A photo of a mural with an interior with Tom and Jerry by Mmzaa794 – Wikimedia commons

60 Most Famous Cartoon Characters of All Time


 

Cartoons are helpful in our today’s life settings. Many cartoons for kids teach valuable lessons about honesty, kindness, and other important character traits. Let children watch these cartoons so that they can learn how to be better people in their own lives.

Cartons are also therapeutic. Believe me that even adults can use cartoons to cool off from work pressure and can reduce work-related stress. Therefore, as we watch cartoons, we tend to realize that there are characters we create biases towards because they are fun. In the article, therefore, are the 60 most famous cartoon characters of all time.

1. Woody Woodpecker

Woody Woodpecker is an animated character that appeared in theatrical short films produced by the Walter Lantz Studio and distributed by Universal Studios between 1940 and 1972. Woody, an anthropomorphic woodpecker, was created in 1940 by Lantz and storyboard artist Ben “Bugs” Hardaway.

2. Virtual humans

Virtual humans are simulations of human beings on computers. The research domain is concerned with their representation, movement and behaviour. There is a wide range of applications: simulation, games, film and TV productions, human factors and ergonomic and usability studies in various industries like aerospace, automobile, machinery, furniture clothing industry, telecommunications (avatars), and medicine.

3. Tokai

Tokai, the longest surviving cartoon character of Bangladesh, is a creation of Rafiqun Nabi or Ronobi, as he is widely known. Tokai, a street urchin of age below ten, is not only a character, but it is also a phenomenon in Bangladesh, acting as a witty outlet for the feelings of the people about the current political and socio-economic condition of the nation.

The word Tokai has become the colloquial synonym for street kids or dumpster divers in Bangladesh. Having a bald head and a pot belly, Tokai became a national asset of Bangladesh. People love Tokai because he reflects their thoughts in a simple yet witty manner. Tokai represents the most deprived people in society and is Bangladesh’s most loved cartoon character.

4. Toby the Pup

Toby the Pup is an animated cartoon character created by animators Sid Marcus, Dick Huemer, and Art Davis. He starred in a series of early sound shorts produced by Charles B. Mintz for RKO Radio Pictures. The series lasted from 1930 to 1931. Twelve cartoons were produced, though only seven still survive today. Toby is featured dancing in one of the scenes of the movie, Cool World.

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5. Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales

Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales is an animated television series that originally aired Saturday mornings on CBS from 1963 to 1966 as one of the earliest Saturday morning cartoons. It was produced by Total Television, the same company that produced the earlier King Leonardo and the later Underdog, and primarily sponsored by General Mills.

6. Tom Cat

A photo of a mural with an interior with Tom and Jerry by Mmzaa794 – Wikimedia commons

Thomas Jasper “Tom” Cat Sr. is a fictional character and one of the two titular main protagonists in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s series of Tom and Jerry theatrical animated short films.

Created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, he is a grey and white anthropomorphic domestic short-haired mute tuxedo cat who first appeared in the 1940 MGM animated short Puss Gets the Boot.

The cat was known as “Jasper” during his debut in the short. However, beginning with his next appearance in The Midnight Snack he was known as “Tom” or “Thomas”.

7. Jerry Mouse

A photo of a mural with an interior with Tom and Jerry by Mmzaa794 – Wikimedia commons

Gerald Jinx “Jerry” Mouse is a fictional character and one of the two titular characters in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s series of Tom and Jerry theatrical animated short films and other animated media, usually acting as the protagonist opposite his rival Tom Cat.

Created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, Jerry is a cute young brown mute anthropomorphic house mouse. He first appeared as a mouse named Jinx in the 1940 MGM animated short Puss Gets the Boot. Hanna gave the mouse’s original name “Jinx”. However, Barbera claimed the mouse went unnamed in his first appearance.

8. T-Babe

T-Babe was a virtual pop singer created by husband-and-wife team Sascha and Tessa Hartmann for their independent record label Glasgow Records. The couple was looking to sign an artist to sing the dance tunes that Sascha had written, but were unable to find anyone suitable. As a result, they decided instead to create a 3D computer-generated character who could perform the songs.

9. Sunny Bunnies

A photo of Sunny Bunnies logo by Andrei Ledzianeu, director of Digital Light Studio LLC – Wikimedia commons

Sunny Bunnies is a Polish-Belarussian computer-animated television series produced by Digital Light Studio and Animation Café. The show consists of seven full seasons, with 26 episodes each.

