The first use of "Powerhouse" in a cartoon occurred in the 1943
Warner Bros. Looney Tunes short ''
Porky Pig's Feat, directed by Frank Tashlin. Also in 1943, it was used in the Private Snafu shorts Gripes
, Spies, and Rumors''. It was subsequently featured in over 40 other Warner Bros. cartoons. The most well-known "assembly-line" usage of "Powerhouse B" occurs in
Bob Clampett's
Baby Bottleneck (1946), in which newborn babies (of various species) are processed on a conveyor belt in time to the melody. The "Powerhouse A" section is featured prominently during
Bugs Bunny's altercation with a
gremlin in Clampett's 1943
Merrie Melodies cartoon
Falling Hare. Stalling's lengthiest adaptation of the "Powerhouse A" section is interpolated during the beginning and end of the rocket travel sequence in the 1953
Merrie Melodies cartoon
Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century (directed by
Chuck Jones). It starts at roughly 2:20, clocking in at one minute and twenty-five seconds. Other Warner cartoons which contain excerpts from "Powerhouse" include
Birdy and the Beast (1944),
Cat-Tails for Two (1953),
Early to Bet (1951),
His Bitter Half (1950),
House-Hunting Mice (1948), ''
It's Hummer Time (1950), Jumpin' Jupiter (1955), Rocket Squad (1956), A Sheep in the Deep (1962), Compressed Hare'' (1961), and dozens more. In the 1960s, producer
Hal Seeger and composer/arranger
Winston Sharples adapted "Powerhouse" and other Scott compositions in dozens of episodes of their
Batfink cartoon series. The original Raymond Scott Quintette recordings, including "Powerhouse", were licensed in the early 1990s for
soundtrack usage in twelve episodes of
The Ren & Stimpy Show. Various passages of the tune have been arranged for use in
The Simpsons,
Duckman,
The Bernie Mac Show, and
The Drew Carey Show (in a brief scene involving an animated character). An entire 1993 episode of
Animaniacs, "Toy Shop Terror", was set to Warner Bros. music director
Richard Stone's arrangement of the composition. "Powerhouse" also served as bumper theme music for
Cartoon Network from 1998 to 2003, and can be heard as a systematic rock theme in the 2003 feature film
Looney Tunes: Back in Action. "Powerhouse" has been used in
The Simpsons four times, usually in reference to the Warner Bros. cartoons. The first occurs in "
And Maggie Makes Three" (Season 6, Episode 13) during a montage of a bowling pin assembly line. In the episode "
Bart Has Two Mommies" (Season 17, Episode 14), "Powerhouse" B is adapted in a scene that pays homage to the 1937
Disney short
The Old Mill, when
Homer Simpson gets caught in the Old Mill while trying to save his Rubber Duckie. In the episode "
Little Big Girl" (Season 18, Episode 12), "Powerhouse" was used during the sequence where the fire at Cletus' farm is lit. In the episode "
The Fool Monty" (Season 22, Episode 6), "Powerhouse" was adapted as background music for a construction scene in which
Charles Montgomery Burns, having lost his memory, is led to a dangerous construction site by Homer Simpson, who seeks revenge for Burns' years of cruel behavior. Burns walks along moving girders, narrowly avoids flying rivets, and other well-worn cartoon construction site gags.
Simpsons creator
Matt Groening once ranked "Powerhouse" as #14 on a list of his "100 Favorite Things". In the
SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Broken Alarm" from
season 12, an arrangement plays over a scene of
SpongeBob SquarePants using a
Rube Goldberg machine to get to work. The arrangement uses an
ukulele, an instrument traditionally used in SpongeBob music. "Powerhouse," with added lyrics and a new arrangement, was used as a recurring song in the Looney Tunes animated series
Bugs Bunny Builders entitled "Hard Hat Time" by composer Matthew Janszen. An arrangement of the song by Joshua Moshier was also used for the "Push the Button, Pull the Crank" sequence in the 2024 film
The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie, while
Daffy Duck and
Porky Pig work in the Goodie
Gum factory. A
Shibuya-kei influenced arrangement of "Powerhouse B" was used in the
Battle for Dream Island episode "Fishes and Dishes" during the scene where Two complains about their plates being washed away by the pool water and ending up at "the steepest hill" of the grasslands, then going up the "zoomy ramp of Yoyle legend", then falling on the clouds in the sky, and finally sinking into the Goiky Canal. ==Recent performances, recordings, and usages==