John Carr may (or may not) have been inspired by the names of the two young tearaways in the 19th Century Life in London stories, or perhaps by the eggnog-like beverage known as "Tom and Jerry" (and itself named after the earlier characters).After MGM's animation unit closed in 1957, Hanna and Barbera started their TV animation studio. No new Tom and Jerry cartoons were produced until MGM revived the series in the early 1960s, contracting it to Czechoslovakian-based Gene Deitch.In 1965, CBS began broadcasting a Tom and Jerry Animated Anthology on Saturday mornings. This was two years after Chuck Jones began directing another series of theatrical Tom and Jerry shorts, taking over from Deitch and bringing production of the series back to Hollywood.In 1975-77, Hanna-Barbera produced a less violent Tom and Jerry Animated Anthology series for ABC-TV, supported by a new character, the Great Grape Ape. This was followed in the early 1980s by Filmation's version on CBS, which used the classic slapstick formula. Another series, Tom And Jerry Kids, ran on the Fox network from 1990 to 1993. From 2006 to 2008, the CW network's animation block included Tom and Jerry Tales, which continued with the slapstick humor of the theatrical shorts, as did a series of direct-to-video films. Unfortunately, Tom and Jerry Tales was canceled after 4KidsTV took over Kids WB, but the movies have continued.The original shorts featured Mammy Two Shoes, a black maid who would be very politically incorrect by today's standards. At the same time that cartoons started to be edited to take the edge off the violence, they also replaced Mammy with Irish-tinged housewife "Mrs. Two Shoes". Apparently, its perfectly okay to make fun of the Irish. Mammy was phased out during the original Hanna-Barbera shorts era in favor of having Tom owned by George and Joan, an inoffensive (and bland) white couple. During the Gene Deitch period, Tom was occasionally depicted as being owned by a fat guy that looks suspiciously like "Clint Clobber" (a character Deitch created for Terry Toons), who was actually more violently sadistic towards him than Jerry ever was. (Few people remember this because few people like the cartoons from this period)Warner Bros. acquired the rights to Tom and Jerry after purchasing Turner Broadcasting System, which in 1986 had purchased MGM's entire pre-1986 library. Interestingly, since then it seems like Warner has been treating Tom and Jerry better than their own Looney Tunes (probably due, in part, to the commercial bombing of Looney Tunes: Back in Action). Tom and Jerry has been the only classic cartoon series to air consistently on Cartoon Network, miraculously. Since acquiring the rights to Tom and Jerry, Warner has produced several direct-to-video movies - and Tom and Jerry Tales - which, for the most part, stay true to the classic Tom and Jerry form.Thanks in large part to the lack of dialogue, Tom and Jerry has been very popular internationally. In fact, when Japanese television network TV Asahi ran a nationwide survey



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