Sunny Bunnies is broadcast in more than 160 countries internationally, and its YouTube channel launched in April 2016 with management support from DHX-owned online kidsnet WildBrain.

10. Strong Bad

Strong Bad is a fictional character from Homestar Runner, a series of animated Flash videos, who is inspired by “The Strong Bads” from the video game Tag Team Wrestling.

He is voiced by Matt Chapman, the principal voice actor and co-creator of the series. Strong Bad enjoys pranking the other characters of the series, along with his ever-diligent lackey pet named “The Cheat” and his older brother Strong Mad.

The main segment that Strong Bad is a part of is Strong Bad Email, in which he answers emails sent to him by fans. The Strong Bad Email series grew to be so popular that seven DVDs featuring the emails have been released, as well as a podcast where emails could be downloaded to digital media players, since its first episode in 2001.

11. Spokestoon

A spokestoon is an established cartoon character who is hired to endorse a product. It is not an identity cartoon character i.e. it is not invented specifically to give identity to a product, such as the Michelin Man or Speedy Alka-Seltzer. Toons have also lent their celebrity to individual events, such as Pogo for Earth Day in 1970, or The Smurfs to UNICEF in 2005.

12. Shapoklyak

A statue photo of Shapoklyak by Avi1111 dr. avishai teicher – Wikimedia commons

Old lady Shapoklyak is a popular villain from a story about Gena the Crocodile written by Russian writer Eduard Uspensky. She appears as an old woman, wearing an outdated hat and carrying a purse, in which she carries her pet rat Lariska.

Her name is the word for the hat she wears, borrowed from the French chapeau claque, an obsolete spring-loaded top hat, which sounds funny to the Russian ear. In the film Cheburashka Goes to School (1983) she admits that she has not received secondary education and is sent to school together with Cheburashka.

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13. Salad Fingers

Salad Fingers is a British animated web series created by David Firth in 2004. It revolves around the eponymous Salad Fingers, a thin, green, mentally troubled man who inhabits a desolate world. As of March 2022, there have been twelve episodes published on YouTube and Newgrounds. Since its debut, Salad Fingers has amassed a cult following and has been described as a viral phenomenon.

14. Family Guy

Family Guy is an American adult animated sitcom created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company. The series centres on the Griffins, a family consisting of parents Peter and Lois; their children, Meg, Chris, and Stewie; and their anthropomorphic pet dog, Brian.

Set in the fictional city of Quahog, Rhode Island, the show exhibits much of its humour in the form of metafictional cutaway gags that often lampoon American culture.

15. Brian Griffin

A photo of Life-sized costume of Brian Griffin by Gage Skidmore – Wikimedia commons

Brian is a white-furred anthropomorphic dog. He can talk, generally walks on his hind legs, has opposable thumbs, drives a second-generation Toyota Prius with the license plate “BRI-DOG”, and is often portrayed as the only sane person in his family.

He is the pet dog of the Griffin family, and in keeping with the show’s treatment of anthropomorphic characters generally, Brian’s human attributes receive little acknowledgement and no explanation; he is largely treated as a human character.

Brian is the best friend of Stewie and many of the show’s sub-plots centre around them. Brian and Stewie have a love-hate relationship in which they constantly argue and humiliate each other, and yet show appreciation for each other several times.

15. SpongeBob SquarePants

SpongeBob SquarePants is an energetic and optimistic yellow sea sponge who lives in a submerged pineapple. SpongeBob has a childlike enthusiasm for life, which carries over to his job as a fry cook at a fast food restaurant called the Krusty Krab. One of his life’s greatest goals is to obtain a boat-driving license from Mrs Puff’s Boating School, but he never succeeds.

His favourite pastimes include “jellyfishing”, which involves catching jellyfish with a net like a butterfly catching and blowing soap bubbles into elaborate shapes. He has a pet sea snail with a pink shell and a blue body named Gary, who meows like a cat.

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16. Mr Krabs

Eugene Harold Krabs, better known as simply Mr Krabs, is a fictional character in the American animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants. Krabs owns and operates the Krusty Krab, a prominent fast-food restaurant located in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom.

He resides in a hollow anchor with his daughter Pearl, who is a teenage sperm whale. Krabs is obsessed with money and dislikes spending it, but will go to great lengths to make Pearl happy.

