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Giving to charity isn't just for the rich anymore
Giving to charity isn't just for the rich anymore

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Giving to charity isn't just for the rich anymore

In this episode of Financial Freestyle, host Ross Mac is joined by Adam Nash, co-founder and CEO of the charitable donation app Daffy. Adam breaks down his incredible career in Silicon Valley, what a donor-advised fund is, and his mission to democratize personal finance. To learn more about how a gifting plan can help support important causes and give you a valuable tax write-off, check out this week's episode of Financial Freestyle. Listen and subscribe to Financial Freestyle on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts. Financial Freestyle with Ross Mac on Yahoo Finance is dedicated to promoting economic prosperity for all. Through expert insights, practical advice, and inspiring success stories, we empower you to build and grow wealth. Join us on this transformative journey toward financial freedom and inclusive economic growth. This post was written by Dennis Golin. Welcome to Financial Freestyle. I'm Ross Mack, and this is sponsored by to Financial Freestyle here on Yahoo Finance. I'm your host, Ross Mack. No matter where you are on your financial journey, you could always learn more and that's why I'm always talking to some of the most informative people, inspirational people in the world of finance, helping you get to a bag. In today's no different, I'm talking to Adam Nash, CEO and co-founder of Daffy. Adam, how are you doing today? Good, good. It's great to be here. Thanks so much for coming, man. I know you're coming from the West Coast, so thanks. Thanks for that. But also write to the people, who is Adam Nash? Oh, as you said, I'm the CEO co-founder of Daffy. Um, I've had a long career in technology, I actually started at Apple early on as an engineer, and I've worked for a large number of startups, um, and, and famous companies along the way, but very passionate about building products that actually make a difference for a real passion for personal finance and I just feel like it's been an amazing run the last 10 to 15 years where we've been able to use technology to create better products to help people spend better, save better, invest better and and you know, with Daffy now give better. I love it. So let's kind of go back, right? You're you're venture guy from Silicon Valley type vibes, right? And something that you talked about was, and obviously we talked about this offline, but you're not just a tech guy, right? You're also a person that is adamant about helping people understand personal finance. In fact, you lecture at Stanford. So when you start thinking about Fintech and the democratization of access to information, right?How are you seeing Sofi actually change people's access to information when it comes to personal finance? Yeah, well, I think, you know, it starts with the basics of recognizing that it's, it's a problem. I mean, the reason I teach the class at Stanford on personal finance is because I wish that class existed when I was in school. I mean, if you don't teach personal finance to people, you can't expect, it's not an IQ thing. You can't just expect people to learn it. Mostly what they're going to learn and internalize is from their parents and their friends and the friends of their parents and the parents of their friends. And the truth is that's a really bad set of information to be learning so I think that the great thing about the web, of course, and, and all these technologies, they brought a lot of information to people. Originally it was just basic content, now it's it's shows like yours and and other things people can subscribe to and learn from. Um, but the great thing about FinTech is we actually can build better products and services now, right? We don't have to just tell people what they should be doing with their money or how they should treat their money. We can actually build tools to help do it for them or help them learn along the way as they make these decisions and you're passionate about helping people with these problems around money and and personal finance, I I I think it's, it's a wonderful time to be building and it's a wonderful time um to be learning about personal finance. I love it, man. I,I'm clear as day, right? Very adamant and passionate about personal finance and actually helping people, you know, become better with their finances and their money. And so if you were, you know, just one lesson that you can leave us with that you are, you know, speaking, if this was a Stanford class, what's one personal finance lesson everybody needs to know? You know,Believe it or not, I mean, in the Stanford class, right, you know, the students are fairly smart, like there's not a problem with IQ in the room, etc. but a lot of the students in the class, um, some of them are the first in their family to go to college, um, others are are majoring