Tweety Bird is a yellow canary and Looney Tunes character from Warner Bros.
Why He's Great[]
- Is known as a lovable, and sweet bird to most who interacts with him, especially towards his owner Granny.
- Despite at first thinking he's a helpless little birdie. He's much more than what he's thought out to be managing to outsmart his enemy Sylvester who tries to eat him multiple times, and uses his toon force to defeat him every single time that bad ol' puddy tat wants to eat him so badly.
- Has no problem helping other innocent animals from almost being eaten by Sylvester, or the other cats, and helping the Looney Tunes characters win the basketball games in both Space Jam movies.
- Even though he has a huge rivalry with Sylvester brutally beating the cat up for trying to eat him. He does still care for him, and will team up with him at times, especially in the Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries series.
- Along with other Looney Tunes characters, such as Daffy Duck. He's a fan favorite by fans watching the classic cartoon episodes, but there can be some who hate him, or find his character annoying.
- It's understandable in his part fighting back against Sylvester trying to eat him because he's always trying to chill in his cage, while Sylvester never leaves him alone.
- He's pretty funny at times, which is really no surprise being a Looney Tunes character after all, and is always willing to make the audience laugh when outsmarting his predator Sylvester.
- Even if the nature of Looney Tunes is violent with the characters willing to drive others insane. He's not on the same level of violence as to compared to Bugs Bunny, or Daffy Duck.
- Since he was loved so much by fans. He got his own spin-off starring in Tweety's High Flying Adventure, despite the audience reviews being poor.
Bad Qualities[]
- Though he's originally supposed to represent cute, and innocence in his character. He's not always cute, and innocent as he enjoys brutally beating Sylvester, which it's way too much punishment for the cat just trying to eat him as well as enjoying to see him in pain.