Later reruns of
Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales are quite different from the original network airings, like most cartoon series produced by Total Television. The first 34
Tennessee Tuxedo cartoons were incorporated into syndicated prints of
The Underdog Show. That syndicated package actually was a revised version of another earlier (mid-1960s) syndicated series called
Cartoon Cut-Ups which initially featured first season segments of
Underdog,
Tennessee Tuxedo, and
Commander McBragg. In fact, the syndicated
Underdog Show includes some artifacts such as the
Cartoon Cut-Ups closing, combining portions of the original
Tennessee Tuxedo and
Underdog closings, effectively eliminating the punch line of the visual "Post No Bills" joke in the original
Underdog closing. It also includes the final teaser at the end of the show in which announcer George S. Irving says, "Looks like this is the end...but don't miss our next
Cartoon Cut-Ups show!" (the line was redubbed to say "Underdog" instead of "Cartoon Cut-Ups".) In syndication,
Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales features different supporting cartoon segments compared to the show's original network run, including some cartoons from the
Jay Ward studio. The first 39 syndicated episodes (#901–939) include "
Tooter Turtle," "
Bullwinkle's Corner" (followed by a vintage
Rocky and His Friends commercial bumper), and "
Aesop And Son." For syndicated episodes #940–945 and again from #956 through the end of the episode cycle, the supporting segments are all Jay Ward cartoons: "
Peabody's Improbable History," "
Mr. Know-It-All," and "
Fractured Fairy Tales." Syndicated shows #946 through #955 repeat the "Tooter Turtle," "Bullwinkle's Corner", and "Aesop And Son" cartoons already shown in episodes #901–910. Each of the seventy
Tennessee Tuxedo cartoons themselves appears twice over the 140 syndicated shows, in addition to the repeats of the first 34 segments as part of the syndicated
Underdog Show (during a recent run on the
Black Family Channel cable network, only shows #901–934 were aired). In its first season during its original network run,
Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales featured segments of "The Hunter" and "The King And Odie". Both segments originated in the 1960 series
King Leonardo And His Short Subjects, but
Tennessee Tuxedo included 26 newly produced segments of both, which were not seen on the original
King Leonardo program (and were not syndicated as part of that package either). The following season, "The Hunter" began appearing as a segment on
The Underdog Show, and the "Hunter" spot in
Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales was filled by repeated segments of "Tooter Turtle" (a character also previously seen on
King Leonardo And His Short Subjects). The "Tooter" cartoons shown on
Tennessee Tuxedo were all repeated segments; no new segments were produced. Between 1968 and 1970, "Tooter Turtle" and "The Hunter" were seen as part of ABC-TV's
The Dudley Do-Right Show. The 26 "Hunter" and "King & Odie" segments originally produced for
Tennessee Tuxedo are seen in syndicated reruns as part of the
Dudley Do-Right And Friends package (which also is different from the 1968–1970
Dudley Do-Right Show). As both the
Tennessee Tuxedo and "Bullwinkle"-related segments are now owned by different companies (the former by
Universal Television and the latter by
WildBrain/Ward Productions), the original syndicated format has been withdrawn from distribution. ==Home media==