In film and television smashed into an
ACME Instant Tunnel on the wall of the Rotch Library at
MIT Examples that specifically reference the Wile E. Coyote cartoon character include: • Various forms of film and television based on
the Looney Tunes franchise often deal with the Acme Corporation. • The 1988 film
Who Framed Roger Rabbit attempted to explain Acme's inner workings in detail. The plot is centered on the murder of the corporation's owner, Marvin Acme (
Stubby Kaye). Many of the film's scenes involve Acme products and its climax is set in an Acme warehouse. • The
Tiny Toon Adventures series expanded on Acme's influence, with the entire setting of the series taking place in a city called "Acme Acres" and its young
protagonists attending "Acme Looniversity". In one episode, Calamity Coyote sues Acme, accusing it of making products that are unsafe. • The corporation appears as the antagonistic force of
Looney Tunes: Back in Action. The head offices of Acme are depicted, revealing it to be a
multinational corporation whose executive officers are led by the film's main
antagonist, Mr. Chairman, portrayed by
Steve Martin. • The 2015
direct-to-video animated film
Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run portrays Acme as a
department store. •
Coyote vs. Acme revolves around Wile E. Coyote suing Acme for their faulty products; it is set to be released on August 28, 2026. Acme's legal defense is lead by Buddy Crane, played by
John Cena while the role of Acme CEO is filled by
Foghorn Leghorn. • The animated series
Loonatics Unleashed is set in a city called Acmetropolis. • The corporation is mentioned/referenced in
Animaniacs numerous times, one of the most prominent examples being the episode "Cookies for Einstein", which features product ads for the "Acme Pocket Fisherman" and "Acme Hair Magnet", as well as the "Acme Song". • In the recurring segment
Pinky and the Brain, which would later receive its spin-off series, the titular protagonists reside in a cage at Acme Labs. • In ''
Wakko's Wish, the Animaniacs'' feature film, characters live in the village of Acme Falls. •
External World, a short film by
David OReilly, features Acme Retirement Castle, a dystopian retirement facility for disabled cartoon characters. • In the 1998 Spanish film
The Miracle of P. Tinto, Acme is referenced along with an equally fictional competing Spanish business, Mikasa. When a Mikasa product appears on screen, it is announced in the same tone as Acme products are in the Spanish dubbing of
Looney Tunes. • In the 1978 animated special
Raggedy Ann and Andy in The Great Santa Claus Caper (written, directed and co-produced by Chuck Jones), Acme is credited as making Gloopstick, touted as a clear and indestructible compound to preserve toys perfectly. Gloopstick is brought to
Santa Claus' workshop by "inefficiency expert" Alexander Graham Wolf, who strongly resembles Wile E. Coyote in appearance and voice.
Music •
Bell X1's song "One Stringed Harp" includes the lyric ''"Like Wile E. Coyote/As if the fall wasn't enough/Those bastards from Acme/They got more nasty stuff"''. • The
Brazilian thrash metal band
Chakal has a song titled "Acme Dead End Road" from its 1990 album,
The Man Is His Own Jackal. The song begins with the
Road Runner signature sound "
beep, beep".
Legal humor • Joey Green wrote "Cliff-hanger Justice", a fictional account of a
product liability lawsuit by Wile E. Coyote against Acme, which appeared in three parts in the August, September, and October 1982 issues of
National Lampoon magazine. •
Ian Frazier wrote a fictional legal complaint "
Coyote v. Acme", which was published in
The New Yorker in 1990 and later became the title piece of a short fiction collection. The story was the inspiration for the film
Coyote vs. Acme, which is scheduled to be released in 2026.
Other • The
Comprehensive Perl Archive Network provides an "Acme::" namespace that contains many humorous, useless, and abstract modules for the
Perl programming language. It was named "in homage to that greatest of all absurd system creators: Wile E. Coyote." •
ACME Communications was a former U.S. broadcasting company established by former
Fox Broadcasting Company executive
Jamie Kellner. The stations were affiliated with Warner Bros' broadcast television network
The WB, for which he was also a founding executive, and the Acme name was a reference to the cartoon. •
ACME Night is a
Cartoon Network block. •
Acme Tools is an online and in-store retailer. ==Cultural impact==