He tends to worry about his riches and neglect the needs of his employees, SpongeBob and Squidward. He is in a romantic relationship with Mrs Puff and shares a rivalry with his former best friend Plankton, who owns a struggling restaurant called the Chum Bucket located across the street from the Krusty Krab.

17. Squidward Tentacles

Squidward is an anthropomorphic octopus. He lives in a moai between SpongeBob SquarePants’ and Patrick Star’s houses. The character is portrayed as short-tempered, impatient, arrogant, condescending, bitter, and misanthropic, and he hates his two neighbours’ constant disruptive antics.

However, the pair are unaware of Squidward’s dislike towards them and see him as a friend. Squidward works as a cashier at the Krusty Krab restaurant, a job which he does not enjoy.

18. Patrick Star

Patrick Star is a fictional character in the American animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants. In addition to his supporting role in SpongeBob SquarePants, Patrick also serves as the main protagonist of The Patrick Star Show, which premiered in 2021.

Patrick Star is an obese pink starfish. He lives underneath a rock in the underwater city of Bikini Bottom next door to Squidward Tentacles’ moai. His most significant character trait is his low intelligence, which often gets him and his best friend, SpongeBob SquarePants, into trouble. Patrick is unemployed and a self-proclaimed expert in the “art of doing nothing”.

19. Popeye

Popeye the Sailor Man is a fictional cartoon character created by Elzie Crisler Segar. Segar’s Thimble Theatre strip was in its 10th year when Popeye made his debut, but the one-eyed sailor quickly became the main focus of the strip, and Thimble Theatre became one of King Features’ most popular properties during the 1930s.

Popeye’s story and characterization vary depending on the medium. Originally, Popeye got “luck” from rubbing the head of the Whiffle Hen; by 1932, he was instead getting “strength” from eating spinach. Swee’Pea is Popeye’s ward in the comic strips, but he is often depicted as belonging to Olive Oyl in cartoons.

20. Pink Panther

The Pink Panther is a fictional animated character who appears in the opening and/or closing credit sequences of every film in The Pink Panther series except for A Shot in the Dark and Inspector Clouseau. In the storyline of the original film, the “Pink Panther” is the name of a valuable pink diamond named for a flaw that shows a “figure of a springing panther” when held up to the light in a certain way; in the credits, this was translated to an animated pink panther.

21. Ben 10

Ben 10 is an American media franchise created by Man of Action Studios, produced by Cartoon Network Studios and owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. The series centres on a boy named Ben Tennyson who acquires the Omnitrix, an alien device resembling a wristwatch, which contains DNA of different alien species.

Using the Omnitrix, Ben can transform into a powerful alien with various abilities. The Omnitrix initially contains ten aliens, although later on Ben obtains more species by adding their DNA.

22. Supa Strikas

Supa Strikas is a pan-American association football-themed comic, about the titular football team dubbed “the world’s greatest.” Despite their enormous talent, the players must adapt in a game where being the best is only the beginning and where the opposition is always full of surprises.

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23. My Friends Tigger & Pooh

My Friends Tigger & Pooh is an American computer-animated children’s television series on Disney Channel as part of the Playhouse Disney block. The series featured Pooh and other characters from the book and prior film and television adaptations and introduces two new characters: an imaginative 6-year-old red-headed girl named Darby and her dog Buster.

Darby is the main protagonist and an amateur sleuth. Her older best friend is Christopher Robin, who has grown up and makes two appearances throughout the series. Darby teams up with Winnie the Pooh and Tigger to form the trio of Super Sleuths, and they investigate mysteries in the Hundred Acre Wood.

24. Tarzan

Tarzan is a fictional character, an archetypal feral child raised in the African jungle by the Mangani great apes; he later experiences civilization, only to reject it and return to the wild as a heroic adventurer.

Tarzan is the son of a British lord and the lady who was marooned on the coast of Africa by mutineers. When Tarzan was an infant, his mother died, and his father was killed by Kerchak, the leader of the ape tribe by whom Tarzan was adopted.

Soon after his parents’ death, Tarzan became a feral child, and his tribe of apes is known as the Mangani, great apes of a species unknown to science. Kala is his ape mother. Burroughs added stories occurring during Tarzan’s adolescence in his sixth Tarzan book, Jungle Tales of Tarzan.