in in computer science or engineering degrees, they, they know they're going to make some money when they graduate and they don't want to mess it often I just have to convince them to start slow. The basics are really important. I, I can't tell you how important it is to just spend less than you make, right? Everyone wants to jump to how to make money in the market or do this or it's like, slow down, you spend less than you make, um, I'm a big advocate for emergency funds and having a little bit of a cushion, and if you don't have one building that you get to the basics of, you know, investing and, and, and aiming for financial goals in the future, you know, keeping expenses low and, you know, having some humility about your ability to kind of magically pick the winners. Um, and then we talk a little bit about taxes and the other realities. We even talk about, you know, what it means to manage money as a, as a couple versus an individual, which is another problem that most people ignore. And yet it turns out it's a very hard problem and money breaks up a lot of relationships, uh, both married and otherwise. And so, um.I think if you look at the content, I put it online for free. If you look at the content, there's no rocket science there. These are not, you know, this is not difficult math. Um, the hard part is to get people into a a zone in my experience where they have enough humility to say, like, just because I'm an expert in something else doesn't mean I'm an expert in handling money, and having kind of that mind to just learn the basics of how do you lead a healthy financial life and what does that even mean? That's,honestly, that's, that's very interesting. You don't hear that too often when you start thinking about managing money as a couple, right? There was a statistic that came out where it was saying like, which states and cities are, you know, the most expensive to live in and when you actually take in like the average income of those states, like,You know, the average person can't even live in like half of the states, right? And then you actually take into account if you are in a relationship or not. And now it's like, OK, you can actually afford to live in here, but if it's a two-parent household, right, or a two income household. And so the idea of managing money as a couple is, it's no right answer, but there's obviously a few ways to hopefully end in success. So I love that you brought that up. But let's actually get kind of to where you are now, right? Obviously, CEO of Daffy andHow do we get there, right? Because you got a very extensive resume when it comes into the tech world. Oh, well, um, I mean, that's, that's flattering, and I, I have had the chance to work at some amazing companies, you know, when you, you know, each generation of technology, it's funny looking back on my career, you know, from Apple to a company like eBay, um, LinkedIn, of course, for Web 20 and, and, and, um, and then Wealthfront, um, it's just been an embarrassment of riches and sort of in some ways in terms of the people I've gotten to work with and the problems, etc. Um, Daffy comes out of, you know, both a personal I have around um building these products that can help people with important problems, and a feeling thatWell, there's a little bit of hubris with founders, you're gonna have to forgive me, you know, I, I wasn't convinced it was gonna happen otherwise, right? It, it turns out we've had 15 years of fintech of, of these amazing apps and services to help people spend better, save better, invest where are the apps and services to help us give better? I mean, actually giving is huge in the US it's over half a trillion a year. I think last year was 557 billion, and over 370 billion of that's from individuals. So this is a big problem. I mean, that's like 2% of GDP. It's, it's bigger than yet, um, I don't think a lot of people embrace the reality of this is a financial goal that means something to people. I mean, we teach our kids to give. This is not just, you know, budgeting, um, I don't, I don't want to be a little anything that is saving, investing, etc all important, but, um, and so Daffy was really born on this idea of like, hey, those 60 million households in the US who give to charity every year. Um, what if we build a great product for them? They can put aside money for charity proactively when it makes sense for get that tax receipt, right, for the charitable deduction, the money is invested tax free, and then anytime they're inspired to give just a few taps on their phone, and the money can go to any legal charity in the US. So when I really, when that really crystallized, my co-founder and I really felt like that that's a product worth building, that's a that's a platform worth building, um, and that's how Daffy was born. Daffy actually literally stands for the the donor advised fund for you. I love it. I love it. And you know, one thing you might hear, right, is that it's a luxury to give, right? And so if the average person thinks you need to be