Is Bugs Bunny a Rabbit or a Hare? - podcast episode cover

Is Bugs Bunny a Rabbit or a Hare?

Apr 26, 20225 min
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Episode description

Bunnies and hares have a number of distinct traits -- as does Bugs himself. Learn whether he leans rabbit or hare in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/bugs-bunny-rabbit-or-hare.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff. Lauren Vogelbaum. Here, let's talk today about Bugs Bunny. Although a Bugs esque character appeared in the cartoon in Night Bugs as would recognize him today, first appeared on July nine and a cartoon titled a Wild Hair. His character was well received by children and adults alike. This and the fact that his debut coincided with America's Golden Age of animation helped secure his spot as one of

Warner Brothers main cartoon characters. During World War Two, Bugs got another boost the several Air Force troops, including the three eightieth Bombardment Group, shows Bugs as their mascot, and the Marine Corps designated him an honorary Master Sergeant. He starred in propaganda cartoons made specifically for American soldiers stationed in Europe, as well as government and advertisements for wartime bonds.

Bugs Bunny went on to star in a hundred and fifty films, appear as the first animated character on a postage stamp, receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and be ranked number one on a list of the fifty Greatest cartoon characters. Compiled by TV Guide. Although many have attempted to identify what sets Bugs Bunny apart from the cartoon crowd, perhaps the late Chuck Jones, the longtime

writer and producer of Bugs Bunny, described it best. His daughter Linda Jones Cloud told Smithsonian Magazine, and my father's attitude was that bugs already existed and they were just writing about him. He would come home in the evening and say to my mother, you won't believe what Bugs Bunny said today. What do you mean? She would say, you wrote it. No. I discovered under the circumstances that this is what he would say. Whether Bugs Bunny was

conceived as a rabbit or a hare isn't clear. Although the word bunny is part of his name, many of his cart UNEs had hair in the title, including a bill of hair and fallen hair. Of course, that could be wordplay rather than scientific nomenclature. Before we hop to the wrong conclusion, let's take a look at some of

the characteristic differences between rabbits and hairs. Although rabbits and hairs are all from the lapoor dae family, they're classified under nine different genera, eight for rabbits and one for hairs. And fifty three species, twenty one for rabbits and thirty two for hairs, and they start life in markedly different ways.

Hairs are pregnant for about forty two days and deliver fully developed newborns called leverettes, while bunnies have a thirty day gestational period and give birth to kits that don't yet have for or the ability to regulate their body temperature. Hairs also have jointed skulls, unlike those of any other mammal. This gives them cranial kinesis, which means that their skull bones can move relative to each other in ways that humans, for example, can't. Our jaw is our only movable skull joint.

Hairs have an intracranial one that researchers think helps them distribute the impact of long running leaps. Hairs have longer ears and longer legs than rabbits, which seems to tip the scale in favor of bugs. Bunny being a hair, hairs look lanky in ways that rabbits, with their shorter

ears and shorter legs, just don't. Also, hairs are more likely to be gray in color, though hairs and rabbits both come in a range of colors and patterns from white to brown to black, with lots of gradients in between. Hairs are also less social than bunnies. Hairs don't hang out with their families, and by all accounts, neither does bugs.

But hairs live completely above ground, whereas bugs, bunny lives in a burrow like a rabbit that most bunnies create burrows or warrens in which they live and hide their young. There is one thing that could clear all this up, DNA analysis. Rabbits have forty four chromosomes, while members of the hair genus have so analyss of bugs Bunny, a genetic material would wrap this up once and for all,

except that he's not real. So maybe instead of splitting hairs over taxonomy, we should all just relax with a character free and enjoy some classic cartoons. Today's episode is based on the article is bugs, Bunny, a rabbit or a hair? On how stuff Works dot Com? Written by lore L Dove. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com, and

it is produced by Tyler Clang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the i heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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