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Dog Daze (1937)

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Dog Daze

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Lots of era specific sight gags in this short, which was geared to a more adult audience. The celebrities parodied at the very beginning are Edward G. Robinson and William Powell (aka The thin Man) and canine sidekick, Asta.
With prohibition ending just four years before, America was once more awash in alcoholic beverages, as well as alcohol related humor, shown here.
Popular country western recording stars Sons of the Pioneers provided the singing here. One of the earliest such groups, its members included future Western matinee idol Roy Rogers.
"Come up and see our itchings" parodies the line, "come up and see my etchings," supposedly used by a man eager to get a woman into his apartment.
The dogs first shown in the exhibition booths are labeled Bulldog, Wolf Hound, Scottie, and Ralph Wolfe. The latter name (without the "e") reappeared as a character name 16 years later in the Warner Brothers cartoon "Don't Give Up the Sheep," the first Ralph Wolf/Sam Sheepdog pairing.

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