Much of the Wackyland sequence was adapted and reused by Clampett for inclusion in his 1943 short
Tin Pan Alley Cats. A color remake of
Porky in Wackyland was supervised by
Friz Freleng in 1948. Re-titled as
Dough for the Do-Do, the remake was released in 1949. The films were nearly identical, in many cases appearing to match frame-by-frame in certain details, albeit with Porky's appearance updated (by redoing most of the animation of the character), the voices having evolved (with less use of speeding-up) and the backgrounds being changed to a surreal, Daliesque landscape.
Dough for the Do-Do was produced in
Technicolor, but was originally released in
Cinecolor due to a dispute with the Technicolor corporation. Later reissues were printed by Technicolor. There were at least two
Terrytoons plagiarizations of
Porky in Wackyland in the 1940s or 1950s.
Dingbat Land (1949) starred
Gandy Goose and Sourpuss. The role of the Do-Do was taken by a minor Terrytoons character, Dingbat.
Tex Avery, for whom Clampett worked as an animator in the mid-1930s, borrowed strongly from this cartoon for his 1948 MGM cartoons
Half-Pint Pygmy (in which the characters,
George and Junior, travel to Africa in search of the world's smallest pygmy, only to discover that he has an uncle who's even smaller) and
The Cat That Hated People (where the cat travels to the moon and encounters an array of characters similar to those in Clampett's Wackyland, e.g., a pair of gloves and lips that keep saying "Mammy, mammy", just like the Al Jolson duck in
Porky in Wackyland). Clampett would again use the Three Stooges parody when a later creation of his,
Beany and Cecil, faced the "Dreaded Three-Headed Threep". According to writer
Paul Dini, the Do-Do Bird is the father of
Gogo Dodo, a character on the 1990s animated TV series
Tiny Toon Adventures, and a second Wackyland is drawn into Acme Acres by Babs and Buster Bunny. A small clip from the film was used in a
Slappy Squirrel segment on another Warners animated TV series of the 1990s,
Animaniacs. The segment, titled "Critical Condition", featured
Porky in Wackyland as part of a fake
LaserDisc release. The Do-Do Bird has made occasional guest spots in the
DC Comics Looney Tunes comic book, being colored in
grayscale as opposed to the rest of the art being in color. The character makes an appearance in the
Wii game
Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal as an unplayable character. He is given a first name, Yoyo Dodo. Yoyo can also be seen at Maroon Cartoon Studios as a brief cameo during the beginning of the 1988 film
Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Yoyo also made a cameo in the 2020
Looney Tunes Cartoons short "Happy Birthday, Bugs Bunny!" and plays a large role in the
stop motion episode "Daffy in Wackyland". ==See also==