rich to be generous, rich to give, how is Daffy not only you know dispelling that, but also making it a lot more accessible for someone that is trying to be interested ingiving. You know, it's funny. I think this has to do with the fascination our culture has right now around billionaires andAnd beyond and what they're doing, we, we talk so much about what they do with money. We sometimes miss the forest for the trees about what most people's lives look like. Um, it's a complete myth that only the wealthy give. I mean, in fact, a lot of studies actually show that the, the average person proportionally is is more generous, right? It it's, um, and I wasn't kidding, it's about 60 million households in the US every year that give to um those, um, and that's meaningful to them, right? So it's not about dollars, it's about people. And so I was inspired, I have to say I am inspired by their founders and other companies I've worked with in the past. I was on the board of this company, uh, Acorns, wonderful service, now helps millions of lead a better financial life, um, just by having this simple app and service that makes it easy to save, you know, easy to spend better, etc. And so some of the inspiration for Daffu is we can do that for giving, you know, the, the research shows that if you set a goal, if you're intentional about it, right, if you give 32% more to charity. I mean, think of what that would mean, out of those hundreds of billions of dollars, as big as that number is, we actually want to give more. Um, the question is how to do it smart and, and, and, and in a financially prudent the reality is most of giving that is done today when someone asks you, right? But, but how many of us would save for retirement, well, if uh we only put money aside for retirement when someone not how it works. What you want is to say, oh, I have a goal for my retirement. I'm gonna have this much come out of my paycheck every couple of weeks, and over time it'll build up. Um, it turns out some of those lessons apply to giving too. Uh, you set a goal in Daffy, you can set a goal for your giving. You can put aside money every week or or every month. Some of our members actually, you know, they have income is not standard for people. More and more people have good years and not so good years. So putting money aside in the good your taxes are higher, right? And you actually have the money to give, ensures that in the not so good years, you still have some money put aside for the organizations and causes you care about. And the truth is if you talk to the organizations, that's what they really want. They want people who are gonna support them for long periods of time. They don't just want one check, you know, one donation, um, they want to build a community around the cause and and and the organization that that they're passionate about. That's very interesting. So let's actually kind of walk us through it, right? Say I'm a, you know, a person that's making, I don't know, $80,000 a year, right? And I'm making a point that I want to give 10% a year to charity. How exactly would I utilize Daffy? Oh, that's, well, first of all, you're describing a very generous person, which is fantastic though. Um but no, no, no, no, not, not unusual actually, you know, it turns out, um, so there's a couple options there, right? Like, so you, you said this they always make $80,000 a year? Is it the kind of job where there's some years where better or worse? Um, I would probably say putting a little more money aside in the years that you make more money is, it's smart for your taxes and and an easier way to do it. But it's amazing you can treat it just like retirement or any other financial goal, right? You could decide to put aside, like you mentioned, if it was $8000 a year, you can do that simple math if, if you get paid, you know, that turns into what, you know, sorry, I'm doing this math on the fly, you know, $600 to $700 or something like that every month. Just have it come out of your paycheck and and go to Daffy. You pick a portfolio, it's kind of like a 401k for charity. It could be that simple. And the only advantage is, of course, besides being tax free, is that you're not limited, you don't have to wait to use the money until you're, you know, at retirement age, 59.5 or or something like that. You can actually, um, anytime you're inspired to give, tap tap tap on your the money go to the charity of your choice. That's awesome. We're going to take a quick break, but when we come back, we're gonna have more with Adam Nash of right, welcome back to Financial Freestyle. I'm Ross Mack and I'm talking to Adam Nash. So Adam, quick question, right? What exactly is a donoradvised fund? Oh, no, this is a great question. I mean, obviously we named the company Daffy, the donor advised fund for you, but a lot of people haven't heard of a donor advised fund before, which is kind of amazing because they've been around for a very long time, you know, more than 50 a donor advised fund is just a tax advantage account