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The Crusher is a character in 1948's "Rabbit Punch" and 1951's "Bunny Hugged". He was voiced by Billy Bletcher in "Rabbit Punch" and John T. Smith in "Bunny Hugged".

About Crusher[]

The Crusher is a brutish boxer and professional wrestler. His outward brutish appearance defines his character as a common lout. In The Looney Tunes Show episode "Jailbird and Jailbunny", as an inmate serving a sentence, his behavior stems from anger issues.

The Crusher also appeared in a Tiny Toon Adventures episode, featuring two songs by They Might Be Giants: "Particle Man", as a wrestler, and "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)", as a Montana Max's henchman.

The Crusher also had a cameo role in "Carrotblanca" as a doorman, and appeared in an episode of The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries titled "Rasslin' Rhapsody". He also appeared in two episodes of Duck Dodgers, voiced by John DiMaggio. Crusher appeared in the web show "Fast Food" on looneytunes.com.

In the 2003 film Looney Tunes Back in Action, The Crusher makes a cameo as one of the judges on DJ's stunt performance. He even appears in the video game based on it.

The Crusher was a boss character in the Super NES video game Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage. During the fight, various Warner Brothers characters are in the audience, with PepƩ Le Pew waving a pennant which reads "Crusher".

The Crusher also appears in the Duck Dodgers episode "Surf the Stars".

The Crusher appears in the webtoons episodes "The Cat Stays in the Picture" and "Fast Feud".

The Crusher also appeared in The Looney Tunes Show episodes "Jailbird & Jailbunny", "Fish and Visitors" and "Mr. Weiner".

The Crusher also made a cameo appearance in the New Looney Tunes episode "To Be the Flea, You Gotta Beat the Flea", and also appeared in "Dorlock Vice". He also made a cameo in the Looney Tunes Cartoons short "Happy Birthday Bugs Bunny!"

Notes[]

  • Real-life wrestler Reginald Lisowski would later start using this exact ring name in the late 1950s and would keep it for the remainder of his career. The American Wrestling Association, where Lisowski often wrestled, used a masked competitor called The Masked Terror, like Bugs Bunny's wrestling persona when he wrestled The Crusher in "Bunny Hugged", from 1963 and 1964.

Gallery[]

Characters
Main Characters
Bugs Bunny (Prototype Bugs Bunny) ā€¢ Daffy Duck ā€¢ Elmer Fudd ā€¢ Foghorn Leghorn ā€¢ Lola Bunny (Honey Bunny) ā€¢ Marvin the Martian (K-9) ā€¢ PepĆ© Le Pew (Penelope Pussycat) ā€¢ Porky Pig ā€¢ Road Runner ā€¢ Speedy Gonzales ā€¢ Sylvester (Sylvester Jr.) ā€¢ Taz ā€¢ Tweety ā€¢ Wile E. Coyote ā€¢ Yosemite Sam
Recurring Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Bosko ā€¢ Honey ā€¢ Bruno ā€¢ Foxy ā€¢ Piggy ā€¢ Goopy Geer ā€¢ Buddy ā€¢ Cookie ā€¢ Beans ā€¢ Little Kitty ā€¢ Oliver Owl ā€¢ Ham and Ex ā€¢ Petunia Pig ā€¢ Piggy Hamhock ā€¢ Gabby Goat ā€¢ Egghead ā€¢ Big Bad Wolf ā€¢ Little Red Riding Hood ā€¢ Yoyo Dodo ā€¢ Mrs. Daffy Duck ā€¢ The Two Curious Puppies ā€¢ Sniffles ā€¢ Inki ā€¢ Minah Bird

1940s debuts

Willoughby ā€¢ Three Little Pigs ā€¢ Cecil Turtle ā€¢ Beaky Buzzard ā€¢ Mama Buzzard ā€¢ Leo the Lion ā€¢ Babbit and Catstello ā€¢ Conrad the Cat ā€¢ Hubie and Bertie ā€¢ Claude Cat ā€¢ A. Flea ā€¢ The Three Bears ā€¢ Schnooks ā€¢ Hector the Bulldog ā€¢ The Drunk Stork ā€¢ Gossamer ā€¢ Rocky ā€¢ Barnyard Dawg ā€¢ Henery Hawk ā€¢ Charlie Dog ā€¢ Bobo the Elephant ā€¢ Goofy Gophers ā€¢ The Dog ā€¢ Wellington ā€¢ Gruesome Gorilla ā€¢ Hippety Hopper ā€¢ The Crusher ā€¢ The Supreme Cat ā€¢ Playboy Penguin

