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Did the other dog-people tease Duckworth because of his name?

Which Disney characters EVER had parents we saw? Mickey had two nephews, Daisy had her nieces, Donald his nephews and he was even a nephew himself to Unca Scrooga. Isn't it Goofy's nephew in Goof Troop and such as well?

It's like flippin' Smallville. Or Peanuts. Just no room for parents.
 
Huh. I was just wondering where HDL's mother was and why she wasn't taking care of them. Because I thought I had remembered in Ducktails them saying HDL were Donald's kids and he couldn't care for them because he was in the service?

But they're Donald's nephews too and by extension Daisy's (nephews-in-law.)

So where ARE HDL's parents? Deceased?

And while we're on the topic of accents. Launchpad had a "normal" (I guess we'll go with midwestern) accent and not one similar to Scrooge's Irish-ish brogue (even though Launchpad's last name was McQuack)

Did any of the other "anatid-people" in the Ducktales universe (and by extension the related Disney universes like Duckman and Tailspin) have the "quacky" accent?

And I'm trying to remember. We had Scrooge's canine butler (Duckworth) where there any other anthropomorphic animals in Ducktales? (Been ages since I've watched it. But I used to LOVE watching Ducktales, Duckman and Talespin in the afternoons when coming home from, ahem, high-school.
 
What in the world is Duckman? Are you referring to Darkwing Duck?

I know there were the Beagle Boys -- Ma Beagle and her sons, who were all crooks. I remember mostly everyone were ducks.
 
And Huey, Dewey, and Louie also had voices similar to Donald's...though one would hope they would outgrow it as they got older.

As I recall, at least in DuckTales, their voices (all Russi Taylor) were somewhat similar to Donald's, but not to the same irritating degree. More just the actress making her voice kind of screechy but still human-sounding, rather than doing that bizarre rasping thing that Clarence Nash and Tony Anselmo did.

Come to think of it, I never understood why weren't Huey, Louie, and Dewey Donald and Daisy's children? Why make them nephews?

Because that would imply that Donald and Daisy were having sex. Best to keep that kind of thing at a remove so the little kiddies don't get their brains warped. Or something.


So where ARE HDL's parents? Deceased?

Just absent, I guess:
Huey, Dewey, and Louie are the sons of Donald's sister; in Donald's Nephews, Donald's sister is named Dumbella, but in the comics, her full name is Della Thelma Duck. In the original theatrical shorts, they were originally sent to visit Donald for only one day; in the comics, the three were sent to stay with Donald on a temporary basis, until their father came back from the hospital (the boys ended up sending him there after a practical joke of putting firecrackers under his chair). In both the comics and animated shorts, the boys' parents were never heard from or referred to again after these instances, with the boys ending up permanently living with Donald, in keeping with Disney's usual elimination of characters' parents.[3]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huey,_Dewey_and_Louie

Did any of the other "anatid-people" in the Ducktales universe (and by extension the related Disney universes like Duckman and Tailspin) have the "quacky" accent?

Nope. I guess you mean Darkwing Duck; Duckman was a subversive adult-oriented cartoon from Klasky Csupo and Paramount. And only Darkwing was alleged to be in the DuckTales universe; Talespin was a different anthropomorphic-animal reality that was a cross between The Jungle Book and Donald Bellisario's TV series Tales of the Gold Monkey (in one of Disney's more blatant cases of plagiarism).

(Except I had trouble buying that Darkwing Duck took place in the DuckTales reality, despite having Launchpad and Gizmoduck in common. DT was relatively naturalistic in its physics, in the Disney/Barks tradition; if Scrooge fell out of a plane, you knew he'd implicitly die unless something happened to break his fall. But DD followed Looney Tunes physics; if Darkwing fell out of a plane, he could hit the ground at terminal velocity, get turned into an accordion, march out of frame, and be perfectly all right in the next shot. Darkwing was basically a thinly disguised, Disneyfied Daffy Duck.)

And I'm trying to remember. We had Scrooge's canine butler (Duckworth) where there any other anthropomorphic animals in Ducktales? (Been ages since I've watched it. But I used to LOVE watching Ducktales, Duckman and Talespin in the afternoons when coming home from, ahem, high-school.

There were plenty of dog-people, as the thread title indicates -- notably Ma Beagle and the Beagle Boys, Admiral Grimitz, Black Pete, Dijon from the movie, etc. There were also quite a few pig-people. Gladstone Gander was, well, a gander. Inventor Gyro Gearloose was a chicken, according to Wikipedia.
 
