Say "hello" to the final result of the Hello Song Animated project! 🗯
Several dozen amazing Animaniacs fans collaborated on this project to celebrate a song that never made it to the show. We hope you love it. Check it out and pass it around!
If you wanna check out each artist, we made a detailed credits with social media links: CHECK IT HERE!
One of my favorite things about the Warners is how, despite how clearly intelligent they are, they're still children and think like children. Like Yakko is such a smarty pants know-it-all, and yet he still gets caught up in simple childish misconceptions that he's 100% confident in. For example, the time he tried leading his sibs to Pennsylvania because he decided their parents must be pencils, but actually led them to Transylvania. Never a single doubt that he had done something incorrectly despite all the evidence in front of him. Also when they show up to military bootcamp fully believing it's summer camp, or keep insistently trying to order food from a place that is clearly not a restaurant. Yakko's sibs trust and respect him so much that they accept whatever explanation he gives them without a thought to the contrary, no matter how obviously silly it is.
It's one of my favorite things they do. Just being so confident and single-minded in seeing the world as zany children, even with all their worldly knowledge.
I would posit that Yakko, Wakko, and Dot Warner could kill Macbeth, as they were born on paper.
The Warner Brothers (and the Warner Sister) are an... interesting case. There have been numerous different explanations of the Warners' origins, though of course, in true Animaniacs fashion, these all massively conflict with each other. Several episodes begin with/mention the premise of the trio trying to find their parents (Yakko once speculates that their parents are pencils), though there have also been several implications that the three of them are royalty, to the point where in Wakko's Wish, we see a family portrait of the three siblings as young children with their parents, Sir William and his wife:
At the same time, however, we have "The Warners' 65th Anniversary Special" (the Season 1 finale), which details at length the exact animator who drew them, his boss, and their first appearances in cartoons in-universe. Here, it says their creator was Lon Borax, an animator who went insane from being overworked by his boss Weed Memlo (Good night, everybody!). Borax created them at 2:43AM and made them smash the intended main character, Buddy, with a mallet, before Borax ran away from the studio.
Dot is definitely able to kill Macbeth under Gender Clause either way (and arguably Wakko as well), but ignoring that for a moment: If we accept the idea that the Warner Siblings are royalty and have actual parents, then they would not apply for the UBC or BPC. But if we accept the idea that the Warner Siblings were brought to life in-universe as drawings (whether by Lon Borax or by Yakko's pencil theory), then they apply for both the Unconventional Birth Clause AND Birth Parent Clause.
So, ultimately, it comes down to what continuity you consider as "canon," though considering that this is Animaniacs we're talking about, there are far more cannons than canons.
Sorry that there's no clean answer here! Dot can definitely still kill Macbeth, though. Thank you for your submission!
I did a bunch of little redraws for everyone's favorite trio! love these little guys : )
im working very hard at figuring out how to give dot proper love
The Warner Siblings and The Powerpuff Girls are more similar than you think
Both groups of siblings:
Are a "Beauty, Brains, and Brawn" trio
(Simply put, Dot and Bubbles are both "the cute one")
(Blossom is studious, well organised, and often uses her brain to save the day; Yakko is a "smarty-pants", often outsmarts foes (and sometimes his sibs), and is very knowledgeable about academics-particularly geography and history)
(Buttercup is "the toughest fighter" and Wakko is the most destructive Warner and the most likely to use a mallet)
Are artificial beings who were created on the same day, not as babies but as children
Have a scientist as a guardian
Had a different scientist mass produce deformed clones of them, who eventually rebelled against him
Are insanely powerful to the point of being almost indestructible
(the PPG have superpowers due to Chemical X, and the Warners have Toon Physics/Force)
Became outcasts because of said abilities
Have comic-exclusive evil counterparts
Have fought the devil
...and have anime counterparts
In conclusion...um...Animaniacs good. Powerpuff Girls good. Watch them.