25. Dev Null

Dev Null was an animated virtual reality character created in 1996 by Leo Laporte for MSNBC’s computer and technology TV series The Site. Espresso barista Dev talked with host Soledad O’Brien each weeknight in a five-minute segment. Laporte was awarded a 1997 Northern California Emmy for his nightly performances as the cyber character Dev Null.

26. Olli

Olli is a Dutch children’s book character and a stuffed toy. There are two big Ollis. They are the elder version of small Olli. The Big Olli is a special creature model made for several charities.

One is a permanent hard plastic polyester statue at the Sophia Children’s hospital and another one has a temporary place at the Rotterdam Zoo. The big Olli that is used in the short film to save the Rotterdam ZOO is stored at a secret location according to the creators.

27. Ocha-Ken

Ocha-Ken means in Japanese “tea puppy” or “tea dog”. They are colourful puppies, most of them with leaves for ears, representing “tea leaves”. They were first introduced as toys released by Sega Toys. Later, due to its popularity, an animated series was made based on the Ocha-Ken.

28. Luz Noceda

Luz Noceda is the main protagonist of the Disney Channel animated series The Owl House. Luz Noceda is a 14-year-old Afro-Dominican-American girl from the fictional town of Gravesfield, Connecticut. She has brown skin, short dark brown hair, and brown eyes, and typically wears a cat-ear hooded indigo-and-white t-shirt, denim shorts, black leggings, and white shoes.

Luz is very quirky, outgoing, and unpredictable. She is a fan of the novel series The Good Witch Azura. She loves fantasy to the point of being detached from reality and has a hard time making friends. However, she still does have a heart and good intentions.

Due to her love of all things fantasy and magical, she wants to become a witch. She soon becomes a friend of an old witch named Eda and a small wolf-like demon with a skull-like head named King.

29. Mickey Mouse

Mickey Mouse is an animated cartoon character co-created in 1928 by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. The longtime mascot of The Walt Disney Company, Mickey is an anthropomorphic mouse who typically wears red shorts, large yellow shoes, and white gloves.

Taking inspiration from such silent film personalities as Charlie Chaplin’s Tramp, Mickey is traditionally characterized as a sympathetic underdog who gets by on pluck and ingenuity.

The character’s status as a small mouse was personified through his diminutive stature and falsetto voice, the latter of which was originally provided by Disney. Mickey is one of the world’s most recognizable and universally acclaimed fictional characters of all time.

30. Milk & Mocha

Milk & Mocha are two bear characters popular on many forms of social media. Milk is a white bear and Mocha is a brown bear. They have a small pet dinosaur named Matcha.

Sie first conceived of the pair as a panda and a polar bear before redesigning them, but the concept was generally inspired by other “cute” characters, and their personalities were not developed at first.

She models their interactions on common situations that couples encounter. Milk is usually cheerful and energetic, while Mocha is calm and sometimes gloomy. Often Milk engages Mocha by encouraging him to join her in an activity.

31. Molly Moo-Cow

Molly Moo-Cow was the name of a short-lived animated character appearing in Rainbow Parade shorts created by Burt Gillett and Tom Palmer for Van Beuren Studios in the 1930s. Six cartoons were produced.

32. Manon

Manon is an animated character in children’s books and television programs. The books are written by Gerard Moncomble and Nadine Rouviere, and the character originally appeared in Toupie magazine.

Geared for preschoolers, the books and cartoon focus on the character of Manon, a girl described as “the little queen of animals”, and her adventures with the animals who live on the farm with her.

33. The Man from Another Place

The Man from Another Place, also known as The Arm, is a character from the television series Twin Peaks. The character was created by David Lynch and Mark Frost. He is an inhabitant of the Black Lodge, a realm of pure evil.

He was created from MIKE’s severed left arm. Early on in the series, The Man gives Agent Dale Cooper clues to apprehending The Man’s nemesis, BOB. He later makes recurring appearances about the Black Lodge.

34. Lola and Mila

Lola and Mila is a Serbian animated television series created by Sergej Ćetković and produced by Studio Carousel and Event Media Production. The show focuses on the adventures of two little girls Lola and Mila, named after Sergej’s daughters. As they spend their time exploring new things, they fall into situations that are entertaining but educational as well.

