Special Report

30 of the Most Iconic Bunnies of All Time

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Television Distribution

Ricochet Rabbit
> Debuted: 1964

Ricochet Rabbit is a character in Hanna-Barbera’s “The Magilla Gorilla Show” and “The Peter Potamus Show.” A sheriff in the Wild West town of Hoop ‘n’ Holler, he was named for his habit of bouncing off objects while yelling his catchphrase “Ping-ping-ping!”

Source: Courtesy of Washington Post Writers Group

Hodge-Podge
> Debuted: 1980

Hodge-Podge is a character in Berke Breathed’s Pulitzer Prize-winning comic strip Bloom County. Bloom County examines social and cultural issues from the perspective of small-town America, albeit one where animals talk. Hodge-Podge is a knee-jerk conservative.

Source: Courtesy of Army Surplus Komikz / Joshua Quagmire

Cutey Bunny
> Debuted: 1982

Cutey Bunny is a comic book superheroine created by Joshua Quagmire, parodying the “Cutey Honey” manga series. Cutey Bunny has appeared in various comic books since the early 1980s. She is the alter ego of special agent Kelly O’Hare, who has been described as “the world’s first African-American rabbit superheroine.”

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