You thought "Injun Trouble" from 1969 was not a good way to end the Looney Tunes's run? Well, when they began doing theatrical shorts again in the late 1980s, they came to a tragic finish in 2004 due to the box-office bombing of "Looney Tunes: Back in Action" and some re-organizing at Warner Bros. Animation (especially with Sander Schwartz as executive producer and retooling the studio to largely produce realistic serious action cartoons). The final hand-drawn theatrical-intended "Looney Tunes" short to be made was a Porky Pig outing entitled "My Generation G...G...Gap." It involved even worse attempts at trying to make a legacy property relevant again (somewhat reminiscent of "What's New, Scooby-Doo?" the same studio and crew were also doing at the time), over-the-top violence and cliched plots, and subpar animation and poor voice-acting (Billy West is a great voice actor and all, but he's not a very good Porky Pig). This short even didn't get to be released theatrically, partly due to "Back in Action"'s failure and partly because the head-ups at Warner Bros. Animation were appalled at the job Larry Doyle and Sherry Gunther were doing with these final Looney Tunes shorts, fired them and canceled production on the remaining shorts. After which, so far any theatrical "Looney Tunes" shorts made have been CGI (from 2010 to 2013), and everything else has been produced either for television, direct-to-video or streaming services (this includes the excellent "Looney Tunes Cartoons" that does a noticeably better job at capturing the spirit of the classics than this cartoon certainly does!) Clip © 2003-04 Warner Bros. Discovery; FAIR USE!