35. Malebolgia

Malebolgia is a supervillain appearing as the original main antagonist in comic books featuring the superhero Spawn and reprised the role in the later issues. The name Malebolgia is derived from the term in Dante’s Inferno used to describe Malebolge, the ditches in the eighth circle of Hell, where humans who sinned Fraud are punished. He is Spawn’s former master who serves as one of the major Lords of Hell.

36. Spike and Tyke

Spike, occasionally referred to as Butch or Killer, is a stern though occasionally dim-witted grey bulldog who is particularly disapproving of cats, but is gentle towards mice. Spike goes after both Tom and Jerry, and later, his son Tyke. In the shorts, Jerry would often try to get Tom in trouble with Spike so that the bulldog would beat him.

Spike is very protective towards his son and gets very angry at Tom if Tyke is bothered or harmed. Unlike his father Spike, Tyke does not speak in Tom and Jerry. He does speak in Tom and Jerry Kids, voiced by Frank Welker and speaking roles by Patric Zimmerman.

37. Nibbles

Nibbles known as Tuffy is a little, blue or grey, the nappy-wearing orphan mouse who is close to Jerry and appears frequently with him, especially in the comics.
He is sometimes seen as Jerry’s nephew but occasionally referred to as an orphan. Nibbles are often shown eating excessively. In his first animated appearance, he was left on Jerry’s doorstep, abandoned by his parents. Tom enjoys chasing Nibbles as much as he does Jerry.

38. Toodles Galore

Toodles Galore is an attractive white female cat, who usually wears a large blue bow around her neck, and is supposedly Tom’s girlfriend, although Tom is a reputed playboy, and had other love interests before and after Toodles.

Toodles is the only love interest who appeared more than twice. During the classic era, Tom had to compete twice against Butch and even once against Spike for Toodles’s affection, and he lost them all.

39. Mammy Two Shoes

Mammy Two Shoes is an African-American woman. Whether or not she is a maid taking care of the home in which Tom and Jerry reside or the homeowner is never made clear. Her face is never seen except in Saturday Evening Puss (1950), in which her face is very briefly seen as she runs towards the viewer, and she usually wallops the cat (whom she usually addresses as “Thomas” with a broom whenever he misbehaves.

40. Francis Griffin

Peter’s grumpy, stubborn and abusive 80-year-old Irish stepfather, Lois’ adoptive father-in-law, and the adoptive paternal grandfather of Meg, Chris, and Stewie. He is an outstanding character in the family guy animation series. He was once married to Peter’s biological mother Thelma Griffin.

Griffin is an obsessively devout Roman Catholic. He hates Lois because she is not a Catholic, and often calls her a “Protestant whore”, disapproves of his son’s family’s lifestyle, and frequently attempts to force his religious views on them.

41. Ghostly Trio

The Ghostly Trio consist of Stretch, Fatso, and Stinkie, formerly Fatso, Fusso, and Lazo. They are fictional characters appearing in Harvey Comics. They are well known for being the uncles of Casper the Friendly Ghost. Their first animated appearance was in The Friendly Ghost, a cartoon of Paramount Pictures’ Famous Studios theatrical series from the 1940s.

The characters made numerous Harvey Comics appearances and were featured in the title Casper and the Ghostly Trio. Versions of the Ghostly Trio remained prominent in subsequent adaptations/spin-offs.

42. Fanboy & Chum Chum

Fanboy & Chum Chum is an American computer-animated television series created by Eric Robles for NickelodeonFanboy “Tobias Cranapple III” is an enthusiastic fan of comic books, fantasy, science fiction and action figures. He wears a green and purple costume with white briefs on the outside of his costume. In the pilot from Random! Cartoons, he wears a grey costume.

Chum Chum is Fanboy’s best friend and sidekick. Although he is younger than the other main characters, he is still in the same class as them. Chum Chum is extremely energetic and high-spirited. Chum Chum wears an orange and yellow uniform with white briefs worn outside his costume.

43. Dr Žalost

Dr Žalost is “the greatest unhappy scientist who ever lived” who lives in a giant, moving tower. He lives with his assistant, Rat, whom he constantly asks for a hug. He demands 33⅓ billion dollars from the city of Nowhere to fund his “Unhappy Cannonball” project, only to be brushed off by the city’s officials as a scam artist.

