Michigan J Frog Dance Hello My Baby Hello My Honey

1955Catchphrase / dance / reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Hello My Baby · Hello My Honey · One Froggy Evening · Michigan Rag · Hello Ma Baby

Michigan J. Frog Dance is a 1955 Warner Bros. cartoon routine starring a top-hatted, cane-wielding frog performing to "Hello! Ma Baby," from Chuck Jones' cult classic "One Froggy Evening.

Michigan J. Frog Dance refers to the iconic top-hat-and-cane routine performed by the Warner Bros. cartoon character Michigan J. Frog, typically set to the 1899 Tin Pan Alley song "Hello! Ma Baby." Originating from Chuck Jones' 1955 animated short "One Froggy Evening," the dance became a cultural touchstone through decades of television syndication and the frog's stint as The WB network mascot from 1995 to 2005. Online, the dance and its signature lyric "Hello my baby, hello my honey, hello my ragtime gal" became a recurring reference in memes, mashups, and fan edits across Reddit, Vine, and Tumblr.

TL;DR

Michigan J.

Overview

The Michigan J. Frog Dance is a vaudeville-style routine where the character marches and kicks his legs while wearing a top hat and carrying a cane, belting out old-timey songs. The most recognizable number is "Hello! Ma Baby," a ragtime song about a man whose girlfriend he only knows through the telephone6. In the original cartoon, the joke is that the frog only performs for his owner and instantly reverts to a normal, unresponsive frog whenever anyone else is watching4.

The dance is visually distinctive: a small green frog doing a full Broadway-caliber show with high kicks, spins, and theatrical gestures. People reference it in two main ways online. Some recreate the dance itself with different characters or real animals, while others use the concept of a "Michigan J. Frog situation" to describe something that only works when nobody important is looking2.

The dance first appeared in "One Froggy Evening," a Merrie Melodies animated short released on December 31, 19554. Chuck Jones directed the cartoon, with Michael Maltese writing the script. The short was partly inspired by a 1944 Cary Grant film called "Once Upon a Time" about a dancing caterpillar5. In the cartoon, a construction worker discovers a live frog inside the cornerstone of a demolished building. The frog dons a top hat and cane and launches into song-and-dance numbers, but refuses to perform for anyone else, ruining the man financially4.

The frog's singing voice came from Bill Roberts, a Los Angeles nightclub entertainer who went uncredited at the time, since only Mel Blanc had an on-screen credit clause at Warner Bros.5. The character had no name during production. Jones started calling him "Michigan Frog" in the 1970s, after the original song "The Michigan Rag" written for the cartoon. The middle initial "J." was added during an interview with writer Jay Cocks5.

The signature song "Hello! Ma Baby" predates the cartoon by over half a century. Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson wrote it in 1899 as a Tin Pan Alley number about long-distance romance via telephone, which was still a novelty at the time, present in fewer than 10% of U.S. households6. Arthur Collins made the first recording on an Edison phonograph cylinder7.

Origin & Background

Platform
Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies (source), Reddit / Vine / Tumblr (internet meme spread)
Key People
Chuck Jones, Michael Maltese, Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson, Bill Roberts
Date
1955 (original cartoon), 2014 (internet meme spread)
Year
1955

The dance first appeared in "One Froggy Evening," a Merrie Melodies animated short released on December 31, 1955. Chuck Jones directed the cartoon, with Michael Maltese writing the script. The short was partly inspired by a 1944 Cary Grant film called "Once Upon a Time" about a dancing caterpillar. In the cartoon, a construction worker discovers a live frog inside the cornerstone of a demolished building. The frog dons a top hat and cane and launches into song-and-dance numbers, but refuses to perform for anyone else, ruining the man financially.

The frog's singing voice came from Bill Roberts, a Los Angeles nightclub entertainer who went uncredited at the time, since only Mel Blanc had an on-screen credit clause at Warner Bros.. The character had no name during production. Jones started calling him "Michigan Frog" in the 1970s, after the original song "The Michigan Rag" written for the cartoon. The middle initial "J." was added during an interview with writer Jay Cocks.

The signature song "Hello! Ma Baby" predates the cartoon by over half a century. Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson wrote it in 1899 as a Tin Pan Alley number about long-distance romance via telephone, which was still a novelty at the time, present in fewer than 10% of U.S. households. Arthur Collins made the first recording on an Edison phonograph cylinder.

How It Spread

The cartoon gained massive cultural weight through decades of television reruns. Steven Spielberg called it "the Citizen Kane of animated shorts". In 1994, a poll of 1,000 animation professionals ranked it the fifth greatest cartoon of all time. The United States Library of Congress selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2003.

