Unnatural History is a 1959 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Abe Levitow, with a story by Mike Maltese. The short was released on November 14, 1959. The cartoon is made up of blackout gags with no real story tying them together, similar to many cartoons directed by Tex Avery.
Plot
Professor Beest Lee narrates over clips of animals and their quirky behavior. Scenes include:
An ant rolling a round object from one anthill to another. However, in actuality, the hills are connected to the same tunnel.
An orangutan that sees a banana hanging from the ceiling, but uses nearby giant blocks and a saw to cut a hole in the ceiling of his cage to pull down a fridge full of food.
A mouse that scares an elephant but is then scared by a tiny elephant
A running gag showing a dog, named Rover, patiently waiting on the front porch for his master that hasn't been home in three long, lonesome years.
Inside a food processing factory, a hen lays cube-shaped eggs, much to the chagrin of another hen.
A man who proclaims to an entertainment agent his dog can talk whereas all the dog's answers are "ruff", particularly for the answers to the top of a house, the owner's name and the greatest baseball player. When the agent throws them out, the dog picks himself up, dusts himself off, and declares to his owner: "Maybe I should've said DiMaggio?"
A chameleon that can blend into different unicolor screens but cannot bring himself to attempt a multi-color plaid screen:
Another scene with Rover waiting for his master through a terrible storm.
The classic "trained pigeons" gag in which the trainer's pigeons, when released from their cage, fly past the table of miniature obstacles and out the window.
A hospital room with a dog who has his bandaged leg. The veterinarian unravels the wraps and finds a cat biting the victim's foot and won't let go.
A beaver literally "damming" a river when a piece of the structure breaks off.
Spring, in the forest, where a pair of birds, skunks, and bears are cheek to cheekin love, including a pair of porcupines kissing and then yelp in pain from the quills.
Back to the running gag, Rover's master is finally home, but then gets beat up at the cartoon's end. The dog demandedly wants his supper because he's starved.