Come to think of it, I never understood why weren't Huey, Louie, and Dewey Donald and Daisy's children? Why make them nephews?
Because that would imply that Donald and Daisy were having sex. Best to keep that kind of thing at a remove so the little kiddies don't get their brains warped. Or something.
Yeah, I pretty much came to the same conclusion, but I always rejected that explanation because I didn't like it. Such rubbish. :lol:

(Except I had trouble buying that Darkwing Duck took place in the DuckTales reality, despite having Launchpad and Gizmoduck in common. DT was relatively naturalistic in its physics, in the Disney/Barks tradition
Although the physics behind Gizmoduck himself was definitely a stretch. Also, the time traveling. But I see your point about the Looney Tunes physics in Darkwing Duck (although I never watched the show).

Inventor Gyro Gearloose was a chicken, according to Wikipedia.
Oh, is that what Gyro was suppose to be?! I always wondered. :lol:
 
Gyro was great but I always liked his little robotic "helper" in the comic books. :)

helper.jpg
 
Donald's voice actually was a bit of a running joke in DuckTales. Donald wasn't often on the show (he was in the Navy), but every time he showed up, other characters would always be saying "What'd he say?" as if they were having as much trouble understanding him as we did.
 
I thought Darkwing was pretty good for a Disney attempt to rip off The Scarlet Pumpernickel, Stupor Duck, or any other Daffy-Duck-as-hero cartoon. Wasn't as good as DuckTales -- none of the other Disney TV shows were -- but it was pretty entertaining. And as someone who's always preferred Warner Bros. cartoons to Disney, I liked it that a Disney show was trying to embrace a WB mentality, basically conceding the role of leading voice in American animation. (Sure, DuckTales was somewhat Disneyesque, but it was more Barks-esque, plus it had that great Ron Jones music and a very good lead performance by Alan Young.)

Never got into Duckman, though. Not my cup of tea.
 
I mostly watched it because of Jason Alexander.

If anyone's voice was suited to play an acerbic foul-mouthed duck.

:lol:
 
Nope. I guess you mean Darkwing Duck; Duckman was a subversive adult-oriented cartoon from Klasky Csupo and Paramount. And only Darkwing was alleged to be in the DuckTales universe; Talespin was a different anthropomorphic-animal reality that was a cross between The Jungle Book and Donald Bellisario's TV series Tales of the Gold Monkey (in one of Disney's more blatant cases of plagiarism).

Not true. I seem to recall Disney Adventures (the magazine) doing a four or five-way crossover between DuckTales, Darkwing Duck, Tale Spin, and Chip 'n Dale's Rescue Rangers back in like 1994 or 1995, uniting all four series via the crisies of the storyline. My memory is foggy on it as it was my younger brother at the time who was all in to the cartoons and comics, but I distinctly remember him telling me about it. Granted, it was print media where it happened so some might discount that, but as I said, I'm pretty sure it happened.
 
It's possible that Tailspin took place in the same 'universe.' Granted, in a South Pacific island to Ducktales' "Calisota" -presumably an American state but overall in the same universe.

And is it just me, or is the geekiest conversation ever?

I mean, we've got conversations on this board about how warp drive works, the spirtual implications of transporting someone, Klingon forehead ridges.

And here we all are talking about the social aspects and familial aspects of a cartoon show about talking ducks.

:lol:
 
Nope. I guess you mean Darkwing Duck; Duckman was a subversive adult-oriented cartoon from Klasky Csupo and Paramount. And only Darkwing was alleged to be in the DuckTales universe; Talespin was a different anthropomorphic-animal reality that was a cross between The Jungle Book and Donald Bellisario's TV series Tales of the Gold Monkey (in one of Disney's more blatant cases of plagiarism).

Not true. I seem to recall Disney Adventures (the magazine) doing a four or five-way crossover between DuckTales, Darkwing Duck, Tale Spin, and Chip 'n Dale's Rescue Rangers back in like 1994 or 1995, uniting all four series via the crisies of the storyline.

I wouldn't consider that canonical. Heck, didn't Rescue Rangers take place in a universe populated by humans alongside tiny anthropomorphic animals? That's obviously incompatible with the Barksverse. A tie-in mag can concoct a gimmicky crossover easily enough; it's been done plenty of times. Marvel did two Star Trek/X-Men crossovers (and Pocket did a novel tying into them), but that doesn't mean that ST is in the Marvel universe; it just means that a story was told that used that premise as a conceit for the duration, ignoring the massive continuity problems of the idea. And then there was that Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue special in the '80s, which crossed over cartoon characters from a whole bunch of incompatible TV universes, from Looney Tunes to the Smurfs to ALF.
 
I love this thread. :lol:

In order to try and stay on topic, I was always more of a Darkwing/TaleSpin kid. But DuckTales was cool, too. :techman:
 
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