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Pinky and the Brain

Pinky and the Brain is an American animated television series created by Tom Ruegger for the Kids' WB programming block of The WB. It was the first animated television series to be presented in Dolby Surround and a collaboration of Steven Spielberg with his production company Amblin Television and Warner Bros. Animation. The characters first appeared in 1993 as a recurring segment on the animated television series Animaniacs. It was later spun off as a series due to its popularity, with 65 episodes produced. The characters later appeared in the series Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain,[2] and have since returned to their roots as an Animaniacs segment in the 2020 revival of that series.

Pinky and the Brain
Also known asSteven Spielberg Presents Pinky and the Brain
GenreComedy
Science fiction
Created byTom Ruegger (uncredited)
Voices ofRob Paulsen
Maurice LaMarche
Theme music composerRichard Stone
Opening theme"Pinky and the Brain Theme" by Jess Harnell, Rob Paulsen, Dorian Harewood, & Jim Cummings[1]
ComposersRichard Stone
Steven Bernstein
Julie Bernstein
Gordon Goodwin
Carl Johnson
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes65 (96 segments) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerSteven Spielberg
ProducersLiz Holzman
Charles M. Howell IV
Peter Hastings
Rusty Mills
Running time22 minutes
Production companiesAmblin Television
Warner Bros. Animation
Release
Original networkKids' WB
Picture formatNTSC
Original releaseSeptember 9, 1995 (1995-09-09) –
November 14, 1998 (1998-11-14)
Chronology
RelatedAnimaniacs
Animaniacs (2020 TV series)

Pinky and the Brain are genetically enhanced laboratory mice who reside in a cage in the Acme Labs research facility. Brain is highly intelligent, self-centered and scheming, while Pinky is good-natured but feeble-minded. In each episode, Brain devises a new plan to take over the world which ultimately ends in failure, usually due to the impossibility of Brain's plan, Brain's own overconfidence, Pinky's bumbling, an oversight on Brain's part, circumstances beyond their control, or multiples thereof. In common with many other Animaniacs shorts, many episodes are in some way a parody of something else, usually a film or novel.

Premise

Many of the Pinky and the Brain episodes occur in the 1990s at Acme Labs, located in some large American city underneath a suspension bridge. Several episodes take place in historical times, with Pinky and Brain in the laboratory of some scientifically-minded person, including Merlin,[3] H.G. Wells,[4] Ivan Pavlov,[5] and Johannes Gutenberg. There is very little continuity between episodes outside of the common fixtures of the two mice, though some plans for world domination from early episodes are subsequently referred to in later seasons; for example, Brain's mechanical human suit that was first used in "Win Big"[6] reappears when Brain faces his rival Snowball in "Snowball".[7]

The bulk of every episode involves one of Brain's plans for world domination with Pinky's assistance and the ultimate failure of that plan, with some exceptions. One centers on Snowball's plan to take over the world using Microsponge (a parody of Microsoft).[7] Another episode features Brain's single day where he tries to do anything but take over the world: in the end, a group of people votes that he should take over the world on the one day that he does not want to.[8]

Both Pinky and Brain, white lab mice kept as part of Acme Labs' experimentation, have undergone significant genetic alteration, per the show's title lyrics, "their genes have been spliced" which gives the two mice amplified intelligence over that of a typical mouse, the ability to talk to humans, and anthropomorphism. "Project B.R.A.I.N." suggests that the gene splicing occurred on September 9, 1995,[9] which is coincident to the first full episode of Pinky and the Brain. The episode "Brainwashed" states that the gene splicing was done by Dr. Mordough, along with Snowball the hamster and Precious the cat, using the Acme Gene Splicer, Bagel Warmer, and Hot Dog Steamer.[10]

Although Pinky and Brain plan to conquer the world, they do not show much animosity. In a Christmas special, Pinky even wrote a letter to Santa Claus saying that Brain had the world's best interests at heart.[11]

Episodes

SeasonSegmentsEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
11013September 9, 1995 (1995-09-09)May 12, 1996 (1996-05-12)
2812September 7, 1996 (1996-09-07)May 17, 1997 (1997-05-17)
33533September 8, 1997 (1997-09-08)May 16, 1998 (1998-05-16)
447September 14, 1998 (1998-09-14)November 14, 1998 (1998-11-14)

Characters

Pinky

 
Pinky

Pinky (voiced by Rob Paulsen) is a genetically modified mouse who shares the same cage as Brain at Acme Labs. Pinky is an extremely unstable and hyperactive mouse. He has several verbal tics, such as "Narf", "Zort", "Poit", and "Troz", the last of which he started saying after noticing it was "Zort" reflected backwards in a mirror. Pinky's appearance contrasts with Brain's — while Brain is short, has a crooked tail and pink sclerae, and speaks in a deeper, more eloquent manner, Pinky has a straight tail, blue sclerae, and a severe overbite, is taller than the Brain and speaks in a high-pitched voice with a Cockney British accent. Pinky's name was inadvertently given to him by Brain himself: when insulting the two scientists responsible for their gene splicing while talking to himself, Brain claimed the scientists had "less knowledge in both their heads than I do in my...pinky!" Pinky then responded with "Yes?", believing that Brain was referring to him.[9]

Pinky is more open-minded, kinder, and generally happier than the Brain. Troubles never ruin his day, possibly because he is too scatter-brained to notice them. He steadfastly helps Brain toward world domination, even though Brain usually berates, belittles and even abuses him. Pinky actually seems to enjoy this, often laughing after he is hit on the head. He is obsessed with trivia, spending a lot of time watching television in the lab and following popular culture fads. Sometimes, Pinky even finds non-rational solutions to problems. An entire episode (entitled "The Pinky P.O.V.") even shows a typical night of attempted world domination from his point of view, showing his thought processes and how he comes to the strange, seemingly nonsensical responses to Brain's famous question, "Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?" Pinky often points out flaws in the Brain's plans, which the Brain consistently ignores. The issues Pinky brings up can ironically lead to the downfall of the plan in the given night's plot.

He is also Brain's moral compass and his only true friend. When Pinky sold his soul to the devil to give Brain the world in "A Pinky and the Brain Halloween", Brain saved him because he missed him and the world was not worth ruling without him. Pinky also has shown signs of intelligence, despite his supposed stupidity. In "Welcome to the Jungle", Pinky was able to survive using his instincts and become a leader to Brain, who, despite his intelligence, could not survive in the wild on his own. And in "The Pink Candidate", when Pinky became president, he later began citing various constitutional amendments and legal problems that would bar Brain from his latest plot to take over the world. When Brain attempted to pressure him into helping, Pinky refused, claiming that the plan "goes against everything I've come to stand for."

The Brain

 
The Brain

The Brain or "Brain" for short (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) looks and sounds like Orson Welles. In "What Ever Happened to Baby Brain", Brain actually crosses paths with Welles, who is working as a busboy in a Hollywood restaurant, and they find themselves inadvertently yelling in unison, "Things will be different when I take over the world!" In "Project B.R.A.I.N.", Brain's name is the backronym for the eponymous project: "Biological Recombinant Algorithmic Intelligence Nexus".[9] His tail is angular and bent — he often uses it to pick the lock of the cage door — and his head is large and wide, housing his abnormally large brain. He is highly intelligent and develops complex plans for global domination using politics, cultural references, and his own inventions toward his goal. He seems coldly unemotional, speaking in a snarky deadpan voice. Nevertheless, Brain has a subtle sense of humor and has even fallen in love, with Trudie in the episode "The Third Mouse" and with Billie in "The World Can Wait".[12] Due to his stature and megalomania, Brain has been compared to Don Quixote[13] and has been called a pop culture depiction of Napoleon Bonaparte.[14]

Brain sees his inevitable rise to power as good for the world and not as mere megalomania. In Animaniacs: Wakko's Wish, he said to Pinky "We're on our way to fame, fortune and a world that's a better place for all." Many of the Brain's plots had the endgame of winning over the people's hearts and then having them make him their ruler. However, his motives are not pure. In one episode, Brain finds himself hypnotized by a psychologist whom he had planned to manipulate for one of his schemes, who turns out to be none other than Sigmund Freud. There Brain reveals that he originally lived with his parents in a tin can at the base of a tree in a large field. When he was young, ACME researchers captured Brain and took him from his home, and the last he saw of it was a picture of the world on the side of the can. Dr. Freud speculates that Brain's hunger to take over the world is misplaced, and that all he really wants is to go back home to his parents.[15] According to the creators, Brain wants to take over the world not for the sake of being a dictator, like his rival Snowball, but because he believes that he could do a much better job of it than the people currently in charge. Brain has even helped save the world by doing everything in his power to prevent Snowball's evil schemes, knowing that a world under Snowball's rule would be a worst-case scenario. In the 2020 Animaniacs reboot, Brain gains a new rival in taking over the world in the form of his wife, Senator Julia Brain, after his attempts to mind-control her into becoming a puppet ruler for him led to her becoming insane.

Other recurring characters

  • Snowball the hamster (voiced by Roddy McDowall) is Brain's former childhood friend-turned-rival who was also made intelligent by gene splicing and has a similar desire for world conquest (though his desire is far more malevolent than Brain's) which Pinky and Brain are sometimes forced to stop.[7]
  • Billie (voiced by Tress MacNeille) is a female white mouse and yet another result of gene splicing. She is smarter than Brain and also has the goal of world domination.[12] Though Brain loves her, she fancies Pinky instead. In the episode "You'll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again!", it is revealed that Brain is married to Billie (who in real life is named Sheila and hates playing Billie), who pretty much agreed to marry him only because he is famous, and eventually kicks him out and makes him live in his restaurant. It is later revealed that the events were just a dream.
  • Pharfignewton (voiced by Frank Welker) is a white racing mare, with whom Pinky falls in love. Though Brain constantly tells Pinky that he is a mouse and Pharfignewton is a horse, Pinky always chooses not to listen to him.[16]
  • Larry (voiced by Billy West) is a white mouse[17][18] who was created as a response to demands from Kids' WB executives to include additional characters on the show.[19] His presence is sporadic, as the writers of the show believed that including an additional character would ruin the chemistry between Pinky and Brain, as they worked best as a comedy duo; thus a third character would, therefore, be out of place and unnecessary to the plot. To further drive this point home, Larry's first appearance was marked by a modified version of the theme song with the words "and Larry!" shoehorned in between existing lyrics. He is a caricature of Larry Fine of The Three Stooges fame; therefore, the episode's title is "Pinky and the Brain...and Larry".

