I have a query that has plagued me for 50 years

Popeye's arch nemesis, Brutus is sometimes called Bluto - Why please?

I got this off of AI

"Early Name: Bluto

When Popeye first appeared in the 1930s cartoons (from Fleischer Studios), his big, bearded adversary was called Bluto. He was the original brute who fought Popeye for Olive Oyl’s attention.

Later Change to Brutus

In the 1950s, when King Features Syndicate made Popeye the Sailor TV cartoons, they didn’t think they had the rights to use the name Bluto (because the original Fleischer shorts were controlled by Paramount). So they created what they thought was a “new” character—Brutus—who looked and acted almost exactly the same.

The Confusion

In reality, King Features did own the rights to Bluto, but they didn’t realize it at the time. So for years, Popeye’s nemesis bounced between being called Bluto and Brutus, depending on which series or studio was making the cartoons.

Today

Both names are recognized as referring to the same character. Most modern Popeye adaptations stick with Bluto, but old TV reruns and comics still show Brutus.

👉 In short: He’s the same guy. The name difference came from a rights mix-up in the 1950s."
 
I got this off of AI

"Early Name: Bluto

When Popeye first appeared in the 1930s cartoons (from Fleischer Studios), his big, bearded adversary was called Bluto. He was the original brute who fought Popeye for Olive Oyl’s attention.

Later Change to Brutus

In the 1950s, when King Features Syndicate made Popeye the Sailor TV cartoons, they didn’t think they had the rights to use the name Bluto (because the original Fleischer shorts were controlled by Paramount). So they created what they thought was a “new” character—Brutus—who looked and acted almost exactly the same.

The Confusion

In reality, King Features did own the rights to Bluto, but they didn’t realize it at the time. So for years, Popeye’s nemesis bounced between being called Bluto and Brutus, depending on which series or studio was making the cartoons.

Today

Both names are recognized as referring to the same character. Most modern Popeye adaptations stick with Bluto, but old TV reruns and comics still show Brutus.

👉 In short: He’s the same guy. The name difference came from a rights mix-up in the 1950s."
Thank you. I can sleep easy now with that off my mind.
 
In early cartoons Popeye wears a dark shirt and blue pants. In later ones, he wears a traditional white U.S. Navy uniform.
The US Navy has two types of uniform. One is called Blues or Dress Blues, that is the dark uniform, which is worn in winter or cold climates. The other is Whites, or dress Whites, which are, well, white. These are worn in warm climates and summer.
 
Popeye's arch nemesis, Brutus is sometimes called Bluto - Why please?

After one of your other recently posted threads,
With a possibly misleading title... @Bretrick
😉

I read  this thread title, and thought it was a trick question, which would be on a different topic entirely than this title might suggest...... 🙃😉😄😂

However, you were saved by that wonderful and interesting investigative response posted above by @oslooskar
☺️🤭🤗😁😁😁😁

🥰🤩😍
 

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