Michigan J. Frog got his biggest mainstream push when he became the official mascot of The WB television network in 1995, voiced by Jeff McCarthy. For a decade, the frog appeared in network bumpers, show intros, and TV rating cards before programs like "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". This made the dance a fixture of 90s pop culture, and anyone who watched The WB grew up associating the top-hat frog with the network's identity.

The frog's mascot run ended abruptly on July 22, 2005, when WB Chairman Garth Ancier announced "The frog is dead and buried" at a fall season preview. The network wanted to shed its young-teen image. Various humorous obituaries were published online.

The dance entered internet meme territory in the mid-2010s. On May 21, 2014, a photograph of a real frog sitting upright in a pose resembling Michigan J. Frog was posted to Reddit's r/funny with the "Hello my baby" lyric as a caption, earning 3,131 upvotes. The same photo was reposted on March 8, 2015, pulling in over 4,092 points.

On April 8, 2015, Vine user beniciodeltaco created a mashup combining the Michigan J. Frog dance with Pepe the Frog imagery, swapping the music to "Hello Darkness, My Old Friend." The Vine racked up over two million loops. On January 23, 2016, a video of the Steven Universe character Peridot performing the dance hit Tumblr, gaining over 4,900 notes. The Steven Universe fandom latched onto this reference from the episode "Log Date 7 15 2," with fans calling out the missed meme opportunity.

How to Use This Meme

The Michigan J. Frog Dance typically gets referenced in a few common ways:

1

Character edits: Take any character (animated, real, or meme) and put them in the top-hat-and-cane pose, often with the "Hello my baby, hello my honey" lyric overlaid.

2

Real frog photos: Find a photo of a real frog sitting upright or in an unusual pose and caption it with the song lyrics.

3

The "only performs alone" joke: Reference the concept when something works perfectly in private but fails in front of others. Think: a bug that only appears when QA isn't watching, or a pet doing tricks only when guests aren't around.

4

Audio mashups: Pair the "Hello! Ma Baby" melody with unexpected characters or situations, often for comedic contrast.

Cultural Impact

"One Froggy Evening" cast a long shadow across American pop culture well before the internet picked it up. Mel Brooks parodied the scene in the 1987 film "Spaceballs," where a xenomorph alien bursts from a character's chest and performs the dance routine. The gag worked because audiences in 1987 already knew the reference.

The WB network years (1995-2005) burned the image into a generation's memory. Michigan J. Frog appeared on the network's very first night of programming on January 11, 1995, with Chuck Jones drawing the character on an easel before the frog leaped off to launch the network.

The character's retirement sparked discourse about his connection to historical minstrelsy. On February 5, 2003, two years before the mascot was dropped, Chappelle's Show aired a skit mocking the character's ties to blackface performance traditions. While Warner Bros. officially cited a desire for more adult-oriented branding, the minstrelsy connection became a common alternate theory for the character's retirement.

The frog made a return as the main antagonist in the Teen Titans Go! episode "Warner Bros. 100th Anniversary," voiced by Fred Tatasciore. In the episode, Michigan J. Frog destroys the Warner Bros. studio as revenge for not being invited to the 100th anniversary party.

A frog resembling Michigan also appeared at the opening of the 1988 Disney/Amblin film "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" at Maroon Cartoon Studios. Chuck Jones drew the character for the cover of singer-songwriter Leon Redbone's 1975 album "On the Track".

Fun Facts

The frog's full canonical name is Michigan Jackson Frog, though almost nobody uses the "Jackson" part.

The character's earliest name was "Enrico," as given in The Bugs Bunny Show in 1960, before Jones renamed him in the 1970s.

In the cartoon "From Hare to Eternity," Yosemite Sam digs up the frog's box on a desert island, immediately slams it shut, and yells "Not in my picture!".

"Hello! Ma Baby" was the first well-known song to reference the telephone, and the word "Hello" itself was still primarily associated with phone use at the time of writing.

The 1955 cartoon contains zero spoken dialogue. The only voice in the entire film belongs to the singing frog.

Derivatives & Variations

Pepe x Michigan J. Frog Vine:

Vine user beniciodeltaco's 2015 mashup fused Pepe the Frog with the dance, set to "The Sound of Silence," earning over two million loops[3].

Steven Universe / Peridot version:

A fan-made video of Peridot performing the dance from "Log Date 7 15 2" went viral on Tumblr in January 2016[1].

Real frog Reddit posts:

Multiple Reddit posts featuring actual frogs in Michigan J. Frog-like poses with the song lyrics as captions circulated on r/funny in 2014-2015[3].

Spaceballs chestburster:

Mel Brooks' 1987 parody with a xenomorph performing the routine became one of the film's most quoted scenes[6].

