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  Private Snafu
 
 
                 Updated: 12/02/2016  07:57
  Originally Hosted: 2/17/2008
 
  
 
  Wikipedia: Private Snafu is the title character of a series of black-and-white American 
  instructional cartoon shorts, ironic and humorous in tone, that were produced between 1943 
  and 1945 during World War II. The films were designed to instruct service personnel about 
  security, proper sanitation habits, booby traps and other military subjects, and to improve 
  troop morale.
  The series was directed by Chuck Jones and other prominent Hollywood animators, and the 
  voice of Private Snafu was performed by Mel Blanc.
  The character was created by director Frank Capra, chairman of the U.S. Army Air Force First 
  Motion Picture Unit, and most were written by Theodor "Dr. Seuss" Geisel, Philip D. Eastman, 
  and Munro Leaf. Although the United States Army gave Walt Disney the first crack at creating 
  the cartoons, Leon Schlesinger of the Warner Bros. animation studio underbid Disney by two-
  thirds and won the contract. Disney had also demanded exclusive ownership of the character, 
  and merchandising rights. The cartoons thus represented a multi-talent collaboration by some 
  of America's best in their respective fields; a common occurrence in the war effort.
  The goal was to help enlisted men with weak literacy skills learn through animated cartoons 
  (and also supplementary comic books). They featured simple language, racy illustrations, mild 
  profanity, and subtle moralizing. Private Snafu did (almost) everything wrong, so that his 
  negative example taught basic lessons about secrecy, disease prevention, and proper military 
  protocols.
  Private Snafu cartoons were a military secret—for the armed forces only. Surveys to ascertain 
  the soldiers' film favorites showed that the Snafu cartoons usually rated highest or second 
  highest. Each cartoon was produced in six weeks. The shorts were classified government 
  documents. Martha Sigall, employed at the ink and paint department, recalled the government 
  security measures imposed on the staff working on them. They had to be fingerprinted and 
  given FBI security clearances. They also had to wear identification badges at work. Workers at 
  the ink and paint department were given only ten cels at a time in an effort to prevent them 
  from figuring out the story content.
  The name "Private Snafu" comes from the unofficial military acronym SNAFU ("Situation 
  Normal: All F****d Up"), with the opening narrator in the first cartoon merely hinting at its 
  usual meaning as "Situation Normal, All ... All Fouled Up!"