Other characters that have appeared on the series have included both of Brain's[20] and Pinky's parents[21] and the duo's "son", "Roman Numeral I" (Romy for short) another white mouse who was the result of a cloning mistake. Episodes also include recurring caricatures of celebrities, including both Bill and Hillary Clinton, David Letterman, Dick Clark, Drew Carey, Ryan Stiles, Kathy Kinney, J. D. Wilkes, Paul Gilmartin, Annabelle Gurwitch, Don Rickles, Michael Keaton, Eric and Donny from Too Something, "Macho Man" Randy Savage, The Allman Brothers Band, David Cross, Jack Black, Chris Shiflett, Jim Nabors as Gomer Pyle, and Christopher Walken, as was common on other Animaniacs cartoons.

Creation and inspiration

 
Caricatures of Minton (left) and Fitzgerald (right) from "The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special"

Pinky and the Brain was inspired by the peculiar personalities of two producers of Tom Ruegger's earlier show Tiny Toon Adventures, Eddie Fitzgerald and Tom Minton, respectively.[22][23] The two worked in the same office at Warner Bros. Animation and developed interesting personalities that the other staff had picked up on; Ruegger said that Minton seemed to be always scheming to take over the world, while Fitzgerald comedically agreed with him, injecting nonsense words like "Narf" and "Egad" around the office.[22][23] The gag credit for the Tiny Toon Adventures episode "You Asked For It" credits Eddie Fitzgerald as "Guy Who Says 'Narf'".[24] Series producer Peter Hastings described Eddie by saying, "He always greeted you like you were wearing a funny hat – and he liked it."[25] During the development of Animaniacs, animator Bruce Timm drew caricatures of Minton and Fitzgerald, and Ruegger then added mouse ears and noses to the drawing, cementing the concept for Pinky and the Brain.[23] The Fitzgerald/Minton connection to Pinky and the Brain is shown in the episode "The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special".[18] Two characters shown as writers for Pinky and the Brain cartoons within the short are caricatures of Fitzgerald and Minton.[26]

While Ruegger initially based the Brain after Minton, the Welles connection came from Maurice LaMarche, a big fan of the actor/director, who had supplied the voice for Orson Welles in the 1994 movie Ed Wood. LaMarche stated that on coming in to audition for the character of the Brain, he saw the resemblance to Welles and went with that for the voice, and he was given the role on the spot.[27] LaMarche describes Brain's voice as "65% Orson Welles, 35% Vincent Price".[28] Brain's similarity to Orson Welles was made explicit in the Animaniacs episode "Yes, Always", which was based upon an outtake from one of Welles' television commercials, colloquially known as Frozen Peas, in which he ranted about the poor quality of the script. This cartoon was described by writer Peter Hastings as "a $250,000 inside joke": LaMarche used excerpts from it as sound check material before recording episodes, and Hastings took it to its logical conclusion.[29] The writers developed the script in secret playing off these test lines and the Frozen Peas outtakes, and arranged to have recording on the same day as Sam Kinison's funeral, whom LaMarche was a close friend of. Prior to LaMarche's arrival, the other voice actors, including Paulsen, recognized the humor of the script after they started reading it. According to Paulsen, when LaMarche arrived, he had originally kept his professionalism after the funeral, but broke down in happiness as he recognized the script for what it was.[30] The series also alluded to Welles with an episode in which Brain took on the mind-clouding powers of a radio character called "The Fog": a parody of The Shadow, a popular radio character for which Welles once provided the voice.[31] Other Welles allusions included the episode "The Third Mouse", a parody of The Third Man in which the Brain played the part of Welles' character Harry Lime (with Pinky as Holly Martins),[32] and "Battle for the Planet", in which Brain, inspired by Welles' infamous War of the Worlds radio broadcast and the hysteria that it provoked, stages an alien invasion on television. A caricature of Orson Welles appears in a late episode of the series ("What Ever Happened to Baby Brain"), echoing a rant of the Brain's and introducing himself afterwards.[33]

Paulsen had already been selected to voice Pinky as he was already voicing Yakko Warner for Animaniacs.[27] Paulsen, taking inspiration from British comedies such as Monty Python's Flying Circus, The Goon Show, and Peter Sellers, soon gave Pinky "a goofy whack job" of a British accent for the character.[27]

The episode "Win Big"[6] was the very first Pinky and the Brain segment. It was developed for Animaniacs, written by Ruegger with a script by Peter Hastings, and directed by Rusty Mills. According to Ruegger, most of the elements that would become part of Pinky and the Brain can be found in Hastings's original script. It held many dialogue bits that became conventions of the entire series,[22] including Brain's "Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?", Pinky's "Oh...wait, no." in response to a plan, and Pinky's final question, "Why, Brain? What are we going to do tomorrow night?"

Production

Producers

As with Animaniacs, Steven Spielberg was the executive producer during the entire run, Tom Ruegger was the senior producer, Jean MacCurdy was the executive in charge of production, and Andrea Romano was the voice director. Peter Hastings, Rusty Mills and Liz Holzman produced the series when it was spun off from Animaniacs, as well as the season it ran primetime on the WB. After the first season Hastings left the show and Mills took over as the supervising producer.

Writing

The original Pinky and the Brain shorts on Animaniacs were written primarily by Peter Hastings. Upon moving into its own series, the writing staff included Gordon Bressack, Charles M. Howell IV, Earl Kress, Wendell Morris, and Tom Sheppard. Comedian Alex Borstein was also a staff writer, years before her fame on MADTV and Family Guy. Classic Warner Bros. cartoon director Norm McCabe also wrote for the series.

Voice actors

 
Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche together at the 34th Annie Awards red carpet.

Pinky and the Brain were voiced by Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche, respectively. The series also used the work of many of the same voice actors for Animaniacs, including Tress MacNeille, Jess Harnell, Frank Welker, Nancy Cartwright, Janet Waldo and Jeff Bennett. Celebrities such as Roddy McDowall, Nora Dunn, Townsend Coleman, Ernest Borgnine, Eric Idle, Dick Clark, Ed McMahon, Steve Allen, Joyce Brothers, Gavin MacLeod, John Tesh, Michael McKean, Garry Marshall, Mark Hamill, James Belushi, and Steven Spielberg have all performed guest voice work for the series as well.[34]Cree Summer has also voiced characters in Pinky and the Brain and reprised her role as Elmyra Duff during Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain.

Music

As with Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain was scored by a team of composers, led by Emmy-Award-winning composer Richard Stone. This team included Steven Bernstein and Julie Bernstein, who also orchestrated and sometimes conducted the 40-piece orchestra. The recordings were done on Stage A on the Warner Bros lot, the same stage (and with the same piano) where Carl Stalling recorded his Looney Tunes music. The theme song for Pinky and the Brain was composed by Richard Stone with lyrics by Tom Ruegger.[22]

Two versions of the opening sequence and theme, with slightly different lyrics, were used during the Animaniacs segments. In the first version, Yakko, Wakko, and Dot (voiced respectively by Paulsen, Harnell, and MacNeille) popped up in the lab and sang the theme while letting the two mice out of their cage. The second, later version had the singers off-camera as the Brain picked the lock on the cage door with a small needle to free himself and Pinky. On the Pinky and the Brain series, the theme gained an additional two verses and was sung by Harnell, Dorian Harewood, Jim Cummings, and Paulsen.

The score sometimes includes references to classical music. For example, in the episode where the Brain builds a new papier-mâché Earth, the theme from the 2nd and 4th movements of Dvořák's New World Symphony can be heard throughout the episode.[35] The episode Napoleon Brainaparte makes frequent reference to the French anthem, La Marseillaise,[14] while in the episode in which Pinky becomes the artist "Pinkasso", Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition can be heard.[36]

Animation

Like Animaniacs, most of the original Pinky and the Brain segments used a variety of animation studios, including Tokyo Movie Shinsha, StarToons, Wang Film Productions, and AKOM. The bulk of the episodes created outside of Animaniacs (seasons 2 and beyond) were produced by Rough Draft Studios, Wang Film Productions and AKOM. The only episode that was animated by Tokyo Movie Shinsha on the spin-off series was A Pinky and the Brain Christmas.

Humor

Like Animaniacs, much of the humor in Pinky and the Brain was aimed at adult audiences. Parodies of pop culture icons were quite common on the series, more so during the original episodes developed for the WB prime time slot. In addition to previously mentioned political and actor caricatures, some episodes included complete parodies like those in Animaniacs. The episode "The Megalomaniacal Adventures of Brainie the Poo" parodies Disney's Winnie the Pooh franchise. "Cameos" include Jagger instead of Tigger and Algore instead of Eeyore. Algore is "full of hot air", and shown floating like a balloon. Other parodic elements include Christopher Walken in place of Christopher Robin and the "Brainie the Poo" book appears to have been written by "A. A. Meeting."[37] The three-part episode "Brainwashed" included several allusions to the television show The Prisoner, though everyone in this version of the Village was identified by the hat that they wore, and not by a number.[38][39]

Three songs resemble the musical segments in Animaniacs, matching existing music with new lyrics. Pinky sings "Cheese Roll Call" to John Philip Sousa's march "Semper Fidelis" praising his love for all cheeses from around the world.[40] To the music of "Camptown Races", Brain lists the major parts of the human brain, with Pinky jumping in at the chorus to shout "Brainstem! Brainstem!".[41] "A Meticulous Analysis of History" is set to "When I Was a Lad" from Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore, and sung by both Brain and Pinky, with Brain reciting the rise to power of such historical leaders as Napoleon and Cleopatra, while Pinky mentions how they all fell.[42] In addition, "Brainwashed" featured a song called the Schmëerskåhøvên, a parody of the Macarena, which would brainwash people if it was done correctly. The song includes such odd lyrics as "Put your fingers in your ears, then stick them in your belly" and "Bop yourself on the head and cross your eyes."

