
Age: 62
male
Robert "Bob" Bergen (born March 8, 1964) is an American voice actor. He is the current voice of Porky Pig (having performed the character in Tiny Toon Adventures, Space Jam, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, and the Duck Dodgers TV show), and formerly hosted Jep!, a kids' version of the popular game show Jeopardy! Bergen was born in St. Louis, Missouri. He is also responsible for the voice of Lupin the Third for the Streamline Pictures dubs in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Bob Bergen has played Lupin the Third in: Mystery of Mamo (directed by Soji Yoshikawa), The Castle of Cagliostro (directed by Hayao Miyazaki) and Lupin the Third's Greatest Capers (2 TV episodes from Series Two directed by Hayao Miyazaki). He also played the part of No-Face in the 2001 academy award winning movie Spirited Away and Kai and Masaru in the anime classic Akira. He is also one of the announcers on Disney Channel and voices Bucky the squirrel in The Emperor's New School. He is also responsible for the voice of Luke Skywalker in over a dozen Star Wars video games as well as Robot Chicken's Star Wars Episode I and Star Wars Episode II Specials. He also provided the voice of Wembley and the World's Oldest Fraggle from Fraggle Rock (animated). Bergen was selected to play the animated versions of Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and Link Hogthrob in the ill-fated Little Muppet Monsters and also voiced characters of the day in the 1987-1989 seasons of Jim Henson's Muppet Babies He was the voice of Comet for the highly successful, 'The Santa Clause', 'The Santa Clause 2', and 'The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause'. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bob Bergen, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Bob Bergen

Porky Pig
for Porky Pig in Mickey x Bugs: Creative Control
Suggested by tomzillawash3r3

In a world where cartoons and movies live among humans, two mega-billion dollar companies reign supreme in the world of entertainment, Disney and Warner Bros. Once creators of joy and imagination, these corporations have become massive, monopolizing titans that now drain creativity to fuel the corporate needs. Mickey Mouse is attacked by his haters since he’s Disney’s company mascot and Bugs Bunny feels underused as his animated projects were all cancelled by WB. The two icons decide to cross the bridge between companies and bring the magic back! Meanwhile, two successful CEOs of both companies are revealed to be far more complicated than ruthless businessmen. They entered the industry because of their shared love of cartoons and movies and have struggled to make everyone happy but by following demands by the system they ended up causing more problems for the audience. An alliance is formed not to destroy the studios they helped build, but to remind them why audiences fell in love with cartoons and movies in the first place.
