I got this cartoon on my mind... It featured two "space cowboys", one of which was a cat, the other - I believe - was a cow. Their boss was a grandma(!?), but most importantly - the villain was this cute pink rabbit called Bob, that used to get upset and yell "I am NOT cute and cuddly!". It shouldn't be very old, and I can't remember which company made it.
That kind of sounds like the late Nickelodeon series The Brothers Flub, about 2 alien delivery boys who were also brothers. They were the neurotic Frazz and his easy going brother Guapo. But they weren't animals, just aliens. Their boss was Ms. Tarara Boom-De-Ay, whose main schitick was screaming orders very loudly at the brothers. Ms. Boom-De-Ay, incedientally, was voiced by The Facts of Life's Charlotte Rae. Very little information on the show can be found anywhere. The Nickelodeon website acts as if the series never existed.
However, I don't recall there ever being a pink rabbit villain on the show. That character sounds like the pink stuffed rabbit who appeared in the 1st of the Super Santa shorts "Jingle Bell Justice" in another former Nick series "Oh, Yeah, Cartoons". It's possible that you may be remembering 2 different cartoons as one.
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Procrastinators unite....tomorrow.
(This post was edited by SpaceDemon on Oct 19, 2007, 12:00 PM)
That kind of sounds like the late Nickelodeon series The Brothers Flub, about 2 alien delivery boys who were also brothers. They were the neurotic Frazz and his easy going brother Guapo. But they weren't animals, just aliens. Their boss was Ms. Tarara Boom-De-Ay, whose main schitick was screaming orders very loudly at the brothers. Ms. Boom-De-Ay, incedientally, was voiced by The Facts of Life's Charlotte Rae. Very little information on the show can be found anywhere. The Nickelodeon website acts as if the series never existed.
Brothers Flub was a co-production of Sunbow Productions and a German studio, Ravensburger Film + TV. The series ran for 26 episodes in 1999, but I could only find 22.
Les Gunther was executive producer. Other voices included Nick Bakay, Richard Steven Horvitz and Christine Cavanaugh (as Valerina). Keith Kaczorek and Mitch Schauer directed; writers were Dan Danko, Tom Mason and Ralph Soll.