Mr. Jinks

Mr. Jinks is an anthropomorphic tabby cat and the main antagonist of the Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks shorts of The Huckleberry Hound Show. His voice was originated by Daws Butler.

Jinks usually picks on the two mice, Pixie and Dixie, though he is sometimes a friend of the two.

Character description
Mr. Jinks is an orange, two-legged cat with tan highlights on his feet, hands, and mouth. The only piece of clothing he normally wears is a blue bow tie.

In terms of personality, Mr. Jinks is very laid back and confident. He speaks in a whimsical speech pattern, using beatnik slang and saying the word "like" in a majority of his sentences. He also makes grammatical errors in his speech sometimes, with the plural "meeces" being one example (instead of the correct plural, "mice"); At one point in the episode "Pistol Packin' Pirate," Mr. Jinks does not remember the difference between the words "meeces" and "mooses," although he still refers the word "mice" as "meeces." As house cat, Mr. Jinks is determined to catch and clobber both Pixie and Dixie; he even relishes on catching the two mice (or "meeces" as he calls them) for his own good. Jinks is somewhat dimwitted at times, prone to falling on the duo's elaborate tricks. At the end of the cartoons, he yells his catchphrase, "I hate meeces to pieces!"

Despite their rivalry, Mr. Jinks, Pixie and Dixie do have a soft spot for one another. Jinks doesn't exactly understand why he chases them, but he believes that "cats are supposed to hate meeces". Furthermore, he doesn't mean to cause any harm on the two in some instances.

TV series

 * Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks
 * 1.1 "Cousin Tex"
 * 1.2 "Judo Jack"
 * 1.3 "Kit Kat Kit"
 * 1.4 "Jinks' Mice Device"
 * 1.5 "Pistol Packin' Pirate"
 * 1.6 "Scaredycat Dog"
 * 1.7 "Little Bird Mouse"
 * 1.8 "Jiggers..It's Jinks!"
 * 1.9 "The Ghost with the Most"
 * 1.10 "The Ace of Space"
 * 1.11 "Jinks Junior"
 * 1.12 "Jinks, the Butler"
 * 1.13 "Jinks' Flying Carpet"
 * 1.14 "Puppet Pals"
 * 1.15 "Mark of the Mouse"
 * 1.16 "Dinky Jinks"
 * 1.17 "Hypnotize Surprise"
 * 1.18 "Nice Mice"
 * 1.19 "King-Size Surprise"
 * 1.20 "Cat-Nap Cat"
 * 1.21 "Mouse Nappers"
 * 1.22 "Boxing Buddy"
 * 2.1 "Hi-Fido"
 * 2.2 "Rapid Robot"
 * 2.3 "Sour Puss"
 * 2.4 "King Size Poodle"
 * 2.5 "Mighty Mite"
 * 2.6 "Bird Brained Cat"
 * 2.7 "Batty Bat"
 * 2.8 "Lend-Lease Meece"
 * 2.9 "A Good Good Fairy"
 * 2.10 "Heavens to Jinksy"
 * 2.11 "Goldfish Fever"
 * 2.12 "Pushy Cat"
 * 2.13 "Puss in Boats"
 * 3.1 "Pied Piper Pipe"
 * 3.2 "Price for Mice"
 * 3.3 "Plutocrat Cat"
 * 3.4 "Party Peeper Jinks"
 * 3.5 "Woo for Two"
 * 3.6 "A Wise Quack"
 * 3.7 "Kind to Meeces Week"
 * 3.8 "Missile Bound Cat"
 * 3.9 "Crew Cat"
 * 3.10 "Jinxed Jinks"
 * 3.11 "Light-Headed Cat"
 * 3.12 "Mouse for Rent"
 * 3.13 "High Jinks"
 * 3.14 "Jinks' Jinx"
 * 3.15 "Fresh Heir"
 * 3.16 "Home Flea"
 * 4.1 "Bombay Mouse"
 * 4.2 "Strong Mouse"
 * 4.3 "Mouse Trapped"
 * 4.4 "Magician Jinks"
 * 4.5 "Meece Missiles"
 * 4.6 "Homeless Jinks"
 * The Yogi Bear Show
 * 4.17 "Yogi's Birthday Party"
 * Laff-A-Lympics
 * 1.1 "The Swiss Alps and Tokyo, Japan" (no lines)
 * 1.2 "Acapulco and England"
 * 1.3 "Florida and China" (no lines)
 * 1.4 "The Sahara Desert and Scotland" (no lines)
 * 1.5 "France and Australia" (no lines)
 * 1.6 "Athens, Greece and the Ozarks" (no lines)
 * 1.7 "Italy and Kitty Hawk, North Carolina"
 * 1.8 "Egypt and Sherwood Forest" (no lines)
 * 1.9 "Spain and the Himalayas" (no lines)
 * 1.10 "India and Israel" (no lines)
 * 1.11 "Africa and San Francisco"
 * 1.12 "The Grand Canyon and Ireland" (no lines)
 * 1.13 "Hawaii and Norway" (no lines)
 * 1.14 "North Pole and Tahiti" (no lines)
 * 1.15 "Arizona and Holland" (no lines)
 * 1.16 "Quebec and Baghdad" (no lines)
 * 2.1 "Russia and the Caribbean" (no lines)
 * 2.2 "New York and Turkey"
 * 2.3 "South America and Transylvania" (no lines)
 * 2.4 "French Riviera and New Zealand" (no lines)
 * 2.5 "New Orleans and Atlantis" (no lines)
 * 2.6 "Morocco and Washington D.C." (no lines)
 * 2.7 "Canada and Warsaw, Poland" (no lines)
 * 2.8 "Siam and the Moon" (no lines)
 * Yogi's Treasure Hunt
 * 3.2 "Yogi's Heroes"
 * 3.3 "The Attack of Dr. Mars"
 * 3.5 "Goodbye, Mr. Chump"
 * 3.7 "Yogi & the Beanstalk"
 * The New Yogi Bear Show
 * 5.38 "Bringing Up Yogi" (no lines)
 * Yo, Yogi!
 * 1.11B "Of Meeces and Men"
 * Wacky Races
 * 2.14 "The Trial of Dick Dastardly"
 * Jellystone!