In retaliation, Žalost attacks the city by firing unhappy cannonballs from his mobile tower, making the citizens of the city depressed and unproductive. Despite receiving his money in the end, he refuses to return the inhabitants of the city to normal, as he is jealous of the happiness of others.

He then turns his attention towards the Bagge family, determined to inflict sadness and depression on all of the inhabitants of Nowhere. His name Žalost is a word of Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian, or Slovenian origin meaning “sorrow” or “sadness”.

44. Daddles

Daddles, also known as Daddles the duck, is the name of an animated duck that was first introduced in 1977 and used in the television coverage of cricket by the Australian Nine Network’s Wide World of Sports.

When a batsman is dismissed without scoring, usually referred to as a “duck”, an animation of Daddles, dressed as a batsman, is shown using on-screen graphics, crying, tucking his bat under his wing and walking across the screen accompanying the coverage of the departing batsman on his way back to the pavilion.

45. Din Dong

Din Dong is a Hong Kong-based cartoon cat, formed by comic authors John Chan and Pam Hung. He is a very happy and positive cat with big dreams; his motto is “Impossible is possible”. He often posts illustrations on his Facebook page. He is a multimedia creator covering animation, comics, books, DVDs, apps and household items.

46. Daffy Duck

Daffy Duck is an animated cartoon character created for Leon Schlesinger Productions by animators Tex Avery and Bob Clampett. Styled as an anthropomorphic black duck, he has appeared in cartoon series such as Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies, in which he is usually depicted as a foil for either Bugs Bunny or Porky Pig.

46. Cubix

Cubix is a South Korean animated television series created by Cinepix. The titular Cubix is a one-of-a-kind robot built before Professor Nemo’s disappearance, who is found deactivated without visible damage, but no way to reactivate him either. He is introduced as part of Connor’s initiation ceremony as the robot he chooses to fix.

However, he cannot get Cubix to work until Dr K appears to retrieve Solex from a robot. Connor brings Cubix back to life, just as the building they are in starts to fall apart. His body is made out of several cubes, giving him a versatile modular function- by restructuring himself and using different gadgets within the cubes, he can transform into a hoverbike, an aeroplane, a helicopter and plenty more.

47. Catbug

Catbug is an alien creature created in Johnny Tezuka’s Dimension Garden, Catbug is a friend and comrade to the Bravest Warriors. He is half-cat and half-ladybug and possesses the physical traits of both animals; he can often be seen stalking, like a cat, and he can fly, like a ladybug.

Catbug has childlike and carefree, which sometimes interferes with his ability to complete a mission. He can teleport between the two dimensions, the real world and the See-Through Zone, though he cannot travel between the two at will, only at random. Catbug is the unofficial 6th Bravest Warrior and the 2nd unofficial Warrior beside Plum.

48. Bugs Bunny

Bugs Bunny is an animated cartoon character created in the late 1930s by Leon Schlesinger Productions Bugs is an anthropomorphic grey and white rabbit or hare who is famous for his flippant, insouciant personality. He is also characterized by a Brooklyn accent, his portrayal as a trickster, and his catchphrase “Eh…What’s up, doc?”.

Due to Bugs’ popularity during the golden age of American animation, he became not only an American cultural icon and the official mascot of Warner Bros. Entertainment but also one of the most recognizable characters in the world. He can thus be seen in the older Warner Bros. company logos.

49. Bullseye

Bullseye is a Bull Terrier and the official mascot of Target Corporation. The dog is featured in Target’s commercial campaigns and in-store sale signage and is used in various marketing campaigns.

Three dogs play Bullseye taking turns during different promotional campaigns. Each Bullseye has a pure white coat and has Target Corporation’s bullseye logo painted around her left eye, which is the origin of her name. The makeup used on Bullseye is all-natural and non-toxic.

50. Captain Bluebear

Captain Bluebear is a fictional character created by novelist and comic artist Walter Moers. Bluebear, an anthropomorphic talking bear with blue fur who originally appeared in the German children’s television program Die Sendung mit der Maus.

He has since then appeared in a film, a novel, a stage musical and various other media, all of which chronicle the character’s life as a sailor and adventurer. Outside of Germany, Captain Bluebear is best known for being the protagonist of Moers’ novel The 13½ Lives of Captain Bluebear.