Like Animaniacs, there was a gag credit in the closing credits: each show featured an English word appropriate for the episode with its definition. For example, "Around the World in 80 Narfs", where the mice are foiled by trying to speak "New York cabbie" and end up going in circles in one location, the gag credit word was "anophelosis" defined as "morbid state due to extreme frustration".[43]

Another common element in nearly every episode is the following exchange (often referred to by the acronym "AYPWIP"):

Brain: Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?
Pinky: I think so, Brain, but...

Pinky's response ends with a non sequitur such as, "we're already naked", "isn't a cucumber that small called a gherkin?" or "if they called them Sad Meals, kids wouldn't buy them." Brain would then become furious, often bashing Pinky on the head. A few times in the series Pinky and Brain indeed pondered the same thing, though in one of these Pinky dismissed his idea as being too stupid. Just one time the answer was "Yes I am!", when Pinky's intelligence is elevated to match Brain's. In another episode, it turns out that what Pinky was pondering was that he and Brain never ponder the same thing, which turned out to be part of what Brain was pondering as well. In a short episode ("Pinky's P.O.V.") the spectator sees everything Pinky sees (including his imaginations) and hears his thoughts. His brain seems to censor a large portion of Brain's dialogue, leaving Pinky to wander into random internal tangents until Brain asks the question. Pinky then responds with whatever was on his mind at the end of the tangent.

Response

Popularity

Pinky and the Brain were popular on Animaniacs, and the popularity continued into their own series. It attracted many of the same fans as Animaniacs and Internet outreach attracted more. Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen appeared on voice actor tours around the Warner Bros. Studio Stores.

In an interview on the third DVD volume, LaMarche and Paulsen noted that Roy Langbord (vice-president of Showtime), Al Franken, and Barenaked Ladies are fans of the shows.[44] Naughty Dog co-founder Jason Rubin was also fond of the series; the character of the Brain served as an influence in the creation of Doctor Neo Cortex, the main antagonist of the Crash Bandicoot video game series.[45]

Nominations and awards

Pinky and the Brain won several Emmy and Annie Awards.[46] In 1996, the series won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program for the episode A Pinky and the Brain Christmas.[11] Paulsen won the Annie Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement for "Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Television Program Production" in 1996 and 1997, while LaMarche won the same in 1998. Paulsen also won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program for his role as Pinky subsequently in 1999. The series itself won the 1999 Daytime Emmy for "Outstanding Special Class Animated Program".

The episode "Inherit the Wheeze",[47] in which Brain was subject to the effects of smoking by a tobacco company, won a PRISM Award for its anti-smoking message.[48]

References in other media

  • The Rice University Neologism dictionary[49] includes not only "narf" as a random sound or nonce word, but also "narfed" as a verb to mean "to be struck completely" with some embarrassment or folly, much as Pinky would be hit on the head by Brain after his follies ruined Brain's plan. The International Dictionary of Neologisms[50] includes the word "narfistic" as "an idea or concept that works fine when you think about it – but is very difficult to express to someone else", as a result of Pinky only saying "Narf!" after Brain elaborates on one of his extensive plans.
  • In one of the host segments in the Hobgoblins episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, Pearl Forrester summons her sidekicks Professor Bobo and Observer over by calling, "Pinky! Brain!"
  • In the post-apocalyptic role-playing game Fallout 2 by Interplay, a couple of mutant albino mole rats appear. One creature is utterly insane, muttering intentions of taking rulership. The other is a highly intelligent cult leader who has intricate plans to claim domination of the post-apocalyptic world; he also has a taste for Cheezy Poofs.
  • Pinky and the Brain were alluded to in The Incredible Hulk #438 as two white mice kept by Omnibus. One of the realistically drawn mice had an enlarged cranium, and when their cage was destroyed the sound "narf" is indicated. Also, when Jailbait asked what they would do during the night, Hotshot replied "The same thing they do every night...whatever that is."
  • The track "Great Day" on the album Madvillainy by the eponymous duo of MF Doom and Madlib features a reference to one of Brain's famous catchphrases: "DOOM, are you pondering what I'm pondering?/Yes, but why would the darn thing be wandering?"
  • The Virgin New Adventures Doctor Who novel, Death and Diplomacy by Dave Stone includes two characters repeating the "Are you pondering..." lines, and near the end, two of the fallen villains in the story recover, one telling his comrade that they must prepare for tomorrow night when they will take over the universe.
  • This is Not a Game, a novel by Walter Jon Williams begins "Plush dolls of Pinky and the Brain overhung Charlie's Monitor..." and the theme of world domination is central to the plot.
  • In the game Destroy All Humans!, during the final boss battle against Silhouette when you read her mind one of the things she says is "What do I do? The same thing I do every night. Try and take over the world!"
  • In the Robot Chicken episode "Kramer vs. Showgirls", a sketch has Michael Moore interviewing cartoon characters from the 1990s, including Pinky and the Brain. Pinky had an ear growing on his back and Brain was moved to another cage, as it turned out his large head was a result of Paget's disease, and he had been rendered blind and had arthritis as a result of the disease. Alan Tudyk voiced Pinky and Seth Green voiced Brain.
    • Another episode has LaMarche reprising his role of Brain in "Eviscerated Post-Coital by a Six Foot Mantis" in a sketch where Pinky and the Brain get sent on a psychedelic trip after being injected with phencyclidine.
  • In the MAD episode "Spy vs. Spy Kids/The Superhero Millionaire Matchmaker", Mickey Mouse captures Pinky and the Brain in a cage.
  • The opening conversation between Pinky and Brain ("Gee, Brain...") that is shown in every episode is sampled in "Joey Bada$$"'s World Domination.
  • In The New Batman Adventures episode "Torch Song", Batman asks Batgirl "So, what are you doing tonight?" to which Batgirl answers "Same thing we do every night, Pinky!". Batman replies "What?", followed by "Never mind." from Batgirl.
  • In the first novel of The Laundry Files, The Atrocity Archive, the hero Bob Howard's roommates are nicknamed Pinky and the Brain.
  • In 2011, a chorus line in the song "Take Over the World" by YouTuber Ray William Johnson (under the channel name Your Favorite Martian) sampled the Pinky and the Brain catchphrase.
  • In 2014, at the end of Nostalgia Critic's review of The Purge, Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche reprised their roles as Pinky and the Brain respectively, in animated form, at the very end of the episode. The segment involves Brain finally losing his temper with Pinky and spewing profanity-laced insults at him, causing Pinky to burst into tears. The segment then cuts to live-action footage of LaMarche and Paulsen recording their lines, with The Critic behind them. LaMarche asks if this is for a kid's show, to which The Critic says, "Just say it, people have been wanting to hear this for years."[51]
  • In the web series Camp Camp (created by Rooster Teeth) episode "Journey to Spooky Island", the characters come across a laboratory with horrific experiments gone wrong. One of the cases labeled "Take a Cartoon Literally #303" has a mouse with a grotesquely huge brain and another with its head removed and replaced with a finger. The brainy one writes 'Kill Me' on the glass.[52]
  • In the 2018 comedy-drama film Tully, Marlo (Charlize Theron) asks the eponymous night nanny (Mackenzie Davis) what she usually does in the daytime, to which Tully replies, "Same thing I do every day, try to take over the world!"
  • On February 15, 2019, the group Postmodern Jukebox released a video for their rendition of the theme song (done in jazz style); this video featured Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche working at the bar in the background, performing a short monologue as their respective characters in the middle of the video.
  • In 2019, during one of the final episodes of the animated series My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, entitled "The Ending of the End: Part 2", Pinkie Pie asks "What are we gonna do, Twilight?", which Twilight Sparkle replies "The same thing we do every time, Pinkie. Try to save the world!"
  • In 2021, an image of Brain appears in The Simpsons Season 33 episode "The Wayz We Were".

History

On Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain

Pinky and the Brain first appeared as a recurring segment on the animated series Animaniacs, another series produced by Steven Spielberg. On September 3, 1993, Pinky and the Brain premiered on television in the episode "Win Big", which aired on the FOX network.

On September 9, 1995, Pinky and the Brain were spun off onto their own half-hour series on Kids' WB!, with each episode consisting of one or more segments, including some of the segments from Animaniacs. The first season was scheduled in a prime time slot from September 10, 1995 through July 21, 1996, as part of the new WB network lineup, with episodes also being repeated within the Saturday morning cartoon block. It had been envisioned for the series to be the WB network's answer to The Simpsons, at that point in its 7th season, which was running on the FOX network.[27] The series tended to have more jokes and humor aimed at adults rather than children.[27] Due to poor ratings following the first season, primarily due to running against 60 Minutes, subsequent seasons were moved to Saturday mornings as part of the Kids' WB! programming block.[27]

Even though they had their own series, they still had several shorts in Animaniacs after they got the series, still appeared in the series' intro and often made cameo appearances.

On Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain

In 1998, the overall structure within the WB Network changed, including the placement of Jamie Kellner as head of the Kids WB! programming. Along with this came pressure on the writers of the series to back off on the idea of world domination and to include more characters on the series.[19] The episode "Pinky and the Brain...and Larry"[17] was a response to this pressure, attempting to show the studio heads that the series was fine as it was, that Pinky and the Brain worked together as a comedy duo - each balancing each other out with their flaws and personalities - and that a third character (or any extra characters at all) would be out of place and thus unnecessary to the plot.[19][27] At this point, Peter Hastings, a key writer for the series, decided to quit, with his last script being "You'll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again!", directly addressing the issue of network executives trying to retool shows that otherwise already work.[19][53] Following the production of the episode, the network backed off from forcing new characters into the show.[27]

With increased pressure from the WB network, the series eventually was retooled on September 19, 1998, into Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain, in which Pinky and the Brain were owned by Tiny Toon Adventures character Elmyra Duff; the unusual change in format was even sarcastically noted in the altered title song, with lyrics such as "It's what the network wants, why bother to complain?".[27] The decision was not well received by the existing crew. For one, according to Paulsen, Spielberg had stated that the Tiny Toons and the Animaniacs/Pinky and the Brain universes were to be kept separate.[27] Furthermore, the chemistry between the characters were altered; by introducing Elmyra (who tended to be even more dense than Pinky was), it shifted Pinky to become the useless "Larry" of this series, as described by Paulsen.[27] This series lasted for 13 episodes, six of which were shown unedited and seven of which were split up into segments and aired as a part of The Cat&Birdy Warneroonie PinkyBrainy Big Cartoonie Show.

