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* Wimpy made two appearances in the animated [[sketch comedy]] [[television program|program]] ''[[Robot Chicken]]''. In the episode [[The Sack (Robot Chicken episode)|The Sack]], Wimpy (voiced by [[Scott Adsit]]) is shown what the world would be like if he never existed, in a parody of ''[[It's a Wonderful Life]]''. (It turns out that the world would indeed be much better without him.) In the episode [[Yancy the Yo-Yo Boy]], a hamburger [[addiction|addicted]] Wimpy (voiced by [[Seth Green]]) faces violent retribution from Popeye after he is unable to "pay him Tuesday for a hamburger today". Wimpy then has to rely on sexual favors to save himself.
* Wimpy made two appearances in the animated [[sketch comedy]] [[television program|program]] ''[[Robot Chicken]]''. In the episode [[The Sack (Robot Chicken episode)|The Sack]], Wimpy (voiced by [[Scott Adsit]]) is shown what the world would be like if he never existed, in a parody of ''[[It's a Wonderful Life]]''. (It turns out that the world would indeed be much better without him.) In the episode [[Yancy the Yo-Yo Boy]], a hamburger [[addiction|addicted]] Wimpy (voiced by [[Seth Green]]) faces violent retribution from Popeye after he is unable to "pay him Tuesday for a hamburger today". Wimpy then has to rely on sexual favors to save himself.
* Wimpy made an appearance in the ''[[Family Guy]]'' episode "[[McStroke]]", after [[Peter Griffin]] had a [[stroke]] eating hamburgers.
* Wimpy made an appearance in the ''[[Family Guy]]'' episode "[[McStroke]]", after [[Peter Griffin]] had a [[stroke]] eating hamburgers.
* Wimpy also went by the alias of Wimpy Burgleton.
* Wimpy was featured in [[Alton Brown]]'s ''[[Good Eats]]'' episode "A Grind is a Terrible Thing to Waste" (Season 2 Episode 8) which featured [[recipe]]s for hamburgers and [[meatloaf]].
* Wimpy was featured in [[Alton Brown]]'s ''[[Good Eats]]'' episode "A Grind is a Terrible Thing to Waste" (Season 2 Episode 8) which featured [[recipe]]s for hamburgers and [[meatloaf]].
* In the ''[[Homestar Runner]]'' [[Halloween]] special "The House That Gave Sucky Treats", the secretly unlocked character Homsar [[trick-or-treating|dresses up]] as Wimpy, even uttering the phrase "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for some [[candy]] today!"
* In the ''[[Homestar Runner]]'' [[Halloween]] special "The House That Gave Sucky Treats", the secretly unlocked character Homsar [[trick-or-treating|dresses up]] as Wimpy, even uttering the phrase "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for some [[candy]] today!"

Revision as of 17:46, 21 October 2009

J. Wellington Wimpy
File:Popeye-meets-ali-baba.jpg
Wimpy, Olive Oyl and Popeye in Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves (1937).
Created byE. C. Segar
Voice ActorsAllan Melvin
Daws Butler
Paul Dooley
AliasWimpy

J. Wellington Wimpy, or just Wimpy, is one of the characters in the long-running comic strip Popeye (originally Thimble Theatre), and in the Popeye cartoons based upon the strip.

Wimpy was created by newspaper cartoonist Elzie Crisler Segar. He became one of the dominant characters in the newspaper strips. When Popeye was adapted as an animated cartoon series by Fleischer Studios, Wimpy was made a more minor character; Dave Fleischer said that the character in the Segar comic strips was "too intellectual" to be used in film cartoons. The character was soft-spoken and generally cowardly, or a "wimp", hence his name. According to fellow cartoonist, Bill Mauldin, Wimpy took his name from one of Segar's instructors at the Chicago Art Institute (Wellington J. Reynolds)[1].

History

Wimpy is Popeye's friend. In the cartoons he mainly plays the role of the "straight man" to Popeye's outbursts and wild antics. Wimpy is very intelligent, and well educated, but very lazy and gluttonous. Wimpy is also something of a scam artist and (especially in the newspaper comics) can be notoriously underhanded at times.

Wimpy loves to eat hamburgers, and is usually seen with one (e.g. in Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor he is seen grinding meat or eating burgers almost the entire time) but is usually too cheap to pay for them. A recurring joke is Wimpy's attempts to con other patrons of the diner into buying him his lunch. Wimpy often tries to outwit fellow patrons with his convoluted logic. His famous line, which was first introduced to the cartoons in 1934's We Aim to Please, is "I'd gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today". Wimpy had other frequently used lines in the original comic strip, usually invoked to someone or a group of people who are after him for some shenanigan he's pulled. On some occasions, Wimpy tries to placate the angry person or mob by saying "I'd like to invite you over to my house for a duck dinner." The angry person or persons are usually satisfied with that line and Wimpy moves away quickly to a safe distance and yells, "You bring the ducks!", the only one who doesn't grow angry at this is Popeye. Another such line was, "Jones is my name...I'm one of the Jones boys"--an attempt to defuse a hostile situation with a false case for mistaken identity. To deflect an enemy's wrath, he would sometimes indicate a third party and say "Let's you and him fight," starting a brawl from which he quickly withdrew.

Other Media

Notes

  1. ^ Bill Mauldin, The Brass Ring, New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1972