The 3 Little Pigs in Pop Culture/Culture Influences
1. Sesame Street used The 3 Little Pigs fairy tale to educate children while entertaining parents by parodying the T.V show House of Cards and making it House of Bricks. It is a political parody, where a devious predator Frank Underwolf tries to force his way into the White Brick House by blowing down the houses of any pigs in his way.
2. The Three Little Pigs and the bad wolf appear in all of the Shrek movies.
In the first Shrek movie, The Three Little Pigs and the bad wolf appear with many other fairy tale animals who were banished by Lord Farquaad
3. In 2003 Studio 100 made a musical called Three Little Pigs, about the daughters of the pig who lived in the stone house.
4. In 1953, Tex Avery did a droopy cartoon, "The Three Little Pups", based on the Three Little Pigs. The wolf is a Southern speaking dog catcher trying to catch Droopy and his brothers, Snoopy and Loopy, to put in the dog pound.
5. In 1989, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, which is a parody of The Three Little Pigs, is a first-person narrative by the wolf, who says the entire incident as a misunderstanding; he had gone to the pigs to borrow some sugar, had destroyed their houses in a sneezing fit, ate the first two pigs to not waste food (since they'd died in the house collapse anyway), and was caught attacking the third pig's house after the pig had continually insulted him.
1. Sesame Street used The 3 Little Pigs fairy tale to educate children while entertaining parents by parodying the T.V show House of Cards and making it House of Bricks. It is a political parody, where a devious predator Frank Underwolf tries to force his way into the White Brick House by blowing down the houses of any pigs in his way.
2. The Three Little Pigs and the bad wolf appear in all of the Shrek movies.
In the first Shrek movie, The Three Little Pigs and the bad wolf appear with many other fairy tale animals who were banished by Lord Farquaad
3. In 2003 Studio 100 made a musical called Three Little Pigs, about the daughters of the pig who lived in the stone house.
4. In 1953, Tex Avery did a droopy cartoon, "The Three Little Pups", based on the Three Little Pigs. The wolf is a Southern speaking dog catcher trying to catch Droopy and his brothers, Snoopy and Loopy, to put in the dog pound.
5. In 1989, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, which is a parody of The Three Little Pigs, is a first-person narrative by the wolf, who says the entire incident as a misunderstanding; he had gone to the pigs to borrow some sugar, had destroyed their houses in a sneezing fit, ate the first two pigs to not waste food (since they'd died in the house collapse anyway), and was caught attacking the third pig's house after the pig had continually insulted him.