On the Animaniacs revival

Pinky and the Brain, with voice work by Paulsen and LaMarche, were featured as primary recurring characters along with the Warner siblings as part of the 2020 revival of Animaniacs produced by Amblin and Warner Bros. for broadcast on Hulu. Two seasons of 13 episodes were ordered, with the first season first broadcast on November 20, 2020 and the second first broadcast on November 5, 2021.[54][55] A third and final season was ordered, releasing on February 17, 2023.[56] A series of four promotional shorts, starring Pinky and the Brain teaching a MasterClass on world domination, was released on March 17.[57]

Merchandise

Pinky and the Brain, along with Animaniacs, aired coincident with the formation of the Warner Bros. Studio Store chain across the United States, and, as a result, numerous T-shirts, coffee mugs, stuffed animals, animation cels, and original artwork from the show were available through these outlets. Other merchandise included comic books, computer games, and videotapes. When Warner Brothers acquired the Hanna-Barbera animation properties in 1998, there was a significant decrease with such merchandise through the store. By the time the series was cancelled, very little merchandise was available.

VHS releases

Four VHS collections of Pinky and the Brain episodes were released in 1996 and 1997, each with approximately two to four episodes that included shorts from Animaniacs. These collections are now out of print.

Title Release date Content
Pinky and the Brain: A Pinky and the Brain Christmas August 13, 1996 (1996-08-13)
  • "A Pinky and the Brain Christmas"
  • "That Smarts"
Pinky and the Brain: World Domination Tour August 13, 1996 (1996-08-13)
  • "Pavlov's Mice"
  • "Brain Meets Brawn"
  • "Where Rodents Dare"
  • "Tokyo Grows"
Pinky and the Brain: Cosmic Attractions November 4, 1997 (1997-11-04)[58]
  • "Fly"
  • "Around the World in 80 Narfs"
Pinky and the Brain: Mice of the Jungle November 4, 1997 (1997-11-04)[58]
  • "Snowball"
  • "Welcome to the Jungle"
  • "Brainstem"

DVD releases

 
DVD cover for Pinky and the Brain Volume 1

Warner Home Video has released all 66 episodes on DVD in Region 1 over three volumes.

DVD Name Ep. # Release date Additional information
Pinky and the Brain Volume 1 22 July 25, 2006 (2006-07-25)[59] This four-disc box set includes the first 22 episodes from the series. Contains "Pinky and the Brain: Are You Pondering What I'm Pondering?" — a featurette with Tom Ruegger, Peter Hastings, Rob Paulsen, Maurice LaMarche, and Andrea Romano as they discuss why they had so much fun working on the series.
Pinky and the Brain Volume 2 22 December 5, 2006 (2006-12-05)[60] This four-disc box set contains the next 22 episodes from the series. Contains "The Return of World Dominating Extras" – a featurette with Mark Hamill and Wayne Knight as they answer a casting call to do the voices of Pinky and the Brain and get coached by none other than Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen.
Pinky and the Brain Volume 3 22 June 19, 2007 (2007-06-19)[61] This four-disc box set contains the last 22 episodes of the series. Contains "It's All About the Fans" – a featurette with Rob Paulsen (the voice of Pinky) and Maurice LaMarche (the voice of the Brain) paying tribute to their fans.

Comic books

Pinky and the Brain were also regulars in the Animaniacs comic book series published by DC Comics. From July 1996 to November 1998, they also starred in their own comic book series (also published by DC Comics), which ran first for one Christmas Special issue and then 27 regular issues before its cancellation. Following the cancellation of the Pinky and the Brain series, the two mice later starred in stories that took up half of the later issues of the Animaniacs comic book series which, starting at issue #43, was re-titled Animaniacs! featuring Pinky and the Brain and ran for another 16 issues before the aforementioned series' cancellation.

Video games

There are two video games based on Pinky and the Brain. The first, a PC game called Pinky and the Brain: World Conquest, was produced by SouthPeak Games and distributed by Warner Bros. The second was Pinky and the Brain: The Master Plan for the Game Boy Advance. The game was produced by Warthog and distributed by SWING! Entertainment in 2002. A third game, titled simply Pinky and the Brain, was announced for the Sega Saturn in 1996 and was planned to be published by Konami,[62] but was later cancelled. The characters have also appeared in several of the Animaniacs video games, such as Animaniacs: The Great Edgar Hunt.

Music

While Pinky and the Brain does not feature as many songs as Animaniacs, some of the music from the show can be found across the three Animaniacs CDs. An expanded version of the Animaniacs segment "Bubba Bo Bob Brain" presented in a radio drama or audiobook fashion was released as a read-along book and CD in 1997 by Rhino Entertainment.

See also

References

  1. ^ Rob Paulsen (December 30, 2012). "Jess Harnell, Dorian Harewood, Jim Cummings and yours truly, if memory serves". Retrieved December 30, 2012.
  2. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 617–619. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  3. ^ "Spellbound". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 38. 1993-11-10.
  4. ^ "When Mice Ruled The Earth". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 47. 1993-11-23.
  5. ^ "Pavlov's Mice". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 18. 1993-10-06.
  6. ^ a b "Win Big". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 2. 1993-09-14.
  7. ^ a b c "Snowball". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 7. 1996-01-20.
  8. ^ "Brain's Night Off". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 52. 1998-02-21.
  9. ^ a b c "Project B.R.A.I.N.". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 59. 1998-09-28.
  10. ^ "Brainwashed: Wash Harder". Pinky and the Brain. Season 4. Episode 64. 1998-09-16.
  11. ^ a b "A Pinky and the Brain Christmas". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 8. 1995-12-13.
  12. ^ a b "The World Can Wait". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 44. 1993-11-18.
  13. ^ "Mouse of La Mancha". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 12. 1996-02-25.
  14. ^ a b "Napoleon Brainaparte". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 7. 1995-11-26.
  15. ^ "Leggo My Ego". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 44. 1997-11-07.
  16. ^ "Jockey for Position". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 27. 1995-10-25.
  17. ^ a b "Pinky and the Brain…and Larry". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 28. 1997-09-13.
  18. ^ a b "The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 61. 1998-09-21.
  19. ^ a b c d "Platypus Comix article on Pinky, Elmyra, and the Brain". Platypus Comix. Retrieved 2006-06-16.
  20. ^ "The Visit". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 13. 1996-05-12.
  21. ^ "The Family That Poits Together, Narfs Together". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 53. 1998-02-21.
  22. ^ a b c d Jeff (1995-04-05). "Peter Hastings' Q&A – P&TB". Newsgroup: alt.tv.animaniacs. Retrieved 2007-06-30.
  23. ^ a b c Greiving, Tim (November 20, 2020). "'They'll Get It at 8 or at 38": How 'Animaniacs' Introduced a Generation to Comedy". The Ringer. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  24. ^ "You Asked For It". Tiny Toon Adventures. Season 1. Episode 20. 1990-10-11.
  25. ^ Will, Ed (1996-06-11). "BRAIN POWER: Pinky, genius pal to resume plotting in 1997". The Denver Post.
  26. ^ takinek (2006-12-19). "The Silver Age of Animation". Retro Junk. Retrieved 2007-06-24.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Burns, Ashley; Schildhause, Chloe (2015-12-30). "The Rise And Fall Of 'Pinky And The Brain,' A Clever Cartoon Too Smart For Its Own Good". Uproxx. Retrieved 2016-01-04.
  28. ^ Arseneau, Adam (2006-07-25). . DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2007-06-24.
  29. ^ "Yes, Always". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 52. 1994-02-11.
  30. ^ Gasper, Gavin (November 17, 2020). "Pinky and the Brain: The Touching Story Behind the Strangest Animaniacs Episode". The Ringer. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
  31. ^ "Pinky and the Fog". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 4. 1995-09-24.
  32. ^ "The Third Mouse". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 12. 1996-05-12.
  33. ^ "Battle For the Planet". Animaniacs. Season 1. Episode 15. 1993-10-01.
  34. ^ "Pinky and the Brain – Full Cast List". IMDb. Retrieved 2007-06-25.
  35. ^ "It's Only a Paper World". Pinky and the Brain. Season 2. Episode 14. 1996-09-07.
  36. ^ "Pinkasso". Pinky and the Brain. Season 2. Episode 15. 1996-09-14.
  37. ^ "The Megalomaniacal Adventures of Brainie the Poo". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 51. 1998-02-07.
  38. ^ "Brainwashed: Brain, Brain Go Away". Pinky and the Brain. Season 4. Episode 62. 1998-09-02.
  39. ^ "Brainwashed: I Am Not a Hat". Pinky and the Brain. Season 4. Episode 63. 1998-09-10.
  40. ^ "Cheese Roll Call". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 4. 1995-10-01.
  41. ^ "Brainstem". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 3. 1995-09-17.
  42. ^ "A Meticulous Analysis of History". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 31. 1997-09-20.
  43. ^ "Around the World in 80 Narfs". Pinky and the Brain. Season 1. Episode 10. 1996-02-03.
  44. ^ Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen (2007-06-19). "It's All About the Fans" extra on "Pinky and the Brain Volume 3" (DVD).
  45. ^ Andy Gavin (February 3, 2011). "Making Crash Bandicoot - part 2". All Things Andy Gavin. Retrieved December 7, 2011.
  46. ^ "IMDB - List of Nominations and Awards for Pinky and the Brain". IMDb. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
  47. ^ "Inherit the Wheeze". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 54. 1998-02-28.
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  49. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-06-29.
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  51. ^ "Channel Awesome - Just Awesome". YouTube.
  52. ^ "Camp Camp Episode 5 - Journey to Spooky Island". Rooster Teeth. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15.
  53. ^ "You'll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town, Again!". Pinky and the Brain. Season 3. Episode 50. 1998-04-25.
  54. ^ Otterson, Joe (January 4, 2018). "'Animaniacs' Reboot Lands Two-Season Straight-to-Series Order at Hulu". Variety. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  55. ^ Thorne, Will (August 7, 2020). "'Animaniacs' Reboot Sets Hulu Premiere Date". Variety. from the original on August 7, 2020. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  56. ^ Alexander, Cristina (2023-01-17). "Animaniacs Season 3 Trailer Promises to End the Hulu Revival with a Bang". The Escapist. Retrieved 2023-03-16.
  57. ^ "Animaniacs 'The Brain' Teaches MasterClass on World Domination". brief.promax.org. Retrieved 2023-03-16.
  58. ^ a b "McCormick, Moira (1997-10-04). "Elmo Haunting Shopping Malls". Billboard.
  59. ^ Lambert, David (2006-03-29). . TVShowsonDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2007-06-15.
  60. ^ Lacey, Gord (2006-08-16). . TVShowsonDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2007-06-15.
  61. ^ Lacey, Gord (2007-02-28). . TVShowsonDVD.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2007-06-15.
  62. ^ "Pinky and the Brain". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 84. Ziff Davis. July 1996. p. 75.