for charity. You can think of it as like an IRA or 401k for charity, right? Um, and it's designed for that. You can put money aside in this account, um, you immediately get the charitable deduction for your then that money can be invested tax-free in any number of portfolios, and then anytime you want that money to go to a charity, tap tap tap, you tell the donor advise fund where that money should go, and they send it off. So it's really a fantastic product. I honestly believe that Daffy aside, everyone who gives to charity regularly should have a donor advised fund. Um, and a lot of what Daffy does is just makes it simple and easy for you to get started with a little account for money put aside for charity. I mean,It is one of the oldest ideas, right? The idea of putting money aside every year for those less fortunate than yourself is is a pretty old idea. Um, Daffy just puts a modern tech rapper over what is a fantastic financial product that most people haven't heard of. No, no, no, no, that I, I think you just truly broke it down and so correct me if I'm wrong, you don't just have to invest money though, right?You have the ability to invest maybe stocks, etc. other investments. Yeah, yeah. Our, our mission at Daffy is actually to help people be more generous more often and so anything that people want to give, we're, we're super excited to help them do that. So you can just use cash, you could use a card, a debit card, credit card, you, um, you can even use Apple Pay, but there's immense tax benefits, you know, so many people now work for companies where they get some compensation in stock. We have a lot of people who are investing in when you donate stock or crypto to charity, you get a double tax win, because if you've held the investment more than a year, first of all, you get to deduct the full market value of that investment today, not what you invested in it, you know, years ago, but what it's worth second, you'll never pay the capital gains taxes on that gain. So you get this double win and so the problem is most charities are not that big. Most charities can't take stock donations, they can't take your ETF or your mutual fund, and they certainly can't take crypto in most cases. But if you use a service like Daffy, we take everything, right? So, you know, we support every crypto that Coinbase supports, right? You know, any ETF, right, any if you happen to be fortunate enough to be sitting on an investment that has a large capital gain on it, it is an incredibly smart financial move to use that instead of cash to give to charity, because you get those extra tax benefits and using an app like Daffy makes it trivial to do, literally can take seconds. Wow. That's that's fascinating. That's fascinating. So I definitely kind of want to pick your brain, uh, from the lens of like an actual founder as well, right? So like you know I speak with a decent amount of founders, tech founders, and you know I always am curious when it comes to starting a company, right? What is the mindset? Right? Are you solving a problem? Are you adding new technology to things that are existing? Like what was the reason you started Daffy? And let's kind of talk aboutYou know how you went from idea to true business. Yeah, well, it's interesting, and this has been a lot of my career is like when you think about building a great product, it's easy to talk about the technology. Um, it's less easy but important to talk about the design, right, and the real product you're building. But the truth is, if you don't wrap a product in a great organization in a great business, um, it won't go forever. You won't have the people on the platform to really solve the problem you're going after. So I think what I tell founders, you know, the, the basic things to think about in the beginning is,You know, what is the product, you know, what's the market for this product? I I spent a lot of time talking to founders, not about the technology, but, but who is this designed for? Where do you really create value? And then building a business around that, you have to have some eye for, wait, why hasn't this happened already? Why now? Right? What what are you seeing that all the incumbents aren't seeing, right? They have money, they have resources, they have smart people, they have customers. Why aren't they building this?And I just happen to be a student, you know, if you go back to Clay Christensen, you know, the innovator's dilemma, um, I always believe that there has to be a reason, what has to be happening for it to be a great opportunity is that the best customers for the existing companies don't want there's a huge base of other people who want something simpler, easier, maybe with a different business model, and the existing companies can't see it because their best customers aren't asking for it. And to me, when you find one of those opportunities, you really have an opportunity to be transformational. I mean, so for know, it turns out most donor advised funds charge fees that they borrowed from