: October 2, 2012, to August 31, 2014, on Cartoon Network .
Season 2 of The Looney Tunes Show premiered on October 2, 2012, and concluded on August 31, 2014. It continued the "animated sitcom" style of the first season, focusing on the domestic lives of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck in a modern suburban setting. 📺 Season Overview 26 total episodes. The Looney Tunes Show - Season 2
It proves that these 80-year-old characters are not fragile museum pieces. Bugs Bunny can be depressed. Daffy Duck can be a failure. Lola Bunny can be a lunatic. And when you put them in a world with traffic jams, grocery stores, and HOA meetings, they become more relevant than ever. : October 2, 2012, to August 31, 2014, on Cartoon Network
One of the standout aspects of Season 2 is its ability to balance humor and heart. The show's writers cleverly crafted episodes that were both laugh-out-loud funny and emotionally resonant. For example, in the episode "The Substitute," Bugs Bunny's substitute teacher, Mr. Marmalade, turns out to be a sinister character with a hidden agenda. The episode expertly balances humor and tension, making it a compelling watch. Similarly, in "The Looney Tunes Games," the characters participate in a series of wacky games, showcasing their comedic skills and athleticism. 📺 Season Overview 26 total episodes
: Daffy continues his erratic employment history, pretending to be a lawyer in "Daffy Duck Esquire" and joining the Marines to rescue Bugs from an Albanian prison in "The Black Widow". Cecil Turtle's Rivalry
Consider the episode “Daffy Duck, Esquire.” When Daffy mistakenly passes the bar exam, he becomes a lawyer. But rather than showcasing competence, the episode reveals Daffy’s superpower: weaponized chaos. He wins cases not through logic, but through exhausting his opponents with illogical rants and emotional manipulation. The brilliance of Season 2 is that it refuses to let Daffy win cleanly. Every victory is Pyrrhic. He alienates Bugs, bankruptes himself, or ends up literally on fire in the backyard pool. The season’s running gag of Daffy’s get-rich-quick schemes (The Yacht Club, a dating service, a pest control business) serves as a cynical commentary on the gig economy. Daffy represents the modern American grifter: charming, incompetent, and utterly convinced he is one lucky break away from glory.