The first season of (later renamed New Looney Tunes ) marked a return to the franchise's slapstick roots after the sitcom-style approach of The Looney Tunes Show . Airing between 2015 and 2018, the season focuses primarily on Bugs Bunny in contemporary settings. Series Overview
In Season 1, Bugs is not the passive-aggressive carrot-chewer of old. He is active, energetic, and slightly more manic. Voice actor Jeff Bergman (who famously revived the character in the early 90s) delivers a pitch-perfect performance, but he adds a layer of weary confidence. This Bugs has traded the woods of Beverly Hills for a modern suburban forest. He lives in a tree, but his neighbors are suburban families, tech billionaires, and yoga instructors.
Wabbit Season 1 failed to capture mass audience nostalgia because it is . It is a quiet, minimalist, absurdist cartoon disguised as a children’s show. Its deep feature is the inversion of cartoon physics into cartoon psychology —where rage becomes sigh, chase becomes chat, and victory becomes a shrug. Wabbit- New Looney Tunes - Season 1
Season 1 explores the friction between . Bugs often finds his quiet home interrupted by modern annoyances or new, supernatural threats.
Not the scary cryptid you’d expect, but a lovable, dim-witted giant who frequently follows Bugs home, leading to various "hidden in plain sight" hijinks. The first season of (later renamed New Looney
Portrayed as a snobbish, tech-savvy neighbor rather than a silent predator.
The feature will blend traditional Looney Tunes humor with modern animation techniques and gags. Think "Looney Tunes" meets "Adventure Time" with a dash of "The Muppet Show" thrown in for good measure. He is active, energetic, and slightly more manic
Season 1 of Wabbit accomplished something difficult: it made Bugs Bunny cool again. It stopped trying to make the characters "relatable" teenagers or domestic roommates and remembered that these are vaudeville performers at heart. It was a love letter to the chaos of Chuck Jones and the wordplay of Friz Freleng.