Pussyfoot has appeared in some Warner Bros. merchandising and the pair have been featured in various Warner Bros. productions, such as the third segment of
Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983) and a
Looney Tunes comic book story called "Bringing Up Baby" that was published in 1999.
Tiny Toon Adventures featured a similar character named
Barky Marky, who was a comparatively minor character on the show. The pair were also an inspiration for the characters
Buttons and Mindy that were featured in the successor to
Tiny Toon Adventures,
Animaniacs. In the Buttons and Mindy short "Cat on a Hot Steel Beam", the cat that Mindy follows throughout the cartoon is Pussyfoot. Additionally, the kitten makes a very brief cameo appearance in the
Chuck Jones short
Another Froggy Evening (1995). Jones would later revisit the idea of a cute kitten having an unlikely protector in the
MGM Tom and Jerry short
The Unshrinkable Jerry Mouse (1964), with Jerry becoming a kitten's friend and protector against a selfish and jealous Tom (the plot of which was borrowed from
Feline Frame-Up (1954)). In
Feline Frame-Up,
Claude Cat attempts to convince their human owner that Marc Antony wants to harm Pussyfoot. A segment of
Feed the Kitty in which an apparently "inconsolable" Marc Antony believes that Pussyfoot has been turned into a cookie (and unaware that the kitten is actually perfectly safe), was the subject of a homage in the 2001
Pixar film
Monsters, Inc. in which Sulley believes that a little human girl he is protecting has fallen into a trash compactor, and reenacts the scene with Marc Antony nearly shot-for-shot. A reference is also made to
Feed the Kitty in the
South Park episode "
Mysterion Rises" with
Eric Cartman acting as Pussyfoot and
Cthulhu as Marc Antony in his "cute kitten" routine. In
Archer, the relationship between
Archer and his daughter A.J. was inspired by their cartoons according to series creator
Adam Reed. ==Alternate names==