External links

pinky, brain, american, animated, television, series, created, ruegger, kids, programming, block, first, animated, television, series, presented, dolby, surround, collaboration, steven, spielberg, with, production, company, amblin, television, warner, bros, an. Pinky and the Brain is an American animated television series created by Tom Ruegger for the Kids WB programming block of The WB It was the first animated television series to be presented in Dolby Surround and a collaboration of Steven Spielberg with his production company Amblin Television and Warner Bros Animation The characters first appeared in 1993 as a recurring segment on the animated television series Animaniacs It was later spun off as a series due to its popularity with 65 episodes produced The characters later appeared in the series Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain 2 and have since returned to their roots as an Animaniacs segment in the 2020 revival of that series Pinky and the BrainAlso known asSteven Spielberg Presents Pinky and the BrainGenreComedyScience fictionCreated byTom Ruegger uncredited Voices ofRob PaulsenMaurice LaMarcheTheme music composerRichard StoneOpening theme Pinky and the Brain Theme by Jess Harnell Rob Paulsen Dorian Harewood amp Jim Cummings 1 ComposersRichard StoneSteven BernsteinJulie BernsteinGordon GoodwinCarl JohnsonCountry of originUnited StatesNo of seasons4No of episodes65 96 segments list of episodes ProductionExecutive producerSteven SpielbergProducersLiz HolzmanCharles M Howell IVPeter HastingsRusty MillsRunning time22 minutesProduction companiesAmblin TelevisionWarner Bros AnimationReleaseOriginal networkKids WBPicture formatNTSCOriginal releaseSeptember 9 1995 1995 09 09 November 14 1998 1998 11 14 ChronologyRelatedAnimaniacsAnimaniacs 2020 TV series Pinky and the Brain are genetically enhanced laboratory mice who reside in a cage in the Acme Labs research facility Brain is highly intelligent self centered and scheming while Pinky is good natured but feeble minded In each episode Brain devises a new plan to take over the world which ultimately ends in failure usually due to the impossibility of Brain s plan Brain s own overconfidence Pinky s bumbling an oversight on Brain s part circumstances beyond their control or multiples thereof In common with many other Animaniacs shorts many episodes are in some way a parody of something else usually a film or novel Contents 1 Premise 2 Episodes 3 Characters 3 1 Pinky 3 2 The Brain 3 3 Other recurring characters 4 Creation and inspiration 5 Production 5 1 Producers 5 2 Writing 5 3 Voice actors 5 4 Music 5 5 Animation 5 6 Humor 6 Response 6 1 Popularity 6 2 Nominations and awards 6 3 References in other media 7 History 7 1 On Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain 7 2 On Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain 7 3 On the Animaniacs revival 8 Merchandise 8 1 VHS releases 8 2 DVD releases 8 3 Comic books 8 4 Video games 8 5 Music 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksPremise EditMany of the Pinky and the Brain episodes occur in the 1990s at Acme Labs located in some large American city underneath a suspension bridge Several episodes take place in historical times with Pinky and Brain in the laboratory of some scientifically minded person including Merlin 3 H G Wells 4 Ivan Pavlov 5 and Johannes Gutenberg There is very little continuity between episodes outside of the common fixtures of the two mice though some plans for world domination from early episodes are subsequently referred to in later seasons for example Brain s mechanical human suit that was first used in Win Big 6 reappears when Brain faces his rival Snowball in Snowball 7 The bulk of every episode involves one of Brain s plans for world domination with Pinky s assistance and the ultimate failure of that plan with some exceptions One centers on Snowball s plan to take over the world using Microsponge a parody of Microsoft 7 Another episode features Brain s single day where he tries to do anything but take over the world in the end a group of people votes that he should take over the world on the one day that he does not want to 8 Both Pinky and Brain white lab mice kept as part of Acme Labs experimentation have undergone significant genetic alteration per the show s title lyrics their genes have been spliced which gives the two mice amplified intelligence over that of a typical mouse the ability to talk to humans and anthropomorphism Project B R A I N suggests that the gene splicing occurred on September 9 1995 9 which is coincident to the first full episode of Pinky and the Brain The episode Brainwashed states that the gene splicing was done by Dr Mordough along with Snowball the hamster and Precious the cat using the Acme Gene Splicer Bagel Warmer and Hot Dog Steamer 10 Although Pinky and Brain plan to conquer the world they do not show much animosity In a Christmas special Pinky even wrote a letter to Santa Claus saying that Brain had the world s best interests at heart 11 Episodes EditMain article List of Pinky and the Brain episodes SeasonSegmentsEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired11013September 9 1995 1995 09 09 May 12 1996 1996 05 12 2812September 7 1996 1996 09 07 May 17 1997 1997 05 17 33533September 8 1997 1997 09 08 May 16 1998 1998 05 16 447September 14 1998 1998 09 14 November 14 1998 1998 11 14 Characters EditPinky Edit Pinky Pinky voiced by Rob Paulsen is a genetically modified mouse who shares the same cage as Brain at Acme Labs Pinky is an extremely unstable and hyperactive mouse He has several verbal tics such as Narf Zort Poit and Troz the last of which he started saying after noticing it was Zort reflected backwards in a mirror Pinky s appearance contrasts with Brain s while Brain is short has a crooked tail and pink sclerae and speaks in a deeper more eloquent manner Pinky has a straight tail blue sclerae and a severe overbite is taller than the Brain and speaks in a high pitched voice with a Cockney British accent Pinky s name was inadvertently given to him by Brain himself when insulting the two scientists responsible for their gene splicing while talking to himself Brain claimed the scientists had less knowledge in both their heads than I do in my pinky Pinky then responded with Yes believing that Brain was referring to him 9 Pinky is more open minded kinder and generally happier than the Brain Troubles never ruin his day possibly because he is too scatter brained to notice them He steadfastly helps Brain toward world domination even though Brain usually berates belittles and even abuses him Pinky actually seems to enjoy this often laughing after he is hit on the head He is obsessed with trivia spending a lot of time watching television in the lab and following popular culture fads Sometimes Pinky even finds non rational solutions to problems An entire episode entitled The Pinky P O V even shows a typical night of attempted world domination from his point of view showing his thought processes and how he comes to the strange seemingly nonsensical responses to Brain s famous question Pinky are you pondering what I m pondering Pinky often points out flaws in the Brain s plans which the Brain consistently ignores The issues Pinky brings up can ironically lead to the downfall of the plan in the given night s plot He is also Brain s moral compass and his only true friend When Pinky sold his soul to the devil to give Brain the world in A Pinky and the Brain Halloween Brain saved him because he missed him and the world was not worth ruling without him Pinky also has shown signs of intelligence despite his supposed stupidity In Welcome to the Jungle Pinky was able to survive using his instincts and become a leader to Brain who despite his intelligence could not survive in the wild on his own And in The Pink Candidate when Pinky became president he later began citing various constitutional amendments and legal problems that would bar Brain from his latest plot to take over the world When Brain attempted to pressure him into helping Pinky refused claiming that the plan goes against everything I ve come to stand for The Brain Edit The Brain The Brain or Brain for short voiced by Maurice LaMarche looks and sounds like Orson Welles In What Ever Happened to Baby Brain Brain actually crosses paths with Welles who is working as a busboy in a Hollywood restaurant and they find themselves inadvertently yelling in unison Things will be different when I take over the world In Project B R A I N Brain s name is the backronym for the eponymous project Biological Recombinant Algorithmic Intelligence Nexus 9 His tail is angular and bent he often uses it to pick the lock of the cage door and his head is large and wide housing his abnormally large brain He is highly intelligent and develops complex plans for global domination using politics cultural references and his own inventions toward his goal He seems coldly unemotional speaking in a snarky deadpan voice Nevertheless Brain has a subtle sense of humor and has even fallen in love with Trudie in the episode The Third Mouse and with Billie in The World Can Wait 12 Due to his stature and megalomania Brain has been compared to Don Quixote 13 and has been called a pop culture depiction of Napoleon Bonaparte 14 Brain sees his inevitable rise to power as good for the world and not as mere megalomania In Animaniacs Wakko s Wish he said to Pinky We re on our way to fame fortune and a world that s a better place for all Many of the Brain s plots had the endgame of winning over the people s hearts and then having them make him their ruler However his motives are not pure In one episode Brain finds himself hypnotized by a psychologist whom he had planned to manipulate for one of his schemes who turns out to be none other than Sigmund Freud There Brain reveals that he originally lived with his parents in a tin can at the base of a tree in a large field When he was young ACME researchers captured Brain and took him from his home and the last he saw of it was a picture of the world on the side of the can Dr Freud speculates that Brain s hunger to take over the world is misplaced and that all he really wants is to go back home to his parents 15 According to the creators Brain wants to take over the world not for the sake of being a dictator like his rival Snowball but because he believes that he could do a much better job of it than the people currently in charge Brain has even helped save the world by doing everything in his power to prevent Snowball s evil schemes knowing that a world under Snowball s rule would be a worst case scenario In the 2020 Animaniacs reboot Brain gains a new rival in taking over the world in the form of his wife Senator Julia Brain after his attempts to mind control her into becoming a puppet ruler for him led to her becoming insane Other recurring characters Edit Snowball the hamster voiced by Roddy McDowall is Brain s former childhood friend turned rival who was also made intelligent by gene splicing and has a similar desire for world conquest though his desire is far more malevolent than Brain s which Pinky and Brain are sometimes forced to stop 7 Billie voiced by Tress MacNeille is a female white mouse and yet another result of gene splicing She is smarter than Brain and also has the goal of world domination 12 Though Brain loves her she fancies Pinky instead In the episode You ll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again it is revealed that Brain is married to Billie who in real life is named Sheila and hates playing Billie who pretty much agreed to marry him only because he is famous and eventually kicks him out and makes him live in his restaurant It is later revealed that the events were just a dream Pharfignewton voiced by Frank Welker is a white racing mare with whom Pinky