Thanks for sharing. I remember seeing episodes after school on WGN-TV in Chicago. They had a rotating cast of three cartoon detectives, including Hemlock Holmes, Joe Jitsu and one other whose name eludes me. The Dick Tracy character only appeared for a few moments in each episode and never had anything to do with the story, so even my third-grade pals and I got bored after a while. We did, however, retain one catchphrase from the show. Instead of saying goodbye to one another, we would say, "Six-two and even. Over and out."
You were thinking of Go-Go Gomez. There is also a fourth character named Heap O'Calorie, but I don't blame you for not remembering him because he appeared in much fewer episodes than the other three.
Love it. I shared and subscribed. My brother and I used to watch it in the early 60s on ch9 wgn out of Chicago (we lived in nearby de kalb). He became a police detective and I a usaf cop during the cold war. "No medals, just guts!"😅
God awful in very every dimension...crummy art, racist characters, corny jokes, voices imitations of 40's actors, and Tracy was (with exception) never part of the program, just the dispatcher... to a humanoid dog, a thick accented Japanese American and Mexican American, and a uniformed Andy Divine impersonator. And kids grew up thinking a gambling expression was a way to end a two way communication.
Thanks for sharing. I remember seeing episodes after school on WGN-TV in Chicago. They had a rotating cast of three cartoon detectives, including Hemlock Holmes, Joe Jitsu and one other whose name eludes me. The Dick Tracy character only appeared for a few moments in each episode and never had anything to do with the story, so even my third-grade pals and I got bored after a while. We did, however, retain one catchphrase from the show. Instead of saying goodbye to one another, we would say, "Six-two and even. Over and out."
You're welcome, we have other Dick Tracy Cartoons on this channel and more to come next year .. Thanks for stopping by.
You were thinking of Go-Go Gomez. There is also a fourth character named Heap O'Calorie, but I don't blame you for not remembering him because he appeared in much fewer episodes than the other three.
Heapo Calorie was the remaining cop .
Love it. I shared and subscribed. My brother and I used to watch it in the early 60s on ch9 wgn out of Chicago (we lived in nearby de kalb). He became a police detective and I a usaf cop during the cold war. "No medals, just guts!"😅
@@davidscott3820 thank you David
New to me as a 60s kid.
Dick Tracy - the man that popularized the "Apple Watch". I originally saw these cartoons in COLOR.
Man who inspired the Apple Watch
They are in color!.😁😁
We saw these as part of a live kids show every afternoon along with Mr. Magoo and Popeye. Over and over and over...
Definitely early 60s animation 😊
Hooray. Dick Tracy triumphs at last. Even though the Brow tried to be a smart skipper.
God awful in very every dimension...crummy art, racist characters, corny jokes, voices imitations of 40's actors, and Tracy was (with exception) never part of the program, just the dispatcher... to a humanoid dog, a thick accented Japanese American and Mexican American, and a uniformed Andy Divine impersonator. And kids grew up thinking a gambling expression was a way to end a two way communication.
Other than that Mrs Lincoln, how was the play?
The beauty of this is that YOU CAN SWITCH CHANNELS!! Phony, Virtue Signaling is not Virtuous…
Pewrsonally speaking the pre war live action films were better.