On Jan. 18, 2007, the final question on the game show Jeopardy was...
A: The middle initial E. of this character introduced in 1949 stands for Ethelbert.
Q: Who is Wile E. Coyote?
Ever wonder where the heck this "fact" came from? It wasn't from a cartoon or anything revealed by Chuck Jones later in life. No, it came from a single 1973 Looney Tunes comic book story. Below you can see the infamous artwork for yourself.
I really doubt this was ever intended to be the character's "official" middle name but thanks to Jeopardy, I am sure this "fact" will be popping up for years to come.
UPDATE: Mark Evanier, author of the "Ethelbert" story, has written more about the subject on his blog.
4 comments:
i was watching that episode and was embarrased i didn't know. I said Alfred E. Newman. Thanks for providing this. I KNEW they never said it in a cartoon!
Ah, Dell comics...you'll throw ANY unrelated characters together!
I remember a comic in which Sylvester explained that he says "Sufferin' Succotash" in rememberance of his Uncle Succotash, the great wild game hunter. Will Jeopardy add that to the canon as well?
I always liked the answer I heard from Chuck Jones in the late '80's. The E in Wile E. Coyote stands for the same thing that Ulysses S. Grant claimed the S stood for. To quote Grant: "In mine you know it does not stand for anything."
can you show the whole story of Ethelberth, please?
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