falls in love Though Brain constantly tells Pinky that he is a mouse and Pharfignewton is a horse Pinky always chooses not to listen to him 16 Larry voiced by Billy West is a white mouse 17 18 who was created as a response to demands from Kids WB executives to include additional characters on the show 19 His presence is sporadic as the writers of the show believed that including an additional character would ruin the chemistry between Pinky and Brain as they worked best as a comedy duo thus a third character would therefore be out of place and unnecessary to the plot To further drive this point home Larry s first appearance was marked by a modified version of the theme song with the words and Larry shoehorned in between existing lyrics He is a caricature of Larry Fine of The Three Stooges fame therefore the episode s title is Pinky and the Brain and Larry Other characters that have appeared on the series have included both of Brain s 20 and Pinky s parents 21 and the duo s son Roman Numeral I Romy for short another white mouse who was the result of a cloning mistake Episodes also include recurring caricatures of celebrities including both Bill and Hillary Clinton David Letterman Dick Clark Drew Carey Ryan Stiles Kathy Kinney J D Wilkes Paul Gilmartin Annabelle Gurwitch Don Rickles Michael Keaton Eric and Donny from Too Something Macho Man Randy Savage The Allman Brothers Band David Cross Jack Black Chris Shiflett Jim Nabors as Gomer Pyle and Christopher Walken as was common on other Animaniacs cartoons Creation and inspiration Edit Caricatures of Minton left and Fitzgerald right from The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special Pinky and the Brain was inspired by the peculiar personalities of two producers of Tom Ruegger s earlier show Tiny Toon Adventures Eddie Fitzgerald and Tom Minton respectively 22 23 The two worked in the same office at Warner Bros Animation and developed interesting personalities that the other staff had picked up on Ruegger said that Minton seemed to be always scheming to take over the world while Fitzgerald comedically agreed with him injecting nonsense words like Narf and Egad around the office 22 23 The gag credit for the Tiny Toon Adventures episode You Asked For It credits Eddie Fitzgerald as Guy Who Says Narf 24 Series producer Peter Hastings described Eddie by saying He always greeted you like you were wearing a funny hat and he liked it 25 During the development of Animaniacs animator Bruce Timm drew caricatures of Minton and Fitzgerald and Ruegger then added mouse ears and noses to the drawing cementing the concept for Pinky and the Brain 23 The Fitzgerald Minton connection to Pinky and the Brain is shown in the episode The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special 18 Two characters shown as writers for Pinky and the Brain cartoons within the short are caricatures of Fitzgerald and Minton 26 While Ruegger initially based the Brain after Minton the Welles connection came from Maurice LaMarche a big fan of the actor director who had supplied the voice for Orson Welles in the 1994 movie Ed Wood LaMarche stated that on coming in to audition for the character of the Brain he saw the resemblance to Welles and went with that for the voice and he was given the role on the spot 27 LaMarche describes Brain s voice as 65 Orson Welles 35 Vincent Price 28 Brain s similarity to Orson Welles was made explicit in the Animaniacs episode Yes Always which was based upon an outtake from one of Welles television commercials colloquially known as Frozen Peas in which he ranted about the poor quality of the script This cartoon was described by writer Peter Hastings as a 250 000 inside joke LaMarche used excerpts from it as sound check material before recording episodes and Hastings took it to its logical conclusion 29 The writers developed the script in secret playing off these test lines and the Frozen Peas outtakes and arranged to have recording on the same day as Sam Kinison s funeral whom LaMarche was a close friend of Prior to LaMarche s arrival the other voice actors including Paulsen recognized the humor of the script after they started reading it According to Paulsen when LaMarche arrived he had originally kept his professionalism after the funeral but broke down in happiness as he recognized the script for what it was 30 The series also alluded to Welles with an episode in which Brain took on the mind clouding powers of a radio character called The Fog a parody of The Shadow a popular radio character for which Welles once provided the voice 31 Other Welles allusions included the episode The Third Mouse a parody of The Third Man in which the Brain played the part of Welles character Harry Lime with Pinky as Holly Martins 32 and Battle for the Planet in which Brain inspired by Welles infamous War of the Worlds radio broadcast and the hysteria that it provoked stages an alien invasion on television A caricature of Orson Welles appears in a late episode of the series What Ever Happened to Baby Brain echoing a rant of the Brain s and introducing himself afterwards 33 Paulsen had already been selected to voice Pinky as he was already voicing Yakko Warner for Animaniacs 27 Paulsen taking inspiration from British comedies such as Monty Python s Flying Circus The Goon Show and Peter Sellers soon gave Pinky a goofy whack job of a British accent for the character 27 The episode Win Big 6 was the very first Pinky and the Brain segment It was developed for Animaniacs written by Ruegger with a script by Peter Hastings and directed by Rusty Mills According to Ruegger most of the elements that would become part of Pinky and the Brain can be found in Hastings s original script It held many dialogue bits that became conventions of the entire series 22 including Brain s Pinky are you pondering what I m pondering Pinky s Oh wait no in response to a plan and Pinky s final question Why Brain What are we going to do tomorrow night Production EditProducers Edit As with Animaniacs Steven Spielberg was the executive producer during the entire run Tom Ruegger was the senior producer Jean MacCurdy was the executive in charge of production and Andrea Romano was the voice director Peter Hastings Rusty Mills and Liz Holzman produced the series when it was spun off from Animaniacs as well as the season it ran primetime on the WB After the first season Hastings left the show and Mills took over as the supervising producer Writing Edit The original Pinky and the Brain shorts on Animaniacs were written primarily by Peter Hastings Upon moving into its own series the writing staff included Gordon Bressack Charles M Howell IV Earl Kress Wendell Morris and Tom Sheppard Comedian Alex Borstein was also a staff writer years before her fame on MADTV and Family Guy Classic Warner Bros cartoon director Norm McCabe also wrote for the series Voice actors Edit Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche together at the 34th Annie Awards red carpet Pinky and the Brain were voiced by Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche respectively The series also used the work of many of the same voice actors for Animaniacs including Tress MacNeille Jess Harnell Frank Welker Nancy Cartwright Janet Waldo and Jeff Bennett Celebrities such as Roddy McDowall Nora Dunn Townsend Coleman Ernest Borgnine Eric Idle Dick Clark Ed McMahon Steve Allen Joyce Brothers Gavin MacLeod John Tesh Michael McKean Garry Marshall Mark Hamill James Belushi and Steven Spielberg have all performed guest voice work for the series as well 34 Cree Summer has also voiced characters in Pinky and the Brain and reprised her role as Elmyra Duff during Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain Music Edit As with Animaniacs Pinky and the Brain was scored by a team of composers led by Emmy Award winning composer Richard Stone This team included Steven Bernstein and Julie Bernstein who also orchestrated and sometimes conducted the 40 piece orchestra The recordings were done on Stage A on the Warner Bros lot the same stage and with the same piano where Carl Stalling recorded his Looney Tunes music The theme song for Pinky and the Brain was composed by Richard Stone with lyrics by Tom Ruegger 22 Two versions of the opening sequence and theme with slightly different lyrics were used during the Animaniacs segments In the first version Yakko Wakko and Dot voiced respectively by Paulsen Harnell and MacNeille popped up in the lab and sang the theme while letting the two mice out of their cage The second later version had the singers off camera as the Brain picked the lock on the cage door with a small needle to free himself and Pinky On the Pinky and the Brain series the theme gained an additional two verses and was sung by Harnell Dorian Harewood Jim Cummings and Paulsen The score sometimes includes references to classical music For example in the episode where the Brain builds a new papier mache Earth the theme from the 2nd and 4th movements of Dvorak s New World Symphony can be heard throughout the episode 35 The episode Napoleon Brainaparte makes frequent reference to the French anthem La Marseillaise 14 while in the episode in which Pinky becomes the artist Pinkasso Mussorgsky s Pictures at an Exhibition can be heard 36 Animation Edit Like Animaniacs most of the original Pinky and the Brain segments used a variety of animation studios including Tokyo Movie Shinsha StarToons Wang Film Productions and AKOM The bulk of the episodes created outside of Animaniacs seasons 2 and beyond were produced by Rough Draft Studios Wang Film Productions and AKOM The only episode that was animated by Tokyo Movie Shinsha on the spin off series was A Pinky and the Brain Christmas Humor Edit See also Animaniacs Hallmarks and humor Like Animaniacs much of the humor in Pinky and the Brain was aimed at adult audiences Parodies of pop culture icons were quite common on the series more so during the original episodes developed for the WB prime time slot In addition to previously mentioned political and actor caricatures some episodes included complete parodies like those in Animaniacs The episode The Megalomaniacal Adventures of Brainie the Poo parodies Disney s Winnie the Pooh franchise Cameos include Jagger instead of Tigger and Algore instead of Eeyore Algore is full of hot air and shown floating like a balloon Other parodic elements include Christopher Walken in place of Christopher Robin and the Brainie the Poo book appears to have been written by A A Meeting 37 The three part episode Brainwashed included several allusions to the television show The Prisoner though everyone in this version of the Village was identified by the hat that they wore and not by a number 38 39 Three songs resemble the musical segments in Animaniacs matching existing music with new lyrics Pinky sings Cheese Roll Call to John Philip Sousa s march Semper Fidelis praising his love for all cheeses from around the world 40 To the music of Camptown Races Brain lists the major parts of the human brain with Pinky jumping in at the chorus to shout Brainstem Brainstem 41 A Meticulous Analysis of History is set to When I Was a Lad from Gilbert and Sullivan s H M S Pinafore and sung by both Brain and Pinky with Brain reciting the rise to power of such historical leaders as Napoleon and Cleopatra while Pinky mentions how they all fell 42 In addition Brainwashed featured a song called the Schmeerskahoven a parody of the Macarena which would brainwash people if it was done correctly The song includes such odd lyrics as Put your fingers in your ears then stick them in your belly and Bop yourself on the head and cross your eyes Like Animaniacs there was a gag credit in the closing credits each show featured an English word appropriate for the episode with its definition For example Around the World in 80 Narfs where the mice are foiled