Run, Run, Sweet Road Runner

[2] It was the first of the Road Runner cartoons subcontracted to Format Productions, and one of the only three which composer William Lava was able to properly score (the subsequent cartoons had to use a set of stock musical cues due to extremely low budgets).

He then climbs down from the top of a rock, and it cuts to Wile E. hammering signs into the ground.

Wile E. gets a stunned look on his face and climbs down to fill the bowl with more bird seed.

Unfortunately, the hot sun creates a glare on the lenses of the binoculars he left on top of the rock and it burns the rope holding up the shade canopy.

As the coyote pours more seed into the bowl, he hears creaking, stands up to listen, and slowly looks up in distress just as the canopy falls right on top of him, leaving him covered by the sheet from the spiked metal grate, which then peels off in segments like a banana.

Angry, he then inadvertently has a new brainstorm: create a fake female road runner.

He then reemerges wearing Native American tribal clothes and holding a drum.

He does a third dance and this time, a bolt of lightning zaps the female road runner, just as Wile E. runs out of the way.