"Another Froggy Evening" (1995):

Chuck Jones' official sequel followed the frog through history, ending with him befriending Marvin the Martian[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

Michigan J Frog Dance Hello My Baby Hello My Honey

1955Catchphrase / dance / reaction imageclassic

Also known as: Hello My Baby · Hello My Honey · One Froggy Evening · Michigan Rag · Hello Ma Baby

Michigan J. Frog Dance is a 1955 Warner Bros. cartoon routine starring a top-hatted, cane-wielding frog performing to "Hello! Ma Baby," from Chuck Jones' cult classic "One Froggy Evening.

Michigan J. Frog Dance refers to the iconic top-hat-and-cane routine performed by the Warner Bros. cartoon character Michigan J. Frog, typically set to the 1899 Tin Pan Alley song "Hello! Ma Baby." Originating from Chuck Jones' 1955 animated short "One Froggy Evening," the dance became a cultural touchstone through decades of television syndication and the frog's stint as The WB network mascot from 1995 to 2005. Online, the dance and its signature lyric "Hello my baby, hello my honey, hello my ragtime gal" became a recurring reference in memes, mashups, and fan edits across Reddit, Vine, and Tumblr.

TL;DR

Michigan J.

Overview

The Michigan J. Frog Dance is a vaudeville-style routine where the character marches and kicks his legs while wearing a top hat and carrying a cane, belting out old-timey songs. The most recognizable number is "Hello! Ma Baby," a ragtime song about a man whose girlfriend he only knows through the telephone. In the original cartoon, the joke is that the frog only performs for his owner and instantly reverts to a normal, unresponsive frog whenever anyone else is watching.

The dance is visually distinctive: a small green frog doing a full Broadway-caliber show with high kicks, spins, and theatrical gestures. People reference it in two main ways online. Some recreate the dance itself with different characters or real animals, while others use the concept of a "Michigan J. Frog situation" to describe something that only works when nobody important is looking.

The dance first appeared in "One Froggy Evening," a Merrie Melodies animated short released on December 31, 1955. Chuck Jones directed the cartoon, with Michael Maltese writing the script. The short was partly inspired by a 1944 Cary Grant film called "Once Upon a Time" about a dancing caterpillar. In the cartoon, a construction worker discovers a live frog inside the cornerstone of a demolished building. The frog dons a top hat and cane and launches into song-and-dance numbers, but refuses to perform for anyone else, ruining the man financially.

The frog's singing voice came from Bill Roberts, a Los Angeles nightclub entertainer who went uncredited at the time, since only Mel Blanc had an on-screen credit clause at Warner Bros.. The character had no name during production. Jones started calling him "Michigan Frog" in the 1970s, after the original song "The Michigan Rag" written for the cartoon. The middle initial "J." was added during an interview with writer Jay Cocks.

The signature song "Hello! Ma Baby" predates the cartoon by over half a century. Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson wrote it in 1899 as a Tin Pan Alley number about long-distance romance via telephone, which was still a novelty at the time, present in fewer than 10% of U.S. households. Arthur Collins made the first recording on an Edison phonograph cylinder.

Origin & Background

Platform
Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies (source), Reddit / Vine / Tumblr (internet meme spread)
Key People
Chuck Jones, Michael Maltese, Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson, Bill Roberts
Date
1955 (original cartoon), 2014 (internet meme spread)
Year
1955

The dance first appeared in "One Froggy Evening," a Merrie Melodies animated short released on December 31, 1955. Chuck Jones directed the cartoon, with Michael Maltese writing the script. The short was partly inspired by a 1944 Cary Grant film called "Once Upon a Time" about a dancing caterpillar. In the cartoon, a construction worker discovers a live frog inside the cornerstone of a demolished building. The frog dons a top hat and cane and launches into song-and-dance numbers, but refuses to perform for anyone else, ruining the man financially.

The frog's singing voice came from Bill Roberts, a Los Angeles nightclub entertainer who went uncredited at the time, since only Mel Blanc had an on-screen credit clause at Warner Bros.. The character had no name during production. Jones started calling him "Michigan Frog" in the 1970s, after the original song "The Michigan Rag" written for the cartoon. The middle initial "J." was added during an interview with writer Jay Cocks.

The signature song "Hello! Ma Baby" predates the cartoon by over half a century. Joseph E. Howard and Ida Emerson wrote it in 1899 as a Tin Pan Alley number about long-distance romance via telephone, which was still a novelty at the time, present in fewer than 10% of U.S. households. Arthur Collins made the first recording on an Edison phonograph cylinder.

How It Spread

The cartoon gained massive cultural weight through decades of television reruns. Steven Spielberg called it "the Citizen Kane of animated shorts". In 1994, a poll of 1,000 animation professionals ranked it the fifth greatest cartoon of all time. The United States Library of Congress selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2003.