Movies

 * Yogi Bear's All-Star Comedy Christmas Caper

Shorts

 * Cartoon Network Shorties
 * "Harasscat"

Comics

 * Laff-A-Lympics
 * The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera
 * #3 "The Man Who Stole Thursday"
 * Deathstroke/Yogi Bear Special
 * #1A "Jellystone Dark"

Yo, Yogi!
In the episode "Of Meeces and Men," Jinks runs a local cheese store, but constantly tries to remove Pixie and Dixie, due to the fact that they eat his cheese on numerous occasions. He later teams up with Dickie Dastardly and Muttley, to get rid of the two mice, which they eventually do. After numerous failed attempts of trying to get them back into the cheese store, Yogi is able to separate the teamwork between Dickie and Jinks, and get Jinks to allow the mice back in.

Everyone's Back in Jellystone!
In Jellystone!, he works as mayor Huckleberry's personal assistant. Unlike previous iterations, he is not paired up with, nor teamed up with Pixie and Dixie. In the episode "Business", Jinks reveals that he has romantic feelings towards Huck.

Development
Mr. Jinks—along with Pixie and Dixie—were created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera as part of The Huckleberry Hound Show. They were both modeled after Tom and Jerry, respectively; though Pixie and Dixie are comprised of two mice instead of one. Despite the similarities between these cartoons and those of Tom and Jerry, they were less violent due to the budgetary restraints Hanna-Barbera had at the time. Likewise, more emphasis was put on making the cartoons rich in witty dialogue—as opposed to visual gags like in their previous work.

Mr. Jinks' vocal characterization was modeled after actor Marlon Brando (namely his role as Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire), although Butler had admitted that he likely began his Brando impersonation in his collaborations with Stan Freberg.

Behind the scenes

 * In the short "Jinks Junior," Jinks is implied to have a son, which also hints that he was married at one point.

In popular culture

 * In The Ren & Stimpy Show episode "The Big Shot!," Stimpy becomes the co-star of Muddy Mudskipper, where they reenact one of the many chase sequences between Yogi and Ranger Smith, respectively. Muddy tells Stimpy to get his hand out of the picnic basket, while Stimpy spouts some random quotes like "I hate meeces to pieces!"
 * In the Beast Wars: Transformers episode "Beast Wars (Part 1)," Rattrap says Cheetor's new beast mode looks tacky, which instigates an angry response that he'll cut meeces to pieces, something that Mr. Jinks said to Pixie and Dixie frequently.