What if MGM Animation remains open?

In the beginning, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) founded its first animation house in 1937, which was responsible with many classic animated cartoons during the the Golden Age of Animation, including such introducing to us with its library of the most beloved animated characters, like Tom and Jerry, Droopy, Slappy Squirrel, George and Junior, and Barney Bear.

Five years later after MGM original animation studio was closing down in 1957, MGM revived its animation felicity by Chuck Jones, under its name MGM Animation/Visual Arts, known for producing its version of Tom and Jerry series, and as well as its collection of specials and feature films, like How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Horton Hears a Who and The Phantom Tollbooth, until it, again closed down in 1970.

Up to the 1990s, MGM rebooted its animation arm with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Animation, who would produced its series of mostly direct-to-video animated movies and television programs, with one occasional theatrical release, parasitically some are based on MGM-owned franchises, The Pink Panther, and All Dogs Go to Heaven, until however, it got seemly defunct since around 2000s.

To this day, there aren't gonna be anymore animation arms run by MGM ever since, despite currently being responsible to distributed its third-party-produced animated films.

So with that said, let's take a time to go to our imagination where we can learn the theory if MGM's three animation studios would've be an one studio together, think about what could've be like if it remained opening to this day, and also think of the differences and changes of the studio itself.

Changes

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