the investment industry. They charge you a percentage of assets, even Vanguard, which I love, I love Vanguard as an organization, I love their products, they charge 60 basis points, 0.6% on their donor advised fund, um, and they have a minimum of $25, if you're one of the existing institutions and you have a business model based on making a percentage of assets, you're gonna chase the biggest accounts. You want to acquire the most so at Daffy, we actually were very purposeful. It wasn't just the product and the technology, we said no, let's align our business model with giving with those 60 million households who don't have millions of dollars, but give a few $100 or a few $1000 to charity every year. And so we make it free to get started under $100. Um, most of our members pay $3 a month, it's flat, and we have a family plan in a higher tier that costs a little bit we really tried to align ourselves on what we thought was the best business to support a product like this, which is a a revenue model that's aligned around people staying with us for very long periods of time and making giving something they do not just once but every year, possibly for decades. That's amazing, right? You're in a very interesting place because you're at the fintech and philanthropy. Where do you see that?Growing in thefuture. Oh, there's there's so much to do. I am so excited about the potential in this area, and part of that self-serving, right? I care about giving, I care about, um, philanthropy, and, you know, I'm very serious as a parent, I have, I have 4 children, um, it's not like other financial goals. It's, it's, it's even more important. It's not just a budget item, although it should be. Um, we, we teach our kids about giving, right? You know, most of us grew up knowing that it's not all for that actually there's other people out there and so I am very passionate about the topic, but I think we're at an exciting time. I mean, the truth is, after 15 years in FinTech, the platforms that are available, I mean, I can't tell you 15 years ago how hard it was to build one of these applications and services. We've learned so much. The fact that I can leverage platforms from companies like Plaid, these might be companies that most people haven't heard of, but you know, what it means is to build a new financial service that has great security, um, that has great features, right? Think about how hard it was to imagine 15 years ago, a computer managing a portfolio for you. But now Daffy can have, you know, 1617 different portfolios, everything from cash to bonds to index funds. We even have crypto for people who want we can do that all automatically in software, not because we're so amazing, although, you know, Alejandro's team really is very impressive, um, but we can build those features and capabilities in in weeks and months because of all these other companies and platforms out there. And so I think we're gonna see an immense amount of innovation in the space, um, at Daffy, you know, this might sound simple. um before Daffy, there wasn't a donor advice fund with a family so many people, you know, we, we see people with their siblings, with their parents, grandparents want to teach their grandkids about giving, um, what, what tech product doesn't have a family plan? I mean, I'm I'm inundated this as a parent, like the, the request from, you know, Apple or Xbox, I get a lot of Xbox requests, that sort of thing, um, but why not forgiving, so I just think the innovation we're gonna see in this category is just phenomenal andI think it's meaningful because the truth is, people always think about the donation, about the benefit to the organization, cause they're going to use that money to have impact and do something good. I think people underestimate the value that people find on feeling like they as a donor has have an impact, that they didn't just talk about something, they did something. It the the the amount of dollars actually doesn't matter, whatever is meaningful to you is what really but I think technology is going to have a huge role to play, and, and we just rolled out some new features that are based on some of the new AI platforms, etc. Um, a lot of the advantages that the ultra wealthy had, you know, teams of people to advise them on giving or kind of make something happen when they're inspired to give, we can now put these innovations in an app that that's available to everyone. That's it for this episode. I just want to give a warm, warm thank you to Mr. Adam Nash for a phenomenal conversation, right, being at the intersection of philanthropy and tech. But that's it for this episode. Make sure you like, subscribe. If you see this QR code, just hit it so you can watch other podcasts on this exact network. And so then, guys, we'll see you next week. I'm Ross Mack and this is Financial Freestyle. This content was not intended to be financial advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional financial services. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

