10 Raw and Geeky Facts About Pop Culture Rabbits

By Tech Tudum

10. Rabbits have played a significant role in pop culture, with the Easter Bunny being a popular symbol of spring and new beginnings.

9. Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter is a classic storybook rabbit who was based on Potter's own pet rabbit named Peter Piper.

9. Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter is a classic storybook rabbit who was based on Potter's own pet rabbit named Peter Piper.

8. Watership Down by Richard Adams is a popular children's book about a community of rabbits trying to escape their warren and find a new home.

7. Rabbits are prominent in advertising logos and mascots, including Energizer, Trix, Nesquik, Cadbury, Playboy, and Psycho Bunny.

6. Disney's recent rabbit hero is Judy Hopps, a little bunny working as a cop in Zootopia.

5. In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, the White Rabbit represents Alice's quest for knowledge and adventure, while the March Hare is based on the phrase "mad as a March hare."

4. Frank, the main baddie in Subway Surfers, is a well-dressed villain who always wears a white bunny mask.

3. Usagi Yojimbo, a "bodyguard rabbit" from Dark Horse Comics, was influenced by various sources including Edo period swordsman Miyamoto Musashi and Sergio Aragonés' Groo the Wanderer.

2. Warner Brothers' cartoon star Bugs Bunny holds a Guinness World Record for most film appearances by a cartoon character.

1. Disney's famous phrase "it all started with a mouse" is not entirely true, it actually started with a rabbit: Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.