The plunger gag is older than recorded sound and still funny — it's the timing of the wet plop release that does the work, not the impact going in. These 17 plunger clips chase that release moment cleanly: rubber-on-porcelain seal compressions, the suction pop on the pull-out, water displacement gulps as the bowl reacts, and longer comic-timing variations where the suck-and-release happens three or four times in sequence.
Comedy editors reach for the single plop on a punchline cut — sitcom-style, dry, immediately readable. Cartoon and animation work uses the exaggerated suction takes because they need the gesture amplified past realism. Foley editors building bathroom-scene soundtracks have a quieter use for the gentler seal compressions, which double as boot-stuck-in-mud or vacuum-pack opens depending on context. Pull any of it free, no signup or watermark.