What to watch with your kids: ‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' and more
What to watch with your kids: ‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' and more

Washington Post

time14-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

What to watch with your kids: ‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' and more

Porky and Daffy's alien adventure mixes scares and silliness. Tied to the 2020 'Looney Tunes Cartoons' series, this animated sci-fi horror spoof follows Porky Pig and Daffy Duck (both voiced by Eric Bauza) as they team up to save Earth from an alien scheme that turns humans into zombies when they chew gum. The tainted gum takes over people's tongues, then grows an eyeball and morphs into a living gum monster. It's all quite silly but could still give younger kids a real scare. The over-the-top, consequence-free cartoon action and slapstick violence are typical for Looney Tunes: Expect to see characters catapult through a wall, explode or suffer electrocution, then be fine a moment later. Daffy and Porky's father figure, Farmer Jim, passes away by disappearing into the sunset, though it's presented so subtly that small children may not perceive that he has died. There's some rude humor and a bit of innuendo ('you can tickle my taste buds anytime!') that might raise adults' eyebrows but will probably sail over kids' heads. A negative character is drawn with breasts so large that she can barely fit into her car. Insults include 'losers,' 'nerd' and 'stupid.' Porky and his love interest, Petunia, bond over their mutual stutter, which isn't portrayed negatively, and the film has clear messages about the importance of teamwork. (91 minutes) Available in theaters. Streaming Violence, peril and language in book-based sci-fi tale. This sci-fi western comedy, based on Simon Stalenhag's graphic novel, is set in a dystopian version of the 1990s. Millie Bobby Brown stars as a teenager who lives with a callous foster father (Jason Alexander) after losing her family in a car accident. Expect violence and peril: A young boy is kept in a comatose state for nefarious purposes, and there are scenes from a deadly war between humans and robots. Expect battles among humans, human-driven drones and robots. These conflicts involve a multitude of deaths, including those of main characters. Weapons range from guns to Tasers. There is one penis joke and a mention of a mother with an alcohol problem. Characters connected to virtual-reality-style helmets look like they're strung out on drugs, and there are timely messages about ditching screens and interacting with others instead. Swearing includes variations of 's---,' 'damn,' 'hell,' 'b----,' 'a--,' 'frickin',' 'moron' and 'b-----d.' Chris Pratt co-stars. (128 minutes) Available on Netflix. Streaming Forgettable horror comedy has scares, language and slurs. This horror comedy has a star-studded cast (including Parker Posey, Brian Cox, Edie Falco and Lisa Kudrow) and some scares. A demon possesses humans — entering them through their nostrils — and the ghosts of people from decades ago haunt a home. A possessed man threatens loved ones, projectile vomits, yells slurs and stabs people (they're sewn up with floss). His head also spins, and he levitates while begging to be killed. Dogs are killed or injured. Adults drink alcohol and get high on marijuana gummies. Two characters kiss and plan a marriage proposal. A man's naked butt is seen. There's discussion of being 'horny,' 'pants-petting' and penis size, and there's a joke about a dog being a lesbian. Sounds in one scene are assumed to be lovemaking. Language includes 'f---,' 's---,' 'goddamn,' 'dammit,' 'hell,' 'b----,' 'a--' and 'whore.' (100 minutes) Available on Max. Streaming Kids jump into a video game world to practice life skills. 'Skillsville' is an educational show about a diverse group of friends who practice life skills within a virtual reality video game. Young viewers will learn about executive function skills like cognitive flexibility, focus, organization and memory, as well as different jobs. The show promotes teamwork, helping others and problem-solving when you make a mistake. There are no iffy or scary moments, but the content will be most relevant for older preschoolers or younger grade-school kids. (40 episodes) Available on PBS Kids. Common Sense Media helps families make smart media choices. Go to for age-based and educational ratings and reviews for movies, games, apps, TV shows, websites and books.

‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' Review: Daffy, Porky, Petunia and Alien Goo
‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' Review: Daffy, Porky, Petunia and Alien Goo