by trying to speak New York cabbie and end up going in circles in one location the gag credit word was anophelosis defined as morbid state due to extreme frustration 43 Another common element in nearly every episode is the following exchange often referred to by the acronym AYPWIP Brain Pinky are you pondering what I m pondering Pinky I think so Brain but Pinky s response ends with a non sequitur such as we re already naked isn t a cucumber that small called a gherkin or if they called them Sad Meals kids wouldn t buy them Brain would then become furious often bashing Pinky on the head A few times in the series Pinky and Brain indeed pondered the same thing though in one of these Pinky dismissed his idea as being too stupid Just one time the answer was Yes I am when Pinky s intelligence is elevated to match Brain s In another episode it turns out that what Pinky was pondering was that he and Brain never ponder the same thing which turned out to be part of what Brain was pondering as well In a short episode Pinky s P O V the spectator sees everything Pinky sees including his imaginations and hears his thoughts His brain seems to censor a large portion of Brain s dialogue leaving Pinky to wander into random internal tangents until Brain asks the question Pinky then responds with whatever was on his mind at the end of the tangent Response EditPopularity Edit Pinky and the Brain were popular on Animaniacs and the popularity continued into their own series It attracted many of the same fans as Animaniacs and Internet outreach attracted more Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen appeared on voice actor tours around the Warner Bros Studio Stores In an interview on the third DVD volume LaMarche and Paulsen noted that Roy Langbord vice president of Showtime Al Franken and Barenaked Ladies are fans of the shows 44 Naughty Dog co founder Jason Rubin was also fond of the series the character of the Brain served as an influence in the creation of Doctor Neo Cortex the main antagonist of the Crash Bandicoot video game series 45 Nominations and awards Edit Pinky and the Brain won several Emmy and Annie Awards 46 In 1996 the series won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program for the episode A Pinky and the Brain Christmas 11 Paulsen won the Annie Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Television Program Production in 1996 and 1997 while LaMarche won the same in 1998 Paulsen also won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program for his role as Pinky subsequently in 1999 The series itself won the 1999 Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Special Class Animated Program The episode Inherit the Wheeze 47 in which Brain was subject to the effects of smoking by a tobacco company won a PRISM Award for its anti smoking message 48 References in other media Edit This section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 The Rice University Neologism dictionary 49 includes not only narf as a random sound or nonce word but also narfed as a verb to mean to be struck completely with some embarrassment or folly much as Pinky would be hit on the head by Brain after his follies ruined Brain s plan The International Dictionary of Neologisms 50 includes the word narfistic as an idea or concept that works fine when you think about it but is very difficult to express to someone else as a result of Pinky only saying Narf after Brain elaborates on one of his extensive plans In one of the host segments in the Hobgoblins episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 Pearl Forrester summons her sidekicks Professor Bobo and Observer over by calling Pinky Brain In the post apocalyptic role playing game Fallout 2 by Interplay a couple of mutant albino mole rats appear One creature is utterly insane muttering intentions of taking rulership The other is a highly intelligent cult leader who has intricate plans to claim domination of the post apocalyptic world he also has a taste for Cheezy Poofs Pinky and the Brain were alluded to in The Incredible Hulk 438 as two white mice kept by Omnibus One of the realistically drawn mice had an enlarged cranium and when their cage was destroyed the sound narf is indicated Also when Jailbait asked what they would do during the night Hotshot replied The same thing they do every night whatever that is The track Great Day on the album Madvillainy by the eponymous duo of MF Doom and Madlib features a reference to one of Brain s famous catchphrases DOOM are you pondering what I m pondering Yes but why would the darn thing be wandering The Virgin New Adventures Doctor Who novel Death and Diplomacy by Dave Stone includes two characters repeating the Are you pondering lines and near the end two of the fallen villains in the story recover one telling his comrade that they must prepare for tomorrow night when they will take over the universe This is Not a Game a novel by Walter Jon Williams begins Plush dolls of Pinky and the Brain overhung Charlie s Monitor and the theme of world domination is central to the plot In the game Destroy All Humans during the final boss battle against Silhouette when you read her mind one of the things she says is What do I do The same thing I do every night Try and take over the world In the Robot Chicken episode Kramer vs Showgirls a sketch has Michael Moore interviewing cartoon characters from the 1990s including Pinky and the Brain Pinky had an ear growing on his back and Brain was moved to another cage as it turned out his large head was a result of Paget s disease and he had been rendered blind and had arthritis as a result of the disease Alan Tudyk voiced Pinky and Seth Green voiced Brain Another episode has LaMarche reprising his role of Brain in Eviscerated Post Coital by a Six Foot Mantis in a sketch where Pinky and the Brain get sent on a psychedelic trip after being injected with phencyclidine In the MAD episode Spy vs Spy Kids The Superhero Millionaire Matchmaker Mickey Mouse captures Pinky and the Brain in a cage The opening conversation between Pinky and Brain Gee Brain that is shown in every episode is sampled in Joey Bada s World Domination In The New Batman Adventures episode Torch Song Batman asks Batgirl So what are you doing tonight to which Batgirl answers Same thing we do every night Pinky Batman replies What followed by Never mind from Batgirl In the first novel of The Laundry Files The Atrocity Archive the hero Bob Howard s roommates are nicknamed Pinky and the Brain In 2011 a chorus line in the song Take Over the World by YouTuber Ray William Johnson under the channel name Your Favorite Martian sampled the Pinky and the Brain catchphrase In 2014 at the end of Nostalgia Critic s review of The Purge Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche reprised their roles as Pinky and the Brain respectively in animated form at the very end of the episode The segment involves Brain finally losing his temper with Pinky and spewing profanity laced insults at him causing Pinky to burst into tears The segment then cuts to live action footage of LaMarche and Paulsen recording their lines with The Critic behind them LaMarche asks if this is for a kid s show to which The Critic says Just say it people have been wanting to hear this for years 51 In the web series Camp Camp created by Rooster Teeth episode Journey to Spooky Island the characters come across a laboratory with horrific experiments gone wrong One of the cases labeled Take a Cartoon Literally 303 has a mouse with a grotesquely huge brain and another with its head removed and replaced with a finger The brainy one writes Kill Me on the glass 52 In the 2018 comedy drama film Tully Marlo Charlize Theron asks the eponymous night nanny Mackenzie Davis what she usually does in the daytime to which Tully replies Same thing I do every day try to take over the world On February 15 2019 the group Postmodern Jukebox released a video for their rendition of the theme song done in jazz style this video featured Rob Paulsen and Maurice LaMarche working at the bar in the background performing a short monologue as their respective characters in the middle of the video In 2019 during one of the final episodes of the animated series My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic entitled The Ending of the End Part 2 Pinkie Pie asks What are we gonna do Twilight which Twilight Sparkle replies The same thing we do every time Pinkie Try to save the world In 2021 an image of Brain appears in The Simpsons Season 33 episode The Wayz We Were History EditOn Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain Edit Main article Animaniacs Pinky and the Brain first appeared as a recurring segment on the animated series Animaniacs another series produced by Steven Spielberg On September 3 1993 Pinky and the Brain premiered on television in the episode Win Big which aired on the FOX network On September 9 1995 Pinky and the Brain were spun off onto their own half hour series on Kids WB with each episode consisting of one or more segments including some of the segments from Animaniacs The first season was scheduled in a prime time slot from September 10 1995 through July 21 1996 as part of the new WB network lineup with episodes also being repeated within the Saturday morning cartoon block It had been envisioned for the series to be the WB network s answer to The Simpsons at that point in its 7th season which was running on the FOX network 27 The series tended to have more jokes and humor aimed at adults rather than children 27 Due to poor ratings following the first season primarily due to running against 60 Minutes subsequent seasons were moved to Saturday mornings as part of the Kids WB programming block 27 Even though they had their own series they still had several shorts in Animaniacs after they got the series still appeared in the series intro and often made cameo appearances On Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain Edit Main article Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain In 1998 the overall structure within the WB Network changed including the placement of Jamie Kellner as head of the Kids WB programming Along with this came pressure on the writers of the series to back off on the idea of world domination and to include more characters on the series 19 The episode Pinky and the Brain and Larry 17 was a response to this pressure attempting to show the studio heads that the series was fine as it was that Pinky and the Brain worked together as a comedy duo each balancing each other out with their flaws and personalities and that a third character or any extra characters at all would be out of place and thus unnecessary to the plot 19 27 At this point Peter Hastings a key writer for the series decided to quit with his last script being You ll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again directly addressing the issue of network executives trying to retool shows that otherwise already work 19 53 Following the production of the episode the network backed off from forcing new characters into the show 27 With increased pressure from the WB network the series eventually was retooled on September 19 1998 into Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain in which Pinky and the Brain were owned by Tiny Toon Adventures character Elmyra Duff the unusual change in format was even sarcastically noted in the altered title song with lyrics such as It s what the network wants why bother to complain 27 The decision was not well received by the existing crew For one according to Paulsen Spielberg had stated that the Tiny Toons and the Animaniacs Pinky and the Brain universes were to be kept separate 27 Furthermore the chemistry between the characters were altered by introducing Elmyra who tended to be even more dense than Pinky was it shifted Pinky to become