"Stay Tooned, Folks!"
I found this while surfing the internet yesterday. It's an original short story written by Gary K. Wolf, author of the cult fantasy / mystery novel
Who Censored Roger Rabbit? that inspired the famous film adaptation, as well as its prose sequel, and it's set in the same world. For those of you who not familiar with this humble little series (and if you're one of those people, shame on you!), it's set in an alternate 1947 Hollywood where cartoon characters actually exist as a racial minority that coexists with normal humans like you and me. The famous characters we see on television and film, like Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny, and all their ilk, are Hollywood actors as real and alive as Clark Gable and Liz Taylor, and their work is scripted and filmed in the same way, not drawn and worked on by animators. The protagonists in the series are Eddie Valiant (portrayed by Bob Hoskins in the movie), a private detective that works for the 'toon movie stars although he's racially prejudiced against them, and his usual client, Roger Rabbit, an oblivious short film 'toon actor with a consistent knack for running afoul of Hollywood shady types.
You guys like reading, right? You like metafiction? Then you should enjoy this. Cheers!
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Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you walk into an open sewer and die. -Mel Brooks