- The McCoys and the Weavers are two feuding hillbilly clans. Elmer Fudd, Peacemaker, attempts to end the fighting; but violence and zaniness win out.
- Things are moving pretty slow in the Weaver cabin. Most of the men (and animals) are sleeping, and even those who are awake are only half-awake. A microphone for the radio station KFWB drops in front of four of them. They snap to and burst into song (with a nap during the commercial). They sing of the joy of shooting McCoys. The McCoys, called skunks by a young boy with a deep voice, shoot their question at the Weavers: "Do ya mean it?" The reply: "Yas we mean it!" The feud is on. Coming on a scooter is "Elmer Fudd, Peacemaker" (though the character design and voice is that of Egghead). He suggests peace to the Weavers, and gets a backside of buckshot. The McCoys give him the same response. The sheriff catches one combatant off-side and gives him a 5 yard penalty. Elmer stands in the middle and again pleads for peace. Everyone gangs up around him; there's a huge brawl, and only Elmer is left standing.—Jon Reeves <jreeves@imdb.com>
- The McCoys and the Weavers are two feuding hillbilly clans. For both families, laziness, violence and zaniness define their existence. It's morning, and the cuckoo bird from the cuckoo clock wakes everyone up on the Weaver side by removing the cork from a jug of moonshine. But active hillbillies are barely distinguishable from sleeping ones. Two semi-industrious Weavers saw wood, both literally and figuratively, by placing a sail on either end of a saw and allowing their snoring to move it back and forth. Two sweethearts manage to dance together, but only their feet move as they continue to snooze. Even the cat and dog fight like narcoleptics. The Weavers are reasonably alert while performing an anti-McCoy song. But what really gets a hillbilly's blood pumping is exchanging gunfire. Elmer Fudd, making his first appearance under that name (but still sporting his original design as Egghead), rides by on a motor scooter and attempts to deliver his unwelcome message of peace. For a hillbilly, putting an end to "this meaningless massacre" and "this useless slaughter" is putting an end to their way of life.—J. Spurlin
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