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- Series premiere: Beanstalk Bunny (1955), Little Rural Riding Hood (1949), Vim, Vigor and Vitaliky (1936), Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story of Life (1965), Walky Talky Hawky (1946).
- Bill seems cursed after he walks under a ladder, in this bad luck-themed episode featuring Bowery Bugs (1949), Bad Luck Blackie (1949), Leave Well Enough Alone (1939), Big Game Haunt (1968), and The Dog House (1952).
- With Bill suffering from amnesia, Toony turns to a slate of cartoons about cartooning itself and the moviegoing tradition to jog his memory: Rabbit Rampage (1955), A Cartoonist's Nightmare (1935), The Tom and Jerry Cartoon Kit (1962), The Film Fan (1939), and Box-Office Bunny (1990).
- Bill shakes up his routine as the show focuses on second-string stars: Pepe le Pew - Really Scent (1959), Screwy Squirrel - Happy-Go-Nutty (1944), Wile E. Coyote - Rabbit's Feat (1960), Barney Bear - The Unwelcome Guest (1945), Elmer Fudd - A Mutt in a Rut (1959).
- Toony tries to help Bill get over his fear of flying with some aviation-themed cartoons: Hare Lift (1952), Little Johnny Jet (1953), Hot Air Aces (1949), The Flying Cat (1952), and The Jet Cage (1962).
- Bill, Goldie, and Mr. Quizzer introduce new puppet characters while the cartoons showcase first appearances of secondary or recurring characters: Devil May Hare (1954), Pip-eye, Pup-eye, Poop-eye an' Peep-eye (1942), The Abominable Snow Rabbit (1961), Jerry's Cousin (1951), and Hobo Bobo (1947).
- Bill has a dentist appointment and Toony learns that tuna fish have teeth, while the cartoons feature classic tooth gags: The Wacky Wabbit (1942), Hook, Line and Stinker (1958), The Super Snooper (1952), Lumberjack and Jill (1949), and Canned Feud (1951).
- Everyone around Bill is acting strangely out of character, while the cartoons feature rivals becoming friends and other atypical behavior: Rabbit Fire (1951), Jerry's Diary (1949), Droopy's Double Trouble (1951), Gopher Spinach (1954), Roadrunner a Go-Go (1965).
- Bill, Toony, and the gang go to great lengths trying to break the record for continuous rhyming (even recording a rap music video). Cartoons include What's Opera, Doc? (1957), Thumb Fun (1952), Rock 'n' Rodent (1967), We Aim to Please (1934), All Fowled Up (1955).
- Toony overhears Bill's phone call with a car dealership and mistakenly suspects his sidekick job is in jeopardy. Cartoons include: One Froggy Evening (1955), Little Red Riding Rabbit (1944), Duel Personality (1966), The Spinach Roadster (1936), and Hopalong Casualty (1960).
- After poking his eye with a knitting needle, Bill acts increasingly like a pirate, accompanied by a lineup of pirate- and nautical-themed cartoons: Buccaneer Bunny (1948), Moby Duck (1965), Spooky Swabs (1957), Dicky Moe (1962), The Mouse on 57th Street (1961).
- Toony downloads a laugh track app to up his comedic appeal, much to Bill's annoyance. Cartoons include Robin Hood Daffy (1958), A Tale of Two Kitties (1942), Just Plane Beep (1965), Nearlyweds (1957), and Puss 'N' Boats (1966).
- Bill and Toony's preparations for a farm-themed episode are undercut by the sound effects mistakes of a new sound operator. Cartoons include: Duck Amuck (1953), Fish and Slips (1962), Spree Lunch (1957), The Cat's Me-Ouch (1965), and Little Boy Boo (1954).
- Sleepy and unprepared after an all-night game of tic-tac-toe, Bill and Toony must find ways to fill airtime without a script. Cartoons include: False Hare (1964), Blue Cat Blues (1956), Hospitaliky (1937), One Droopy Knight (1957), and A Sheep in the Deep (1962).
- Bill explores new functions of his trusty remote control, with a slate of cartoons featuring robots and other examples of technological ingenuity: Hare-Way to the Stars (1958), Advance and Be Mechanized (1967), A Great Big Bunch of You (1932), Insect to Injury (1956), The Solid Tin Coyote (1966).
- Bill falls into a hypnotic trance and regresses into his past-life identity as Victorian pickpocket "Jimmy the Slice". Cartoons include: The Hare-Brained Hypnotist (1942), Matinee Mouse (1966), Pied Piper Porky (1939), Out to Punch (1956), A Bird in a Bonnet (1958).
- Bill helps Toony earn Gil Scout merit badges. The cartoon lineup includes Backwoods Bunny (1959), Cruise Cat (1952), Baby Wants a Bottleship (1942), Daffy's Diner (1967), and D' Fightin' Ones (1961).
- Bill can't find his "good" baseball cap, but a MeTV detective team is soon on the case. The cartoon lineup includes From Hare to Heir (1960), Much Ado About Nutting (1953), Corn on the Cop (1965), Bad Day at Cat Rock (1965), and Olive's $weep$take Ticket (1941).
- Toony is jealous of Svengoolie (1995) mascot Kerwyn, as personal rivalries take center stage both in the studio and in the cartoons: A Star Is Bored (1956), Hip Hip-Hurry! (1958), Let's You and Him Fight (1934), Ain't She Tweet (1952), Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story of Life (1965).
- The show is retooled as a morning zoo radio simulcast, with Bill recast as Simon Shock, an obnoxious radio shock jock. Cartoons include Hare Conditioned (1945), The Zoot Cat (1944), Be Kind to 'Aminals' (1935), Muzzle Tough (1954), and The Ducksters (1950).
- 2021–6.7 (8)TV EpisodeToony can't swim after eating (and Toony can't stop eating). Bill takes a swimming test. Cartoons include Porky's Poor Fish (1940), Aqua Duck (1963), Filet Meow (1966), Weasel Stop (1956), and Clippety Clobbered (1966).
- Toony transforms the studio into a comedy club, but finds his jokes greeted by crickets while Bill and Kerwyn get big laughs. Cartoons include Show Biz Bugs (1957), Symphony in Spinach (1948), Purr-Chance to Dream (1967), Out and Out Rout (1966), and Dog Pounded (1954).
- Toony prepares for a job interview with the Big Kahuna of MeTV, leaving Bill to host the show on his own. Cartoons include The Million Hare (1963), Pecos Pest (1955), Parlez Vous Woo (1956), Mouse-Warming (1952), and The Foghorn Leghorn (1948).
- A burned-out Toony treats himself to a day of spa treatments, and Bill and Toony pay tribute to the late Dawn Wells. Cartoons include Compressed Hare (1961), Assault and Flattery (1956), Daffy's Inn Trouble (1961), Grin and Share It (1957), and The Slick Chick (1962).
- When the studio runs out of ink, the show becomes a black-and-white film noir mystery, with a lineup heavy on caper cartoons: Naughty Neighbors (1939), The Great Piggy Bank Robbery (1946), Catty Cornered (1953), Private Eye Popeye (1954), Ready, Woolen and Able (1960).