1950s debuts

Melissa Duck ā€¢ Frisky Puppy ā€¢ Granny (Proto-Granny) ā€¢ Miss Prissy (Emily the Chicken) ā€¢ Frisky Puppy ā€¢ Sam Cat ā€¢ Nasty Canasta ā€¢ Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot ā€¢ Chester ā€¢ Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog ā€¢ Toro the Bull ā€¢ The Weasel ā€¢ Witch Hazel ā€¢ Tasmanian She-Devil ā€¢ Ralph Phillips ā€¢ Egghead Jr. ā€¢ Mugsy ā€¢ Jose and Manuel ā€¢ The Honey-Mousers (Ralph Crumden, Ned Morton, Alice Crumden, Trixie Morton) ā€¢ Instant Martians ā€¢ Slowpoke Rodriguez ā€¢ Pappy and Elvis ā€¢ Blacque Jacque Shellacque

1960s debuts

Cool Cat ā€¢ Colonel Rimfire ā€¢ Merlin the Magic Mouse ā€¢ Second Banana ā€¢ Bunny and Claude

One-Off Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Owl Jolson

1940s debuts

The Gremlin ā€¢ The Dover Boys (Tom Dover, Dick Dover, Larry Dover, Dora Standpipe, Dan Backslide) ā€¢ Mr. Meek ā€¢ Russian Dog ā€¢ Colonel Shuffle ā€¢ Giovanni Jones

1950s debuts

The Martin Brothers ā€¢ Pete Puma ā€¢ George and Benny ā€¢ Babyface Finster ā€¢ Michigan J. Frog ā€¢ Shropshire Slasher ā€¢ Mot ā€¢ Pablo and Fernando ā€¢ Charles M. Wolf ā€¢ SeƱor Vulturo ā€¢ Mighty Angelo

1960s debuts

Hugo the Abominable Snowman ā€¢ Nelly the Giraffe ā€¢ Count Bloodcount ā€¢ Spooky ā€¢ Rapid Rabbit and Quick Brown Fox

Post-Golden Age Characters
Tiny Toon Adventures

Buster Bunny ā€¢ Babs Bunny ā€¢ Plucky Duck ā€¢ Hamton J. Pig ā€¢ Fifi La Fume ā€¢ Shirley the Loon ā€¢ Sweetie Bird ā€¢ Elmyra Duff ā€¢ Montana Max

Taz-Mania

Jean ā€¢ Hugh ā€¢ Molly ā€¢ Jake ā€¢ Dog the Turtle ā€¢ Drew

Pinky and the Brain

Pinky ā€¢ The Brain

Baby Looney Tunes

Floyd Minton

Duck Dodgers

Dr. I.Q. Hi ā€¢ Captain Star Johnson ā€¢ Commander X2

Loonatics Unleashed

Ace Bunny ā€¢ Lexi Bunny ā€¢ Danger Duck ā€¢ Slam Tasmanian ā€¢ Tech E. Coyote ā€¢ Rev Runner

The Looney Tunes Show

Tina Russo

New Looney Tunes

Squeaks the Squirrel ā€¢ Bigfoot ā€¢ Barbarian ā€¢ Boyd ā€¢ Cal ā€¢ Carl the Grim Rabbit ā€¢ Claudette Dupri ā€¢ Dr. Clovenhoof ā€¢ Eagle Scout ā€¢ Elliot Sampson ā€¢ Horace the Horse ā€¢ Ivana ā€¢ Jack ā€¢ Thes ā€¢ Leslie P. Lilylegs ā€¢ Miss Cougar ā€¢ Pampreen Perdy and Paul Perdy ā€¢ Rhoda Roundhouse ā€¢ Shameless O'Scanty ā€¢ Sir Littlechin ā€¢ Slugsworthy the First ā€¢ Squint Eatswood ā€¢ Tad Tucker ā€¢ Trey Hugger ā€¢ Viktor ā€¢ Winter Stag

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