New York Times

time13-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

‘The Day the Earth Blew Up' Review: Daffy, Porky, Petunia and Alien Goo

Porky Pig just turned 90. His first cartoon was released on March 2, 1935; his tormentor and eventual foil Daffy Duck came along a couple of years later. These Warner Bros. comedic chaos agents were wild ripostes to Disney's arguably saccharine Mickey Mouse. And after years of entertaining adults in the movie theaters of the early- and mid-20th century, television exposure turned Porky and Daffy, along with Bugs Bunny and others, into inspirations for generations of young wiseacres. 'The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie,' directed by Peter Browngardt from a script by almost a dozen writers, races out of the gate with old-school moxie. Browngardt is a 'Futurama' and Cartoon Network veteran. He's also been honing his approach to Daffy and Porky with television's 'Looney Tunes Cartoons,' which has run six seasons on Max. Browngardt's gnarly approach to the Looney Tunes characters seems more influenced by the gross-out antics of Nickelodeon's 'Ren & Stimpy,' than by, say, Warner's own much-missed 'Animaniacs.' The 20th- and now 21st-century pictures featuring these toons are a mixed bag. The least-inspired iterations of the characters, in the 'Space Jam' movies, have been the most popular. Joe Dante's wonderful 'Looney Tunes: Back in Action,' from 2003, had the spirit of the older cartoons — it appreciated the value of dropping anvils on coyotes' heads, and more — but failed to find box office favor. But in Browngardt's installment, citing pop-culture references and breaking out into song have little to no place. Instead, the movie subjects Daffy Duck to a butt-crack joke, and compels him to twerk. Which feels especially weird because the style in which our heroes are depicted comes directly from the Looney Tunes of old. The movie's technical aspects are largely admirable, and it pays homage to the greats of the animation department once known as Termite Terrace by naming the movie's restaurants after the past masters Robert Clampett and Tex Avery. Early on, the young BFFs Daffy and Porky are instructed by a creepy character that if they 'stick together,' all will turn out right for them. Sticking is a major motif here, as an alien goo renders a new brand of chewing gum irresistible. It also makes its consumers mindless zombies. With the help of a 'flavor expert,' Petunia Pig, Daffy and Porky scurry to save the world from, yes, blowing up like a gum bubble. The action is frenetic and gleefully vulgar; at one point a dome of bubble gum emerges from a dog's rear end. There's also some old-school slapstick; chattering fake teeth turn out to be practically world-saving. But the movie's energy doesn't pay off in dividends of real pleasure. Anarchy has never been so mere as it is ultimately rendered here. The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes MovieRated PG. Running time: 1 hour 31 minutes. In theaters.

Eric Bauza Voices Bugs Bunny and More Looney Tunes Greats
Eric Bauza Voices Bugs Bunny and More Looney Tunes Greats

New York Times

time12-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Eric Bauza Voices Bugs Bunny and More Looney Tunes Greats

'We all want to be like Bugs, but we're all really Daffy,' said the voice actor Eric Bauza with a hearty laugh during a recent interview in Los Angeles. For the past five years, the Canadian performer, 45, has played both the clever rabbit and the hyperactive duck. He has won two Children's & Family Emmy Awards for voicing these pair, as well as other characters, in the series 'Looney Tunes Cartoons' and 'Bugs Bunny Builders.' Video transcript 'Eh ... What's up, doc?' Eh ... What's up, doc? 'Eh ... What's up, doc?' Over the years he's also summoned Sylvester, Tweety, Foghorn Leghorn and Elmer Fudd. In the director Peter Browngardt's 'The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie' (in theaters March 14), Bauza voices both Daffy Duck and Porky Pig. Distributed by Ketchup Entertainment, the first fully-animated original feature starring these characters to get a theatrical release is a zany, hand drawn, sci-fi romp in which buddies Daffy and Porky must defeat a malicious alien invader. Sitting in a meeting room at the Garland Hotel in North Hollywood, and wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with Wilma Flintstone (Hanna-Barbera's 'The Flintstones' is among his favorite classic cartoons), Bauza recalled first watching 'Looney Tunes' on Saturday mornings growing up in Scarborough, Ontario. The wacky violence and daring humor of those cartoons enticed a young Bauza. As he recounted one of his favorite 'Looney Tunes' shorts, 'Long-Haired Hare,' in which Bugs Bunny torments an opera singer, Bauza seamlessly shifted into singing in the voice of the famed animated wise guy, 'Music hater and a rabbit hater too, apparently,' he recited. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. Already a subscriber? Log in. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Pet of the Week: Daffy
Pet of the Week: Daffy

Yahoo

time10-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Pet of the Week: Daffy

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (WSPA) – It's Monday and that means another Pet of the Week! This week's featured pet is Daffy! Daffy is 3-month old and is ready to find her fur-ever home! Already almost 25 pounds, Daffy is expected to be a big bundle of fun! Daffy is scheduled to be spayed and microchipped tomorrow, and can be adopted as soon as Tuesday afternoon! It costs $195 to adopt Daffy. Adoption fees include six nights of boarding at Southport Kennel, five days of daycare at Hounds Town and an engraved tag from Paisley Paw. It also includes six months of heartworm prevention. If you are interested in adopting Daffy, or any animal needing a home, visit the Spartanburg Humane Society at 150 Dexter Road. To view all the dogs and cats at the humane society, click here. For more pets of the week, visit our page here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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