51. Batfink

Sir Batfink is a superpowered anthropomorphic grey cyborg bat in a yellow costume with a big red “B” on the chest and red gauntlets and boots. He uses his supersonic sonar radar and black metallic wings to fight crime. When not fighting crime, Batfink lives in a split-level cave, though he also has a direct video link to the Chief’s office in case his help is needed.

52. Godzilla

Godzilla is a fictional monster, or kaiju, originating from a series of Japanese films. Godzilla is an enormous, destructive, prehistoric sea monster awakened and empowered by nuclear radiation. With the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Lucky Dragon 5 incident still fresh in the Japanese consciousness, Godzilla was conceived as a metaphor for nuclear weapons.

53. Go Go Gophers

Go Go Gophers is an animated series set in the Old West that appears as a 4-5 minute long segment within 48 episodes of the Underdog TV series. It was then spun off as a separate series on CBS that aired from September 14, 1968, to September 6, 1969.

54. Gollum

Gollum is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth legendarium. He was introduced in the 1937 fantasy novel The Hobbit and became important in its sequel, The Lord of the Rings. Gollum was a Stoor Hobbit of the River-folk who lived near the Gladden Fields.

In The Lord of the Rings, it is stated that he was originally known as Sméagol, corrupted by the One Ring, and later named Gollum after his habit of making “a horrible swallowing noise in his throat”.

55. Gustafer Yellowgold

Gustafer Yellowgold is a fictional character created by Grammy-nominated American songwriter and illustrator, Morgan Taylor. Gustafer is the main character in a series of audiobooks, and hand-drawn music videos brought to life in both live concerts and its DVD/CD series. I’m From The Sun – The Gustafer Yellowgold Story” was an Audible.com Best Selling Children’s Audiobook.

56. Sonic the Hedgehog

The franchise follows Sonic, an anthropomorphic blue hedgehog who battles the evil Doctor Eggman, a mad scientist. The first game introduced Sonic, a blue hedgehog who can run at incredible speeds, and Doctor Eggman, a rotund mad scientist.

During the Genesis era, Eggman was referred to as Doctor Ivo Robotnik in Western territories. Since Sonic Adventure, the character has been referred to as Eggman in all territories, although the Robotnik name is still acknowledged.

57. Alvin and the Chipmunks

Alvin and the Chipmunks, originally David Seville and the Chipmunks or simply The Chipmunks, are an American animated virtual band and media franchise first created by Ross Bagdasarian for novelty records in 1958. The group consists of three singing animated anthropomorphic chipmunks named Alvin, Simon, and Theodore who are originally managed by their human adoptive father, David “Dave” Seville.

58. Gena the Crocodile

Gena the Crocodile is a fictional friendly crocodile in the series of animation films Gena the Crocodile, Cheburashka and Shapoklyak by Roman Kachanov. He debuted in the 1966 novel Gena the Crocodile and His Friends by Eduard Uspensky. The crocodile’s name is a typical diminutive of the Russian male name Gennady.

59. Pants Ant

Pants Ant is a fictional character created by Woodrow Phoenix and Ian Carney. Pants Ant first appeared in 1998 in the second issue of SugarBuzz! by Carney and Phoenix, and was eventually featured in his book, a one-shot special, The Pants Ant Trouser Hour, published by Slave Labor Graphics.

Pants Ant is the main hero of the town of Gaberdine in Pennsylvania, where everything revolves around pants and lower-body clothing. He was once normal and until he decided to dedicate himself to crime fighting. He wears a mechanical exoskeleton which can change shape and extrude weapons, but it is mostly shaped like a pair of usually human-sized pants.

He was once part of a crimefighting team with a dog called Trouser Schnauzer and the Trews Shrews. His main nemesis is the Bearded Swan, who wants to destroy all his pants because he cannot find a pair to fit him.

60. Jerry the Tyke

Jerry the Tyke also known as Jerry the Troublesome Tyke is a cartoon dog created during the silent film era. Created by Cardiff-based animator Sid Griffiths, and shown throughout British cinemas as part of Pathé Pictorial’s screen news magazines, Jerry the Tyke was the first animated series to be made in Wales.

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  1. Venture Pal Lightweight Backpack – Learn more here
  2. Samsonite Winfield 2 28″ Luggage – Learn more here
  3. Swig Savvy’s Stainless Steel Insulated Water Bottle – Learn more here

Check Amazon’s best-seller list for the most popular travel accessories. We sometimes read this list just to find out what new travel products people are buying.