(That Steven Spielberg was, and remains, an executive producer of the show made for some particularly fun and meta moments.) Yakko, Wakko and Dot were part of a bustling “Tiny Toons” universe including mouse odd couple Pinky and the Brain, Slappy the Squirrel, and a trio of wise guy pigeons known as the “Goodfeathers.” Together, they wreaked havoc, traveled through time, sang silly songs and skewered the more ridiculous sides of Hollywood, both old and new. The first “Animaniacs,” from creator Tom Ruegger, was an explosion of bonkers energy with a sly sense of humor that kept it as buoyant as its constantly bouncing protagonists. (Sure.) So while the 1993 “Animaniacs” was aggressively self-aware, this 2020 version feels aggressively so, even defiant, as it constantly works to justify its existence. In the tweaked opening credits, one of TV’s most enduring theme songs gets pointed lyric updates advising mad nerds to remember that the “Animaniacs” “did meta first,” and assuring the audience that this reboot is appropriately “gender neutral” and “ethnically diverse” for its new era. In one of the first new episodes, for instance, Warner brothers Yakko (Rob Paulsen), Wakko (Jess Harnell) and their Warner sister Dot (Tress MacNeille) sing a peppy song about Hollywood’s conveyer belt of reboots that ends with them all sitting on a giant pile of cash while the Hulu logo blares behind them in bright neon. The new “ Animaniacs,” premiering on Hulu 27 years after it first debuted and in a world where the iconic WB water tower recently got an HBO Max makeover, is well aware of what its preemptive critics might think of it.
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