Michigan J. Frog got his biggest mainstream push when he became the official mascot of The WB television network in 1995, voiced by Jeff McCarthy. For a decade, the frog appeared in network bumpers, show intros, and TV rating cards before programs like "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". This made the dance a fixture of 90s pop culture, and anyone who watched The WB grew up associating the top-hat frog with the network's identity.

The frog's mascot run ended abruptly on July 22, 2005, when WB Chairman Garth Ancier announced "The frog is dead and buried" at a fall season preview. The network wanted to shed its young-teen image. Various humorous obituaries were published online.

The dance entered internet meme territory in the mid-2010s. On May 21, 2014, a photograph of a real frog sitting upright in a pose resembling Michigan J. Frog was posted to Reddit's r/funny with the "Hello my baby" lyric as a caption, earning 3,131 upvotes. The same photo was reposted on March 8, 2015, pulling in over 4,092 points.

On April 8, 2015, Vine user beniciodeltaco created a mashup combining the Michigan J. Frog dance with Pepe the Frog imagery, swapping the music to "Hello Darkness, My Old Friend." The Vine racked up over two million loops. On January 23, 2016, a video of the Steven Universe character Peridot performing the dance hit Tumblr, gaining over 4,900 notes. The Steven Universe fandom latched onto this reference from the episode "Log Date 7 15 2," with fans calling out the missed meme opportunity.

How to Use This Meme

The Michigan J. Frog Dance typically gets referenced in a few common ways:

1

Character edits: Take any character (animated, real, or meme) and put them in the top-hat-and-cane pose, often with the "Hello my baby, hello my honey" lyric overlaid.

2

Real frog photos: Find a photo of a real frog sitting upright or in an unusual pose and caption it with the song lyrics.

3

The "only performs alone" joke: Reference the concept when something works perfectly in private but fails in front of others. Think: a bug that only appears when QA isn't watching, or a pet doing tricks only when guests aren't around.

4

Audio mashups: Pair the "Hello! Ma Baby" melody with unexpected characters or situations, often for comedic contrast.

Cultural Impact

"One Froggy Evening" cast a long shadow across American pop culture well before the internet picked it up. Mel Brooks parodied the scene in the 1987 film "Spaceballs," where a xenomorph alien bursts from a character's chest and performs the dance routine. The gag worked because audiences in 1987 already knew the reference.

The WB network years (1995-2005) burned the image into a generation's memory. Michigan J. Frog appeared on the network's very first night of programming on January 11, 1995, with Chuck Jones drawing the character on an easel before the frog leaped off to launch the network.

The character's retirement sparked discourse about his connection to historical minstrelsy. On February 5, 2003, two years before the mascot was dropped, Chappelle's Show aired a skit mocking the character's ties to blackface performance traditions. While Warner Bros. officially cited a desire for more adult-oriented branding, the minstrelsy connection became a common alternate theory for the character's retirement.

The frog made a return as the main antagonist in the Teen Titans Go! episode "Warner Bros. 100th Anniversary," voiced by Fred Tatasciore. In the episode, Michigan J. Frog destroys the Warner Bros. studio as revenge for not being invited to the 100th anniversary party.

A frog resembling Michigan also appeared at the opening of the 1988 Disney/Amblin film "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" at Maroon Cartoon Studios. Chuck Jones drew the character for the cover of singer-songwriter Leon Redbone's 1975 album "On the Track".

Fun Facts

The frog's full canonical name is Michigan Jackson Frog, though almost nobody uses the "Jackson" part.

The character's earliest name was "Enrico," as given in The Bugs Bunny Show in 1960, before Jones renamed him in the 1970s.

In the cartoon "From Hare to Eternity," Yosemite Sam digs up the frog's box on a desert island, immediately slams it shut, and yells "Not in my picture!".

"Hello! Ma Baby" was the first well-known song to reference the telephone, and the word "Hello" itself was still primarily associated with phone use at the time of writing.

The 1955 cartoon contains zero spoken dialogue. The only voice in the entire film belongs to the singing frog.

Derivatives & Variations

Pepe x Michigan J. Frog Vine:

Vine user beniciodeltaco's 2015 mashup fused Pepe the Frog with the dance, set to "The Sound of Silence," earning over two million loops[3].

Steven Universe / Peridot version:

A fan-made video of Peridot performing the dance from "Log Date 7 15 2" went viral on Tumblr in January 2016[1].

Real frog Reddit posts:

Multiple Reddit posts featuring actual frogs in Michigan J. Frog-like poses with the song lyrics as captions circulated on r/funny in 2014-2015[3].

Spaceballs chestburster:

Mel Brooks' 1987 parody with a xenomorph performing the routine became one of the film's most quoted scenes[6].

"Another Froggy Evening" (1995):

Chuck Jones' official sequel followed the frog through history, ending with him befriending Marvin the Martian[4].

Frequently Asked Questions