the useless Larry of this series as described by Paulsen 27 This series lasted for 13 episodes six of which were shown unedited and seven of which were split up into segments and aired as a part of The Cat amp Birdy Warneroonie PinkyBrainy Big Cartoonie Show On the Animaniacs revival Edit Main article Animaniacs 2020 TV series Pinky and the Brain with voice work by Paulsen and LaMarche were featured as primary recurring characters along with the Warner siblings as part of the 2020 revival of Animaniacs produced by Amblin and Warner Bros for broadcast on Hulu Two seasons of 13 episodes were ordered with the first season first broadcast on November 20 2020 and the second first broadcast on November 5 2021 54 55 A third and final season was ordered releasing on February 17 2023 56 A series of four promotional shorts starring Pinky and the Brain teaching a MasterClass on world domination was released on March 17 57 Merchandise EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pinky and the Brain along with Animaniacs aired coincident with the formation of the Warner Bros Studio Store chain across the United States and as a result numerous T shirts coffee mugs stuffed animals animation cels and original artwork from the show were available through these outlets Other merchandise included comic books computer games and videotapes When Warner Brothers acquired the Hanna Barbera animation properties in 1998 there was a significant decrease with such merchandise through the store By the time the series was cancelled very little merchandise was available VHS releases Edit Four VHS collections of Pinky and the Brain episodes were released in 1996 and 1997 each with approximately two to four episodes that included shorts from Animaniacs These collections are now out of print Title Release date ContentPinky and the Brain A Pinky and the Brain Christmas August 13 1996 1996 08 13 A Pinky and the Brain Christmas That Smarts Pinky and the Brain World Domination Tour August 13 1996 1996 08 13 Pavlov s Mice Brain Meets Brawn Where Rodents Dare Tokyo Grows Pinky and the Brain Cosmic Attractions November 4 1997 1997 11 04 58 Fly Around the World in 80 Narfs Pinky and the Brain Mice of the Jungle November 4 1997 1997 11 04 58 Snowball Welcome to the Jungle Brainstem DVD releases Edit DVD cover for Pinky and the Brain Volume 1 Warner Home Video has released all 66 episodes on DVD in Region 1 over three volumes DVD Name Ep Release date Additional informationPinky and the Brain Volume 1 22 July 25 2006 2006 07 25 59 This four disc box set includes the first 22 episodes from the series Contains Pinky and the Brain Are You Pondering What I m Pondering a featurette with Tom Ruegger Peter Hastings Rob Paulsen Maurice LaMarche and Andrea Romano as they discuss why they had so much fun working on the series Pinky and the Brain Volume 2 22 December 5 2006 2006 12 05 60 This four disc box set contains the next 22 episodes from the series Contains The Return of World Dominating Extras a featurette with Mark Hamill and Wayne Knight as they answer a casting call to do the voices of Pinky and the Brain and get coached by none other than Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen Pinky and the Brain Volume 3 22 June 19 2007 2007 06 19 61 This four disc box set contains the last 22 episodes of the series Contains It s All About the Fans a featurette with Rob Paulsen the voice of Pinky and Maurice LaMarche the voice of the Brain paying tribute to their fans Comic books Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pinky and the Brain were also regulars in the Animaniacs comic book series published by DC Comics From July 1996 to November 1998 they also starred in their own comic book series also published by DC Comics which ran first for one Christmas Special issue and then 27 regular issues before its cancellation Following the cancellation of the Pinky and the Brain series the two mice later starred in stories that took up half of the later issues of the Animaniacs comic book series which starting at issue 43 was re titled Animaniacs featuring Pinky and the Brain and ran for another 16 issues before the aforementioned series cancellation Video games Edit There are two video games based on Pinky and the Brain The first a PC game called Pinky and the Brain World Conquest was produced by SouthPeak Games and distributed by Warner Bros The second was Pinky and the Brain The Master Plan for the Game Boy Advance The game was produced by Warthog and distributed by SWING Entertainment in 2002 A third game titled simply Pinky and the Brain was announced for the Sega Saturn in 1996 and was planned to be published by Konami 62 but was later cancelled The characters have also appeared in several of the Animaniacs video games such as Animaniacs The Great Edgar Hunt Music Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message While Pinky and the Brain does not feature as many songs as Animaniacs some of the music from the show can be found across the three Animaniacs CDs An expanded version of the Animaniacs segment Bubba Bo Bob Brain presented in a radio drama or audiobook fashion was released as a read along book and CD in 1997 by Rhino Entertainment See also EditPortals 1990s Cartoon Television United States Jamie KellnerReferences Edit Rob Paulsen December 30 2012 Jess Harnell Dorian Harewood Jim Cummings and yours truly if memory serves Retrieved December 30 2012 Erickson Hal 2005 Television Cartoon Shows An Illustrated Encyclopedia 1949 Through 2003 2nd ed McFarland amp Co pp 617 619 ISBN 978 1476665993 Spellbound Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 38 1993 11 10 When Mice Ruled The Earth Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 47 1993 11 23 Pavlov s Mice Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 18 1993 10 06 a b Win Big Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 2 1993 09 14 a b c Snowball Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 7 1996 01 20 Brain s Night Off Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 52 1998 02 21 a b c Project B R A I N Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 59 1998 09 28 Brainwashed Wash Harder Pinky and the Brain Season 4 Episode 64 1998 09 16 a b A Pinky and the Brain Christmas Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 8 1995 12 13 a b The World Can Wait Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 44 1993 11 18 Mouse of La Mancha Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 12 1996 02 25 a b Napoleon Brainaparte Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 7 1995 11 26 Leggo My Ego Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 44 1997 11 07 Jockey for Position Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 27 1995 10 25 a b Pinky and the Brain and Larry Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 28 1997 09 13 a b The Pinky and the Brain Reunion Special Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 61 1998 09 21 a b c d Platypus Comix article on Pinky Elmyra and the Brain Platypus Comix Retrieved 2006 06 16 The Visit Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 13 1996 05 12 The Family That Poits Together Narfs Together Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 53 1998 02 21 a b c d Jeff 1995 04 05 Peter Hastings Q amp A P amp TB Newsgroup alt tv animaniacs Retrieved 2007 06 30 a b c Greiving Tim November 20 2020 They ll Get It at 8 or at 38 How Animaniacs Introduced a Generation to Comedy The Ringer Retrieved November 20 2020 You Asked For It Tiny Toon Adventures Season 1 Episode 20 1990 10 11 Will Ed 1996 06 11 BRAIN POWER Pinky genius pal to resume plotting in 1997 The Denver Post takinek 2006 12 19 The Silver Age of Animation Retro Junk Retrieved 2007 06 24 a b c d e f g h i j k Burns Ashley Schildhause Chloe 2015 12 30 The Rise And Fall Of Pinky And The Brain A Clever Cartoon Too Smart For Its Own Good Uproxx Retrieved 2016 01 04 Arseneau Adam 2006 07 25 Pinky And The Brain Volume 1 DVD Verdict Archived from the original on 2007 06 22 Retrieved 2007 06 24 Yes Always Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 52 1994 02 11 Gasper Gavin November 17 2020 Pinky and the Brain The Touching Story Behind the Strangest Animaniacs Episode The Ringer Retrieved November 23 2020 Pinky and the Fog Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 4 1995 09 24 The Third Mouse Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 12 1996 05 12 Battle For the Planet Animaniacs Season 1 Episode 15 1993 10 01 Pinky and the Brain Full Cast List IMDb Retrieved 2007 06 25 It s Only a Paper World Pinky and the Brain Season 2 Episode 14 1996 09 07 Pinkasso Pinky and the Brain Season 2 Episode 15 1996 09 14 The Megalomaniacal Adventures of Brainie the Poo Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 51 1998 02 07 Brainwashed Brain Brain Go Away Pinky and the Brain Season 4 Episode 62 1998 09 02 Brainwashed I Am Not a Hat Pinky and the Brain Season 4 Episode 63 1998 09 10 Cheese Roll Call Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 4 1995 10 01 Brainstem Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 3 1995 09 17 A Meticulous Analysis of History Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 31 1997 09 20 Around the World in 80 Narfs Pinky and the Brain Season 1 Episode 10 1996 02 03 Maurice LaMarche and Rob Paulsen 2007 06 19 It s All About the Fans extra on Pinky and the Brain Volume 3 DVD Andy Gavin February 3 2011 Making Crash Bandicoot part 2 All Things Andy Gavin Retrieved December 7 2011 IMDB List of Nominations and Awards for Pinky and the Brain IMDb Retrieved 2007 06 29 Inherit the Wheeze Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 54 1998 02 28 MIRAMAX NBC CBS amp ABC AMONG WINNERS OF PRISM Awards Which Champion Accurate Depiction Of Drug Use In Movies amp On Tv 1999 03 09 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2007 07 05 Rice University Neologism Dictionary Archived from the original on 2007 06 30 Retrieved 2007 06 29 International Dictionary of Neologisms Retrieved 2007 06 29 Channel Awesome Just Awesome YouTube Camp Camp Episode 5 Journey to Spooky Island Rooster Teeth Archived from the original on 2021 12 15 You ll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again Pinky and the Brain Season 3 Episode 50 1998 04 25 Otterson Joe January 4 2018 Animaniacs Reboot Lands Two Season Straight to Series Order at Hulu Variety Retrieved January 4 2018 Thorne Will August 7 2020 Animaniacs Reboot Sets Hulu Premiere Date Variety Archived from the original on August 7 2020 Retrieved August 7 2020 Alexander Cristina 2023 01 17 Animaniacs Season 3 Trailer Promises to End the Hulu Revival with a Bang The Escapist Retrieved 2023 03 16 Animaniacs The Brain Teaches MasterClass on World Domination brief promax org Retrieved 2023 03 16 a b McCormick Moira 1997 10 04 Elmo Haunting Shopping Malls Billboard Lambert David 2006 03 29 Pinky and the Brain Art Info and Conformation of Date The Pinky and the Brain Vol 1 Plot Exposed TVShowsonDVD com Archived from the original on 2007 10 12 Retrieved 2007 06 15 Lacey Gord 2006 08 16 Pinky and the Brain Ponder This Volume 2 TVShowsonDVD com Archived from the original on 2007 10 12 Retrieved 2007 06 15 Lacey Gord 2007 02 28 Pinky and the Brain Ponder the end of Pinky and the Brain on DVD The final release hits DVD on June 19 TVShowsonDVD com Archived from the original on 2007 10 12 Retrieved 2007 06 15 Pinky and the Brain Electronic Gaming Monthly No 84 Ziff Davis July 1996 p 75 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Pinky and the Brain Pinky and the Brain at IMDb Pinky and the Brain at The Big Cartoon DataBase Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pinky and the Brain amp oldid 1146156526, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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