http://paramountcartoons.wikia.com/wiki/Little_Audrey
Can anyone confirm which of these Little Audrey shorts are real?
Some of them seem fake. The ones with Little Dot and Little Lotta in particular. I don't think they were ever animated characters.
>>93332130
bump for curiosity
i remember downloading a bunch of eps ages ago but never ended up watching them
i saw this one, it came on right after the episode of spongebob where squidwards eyes were blood and he funny scream
>>93332388
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5x9pM-uudE
>>93332388
That one is real.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5x9pM-uudE
>>93332426
>>93332432
creepypasta is real... woah
>>93332362
hot
I was never able to track down most of these. I can't say they don't exist, but it's very likely they aren't on the Internet and possibly lost or rare as fuck. Every Little Audrey cartoon I ever saw, including in the pre-Internet era were those you can find easily today on jewtube.
In other words I dunno. Either things got really messed up and the lists are fake or faulty or we truly are dealing with lost media. Wikipedia also has a list of Li'l Audrey cartoons that nobody has ever seen.
Toonova.net has 11 of the episodes
>>93335278
All of those are known and everywhere.
>>93332432
>implying every little girl wants to be adored just so they can treat everyone like a bitch
Hey /pol/? Got sumthin for ya!
>>93332130
i cant see dawg gawn on youtube but it exists
>Time to post these on Tinder and ensure Chris Hansen has enough work for the next few months!
>>93335715
>>93332426
That gave me a genuine chuckle
>>93332130
>Prior to her adoption by Famous in 1947, Little Audrey had a long career in folklore as the butt of a series of mostly dirty jokes, some going as far back as the First World War.
Pierre Berton, in The Dionne Years: A Thirties Melodrama (1978), offers this example of a Little Audrey joke as was in fashion around the time of the Dionne Quintuplets birth in 1934:
>Little Audrey's mother asks her to buy some groceries at the Safeway, and she laughed and laughed because she knew there was no safe way.
One of the most famous goes like this:
>One day, Li'l Audrey was playing with matches. Her mother told her she'd better stop before someone got hurt. But Li'l Audrey was awfully hard headed and kept playing with matches, and eventually she burned their house down.
>"Oh, Li'l Audrey, you are sure gonna catch it when your father comes home!" said her mother.
>But Li'l Audrey just laughed and laughed, because she knew her father had come home early to take a nap.
As nasty as some of these jokes were, they were extremely popular, and it became inevitable that someone would appropriate the name of the character.