Merrie Melodies.
Hercules.
The construction worker's boss.
Grandma's Pet (1932) (1932 January 18). The Big Bad Wolf waves a magic wand and suddenly Oswald, who was climbing over a fence, is hanging from a beam on top of a construction site.
A Dream Walking (1934) (1934). "Popeye follows Olive Oyl's sleepwalking excursion up, over, around and through the dizzying heights of the city's houses, skyscrapers, and flagpoles." (Leonard Maltin, Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Cartoons, NY, 1987, p. 109.)
Sock-a-Bye, Baby (1934) (1934). Popeye destroys a construction site just to keep the noise from waking up the baby he's sitting.
The Riveter (1940) (1940). Donald Duck has close calls as a construction worker on a developing skyscraper.
Nix on Hypnotricks (1941) (1941). Prof. I. Stare hypnotizes Olive via the telephone. She wanders around obliviously on a construction site.
Homeless Hare (1950) (1950). Bugs Bunny, in a daze after a worker hits him on the head with a steel beam, walks about on a skyscraper under construction.
Child Sockology (1953) (1953). Popeye and Bluto chase Swee'pea on a construction site.
Cat Feud (1958) (1958). A bulldog chases a cat on the skeleton of partly constructed skyscraper.
Tot Watchers (1958) (1958). Tom and Jerry try to prevent a baby from coming to harm after it wanders from home and onto a construction site.
Bad Day at Cat Rock (1965) (1965). Tom chases Jerry on a construction site.
Skyscraper Caper (1968) (1968). Daffy Duck sleepwalks on a construction site; his pal Speedy Gonzales tries to save him.
The New Tom & Jerry Show (1975): Towering Fiasco (1975). A huge, out-of-control dog, pulls two dogwalkers (Tom and Jerry) onto a construction and into danger.
High Rise Hair Raiser (1976) (1976). The Spectre chases Scooby and Shaggy on the 19th and 20th floors of a building under construction.
Baby's Day Out (1994) (1994). Three bumbling crooks chase a baby on a construction site.
A Dream Walking (1934) (1934). "Popeye follows Olive Oyl's sleepwalking excursion up, over, around and through the dizzying heights of the city's houses, skyscrapers, and flagpoles." (Leonard Maltin, Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Cartoons, NY, 1987, p. 109.)
Sock-a-Bye, Baby (1934) (1934). Popeye destroys a construction site just to keep the noise from waking up the baby he's sitting.
The Riveter (1940) (1940). Donald Duck has close calls as a construction worker on a developing skyscraper.
Nix on Hypnotricks (1941) (1941). Prof. I. Stare hypnotizes Olive via the telephone. She wanders around obliviously on a construction site.
Homeless Hare (1950) (1950). Bugs Bunny, in a daze after a worker hits him on the head with a steel beam, walks about on a skyscraper under construction.
Child Sockology (1953) (1953). Popeye and Bluto chase Swee'pea on a construction site.
Cat Feud (1958) (1958). A bulldog chases a cat on the skeleton of partly constructed skyscraper.
Tot Watchers (1958) (1958). Tom and Jerry try to prevent a baby from coming to harm after it wanders from home and onto a construction site.
Bad Day at Cat Rock (1965) (1965). Tom chases Jerry on a construction site.
Skyscraper Caper (1968) (1968). Daffy Duck sleepwalks on a construction site; his pal Speedy Gonzales tries to save him.
The New Tom & Jerry Show (1975): Towering Fiasco (1975). A huge, out-of-control dog, pulls two dogwalkers (Tom and Jerry) onto a construction and into danger.
High Rise Hair Raiser (1976) (1976). The Spectre chases Scooby and Shaggy on the 19th and 20th floors of a building under construction.
Baby's Day Out (1994) (1994). Three bumbling crooks chase a baby on a construction site.
Some TV prints remove the scene where Bugs Bunny drops a brick on the construction worker's face.
Source: The Censored Cartoons Page
Source: The Censored Cartoons Page
See: this FAQ entry
Yes, it's included in Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume Three (2005) (V) Disc 1.
This cartoon is also a bonus feature on the 2005 Warner Home Video DVD release of White Heat (1949) (1949).
This cartoon is also a bonus feature on the 2005 Warner Home Video DVD release of White Heat (1949) (1949).
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