Look at the timing directors. Michael Lah is here. Tex Avery's animator through the 1950's and the first animator hired by Hanna-Barbera for their cartoon studio.
The New Adventures of Beany And Cecil Is An American Animated Children's Television Series Produced By DIC Animation City/ John K. It Aired From September 10 1988 to October 8 1988 On ABC. This Program Was Given a TV-Y Rating Due To Funny Cartoon For All Children. The First Season 1 Has 5 Episodes.
Must be the pilot episode of this short-lived revived DIC Animation City-Spümcø- Bob Clampett Productions “Beany & Cecil” series cause of the classic colorized footage from The early ABC Weekly Primetime & Saturday Morning tv series “Matty’s Funday Funnies with Beany & Cecil” @ 0:37. Also this episode was originally aired on KOVR • TV 13, a local ABC TV Network station in Stockton & Sacramento, CA. In 1988 before a episode of the 2nd long-running Saturday Morning cartoon show on ABC right after “School House Rock” & “The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show”: Disney’s “The New Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh” @ 0:18 & 21:56.
@@d-manthecaptain1382 There's a lot to unpack here. In the Golden Age of animation, cartoons were not scripted. They were written straightaway at storyboards. Now, starting in the 1960's, and throughout the 70's and 80's, was considered the Dark Age of animation. Most scripters on these crass garbage animated television shows were indifferent to animation, with ambitions to something higher in television. Chuck Lorre was one of these people. In fact, he only took this job because of a Writers' Strike! John Kricfalusi, the head director and producer on the show, called his scripts the worst in cartoon history. There were conflicts between Kricfalusi, Lorre, and the network. Either Lorre quit or was fired, and he said all his scripts were rewritten without his permission. And besides, Kricfalusi would keep adding jokes in the storyboard, where he believed a cartoon should be written. Credit goes to Thad Komorowski's book _Sick Little Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren and Stimpy Story_ .
And also, of course, Harriet Beck, Sody Clampett, John Kricfalusi, And Andy Heyward are the creator and executive producers of this short-lived ABC Saturday morning cartoon show, too.
Okay so this is basically just SpongeBob but if it was out of water a lot plus the creator of Ren and Stimpy has also worked with some of the people who worked on SpongeBob like Vincent Paul Weller and Bob camp
@@yosefdemby8792 -- "Sir Pint" would be funny, though. Like, a knight who consumes inordinate amounts of ale, and every time he hiccups drunkenly, his visor falls down and pinches his nose.
Some of the bad guys seen in the Club Bad scene appear to be parodies of Doctor Doom, Joker, Frankenstein's Monster, Red Skull, Doctor Octopus, Jason Voorhees, Darth Vader, and Ming the Merciless.
I recall ABC wanted to replicate the success CBS was having with "Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures", so they ordered two Saturday morning cartoons for the 1988-89 that were inspired by that series: this from DiC, and "A Pup Named Scooby-Doo" from Hanna-Barbera. DiC and the Clampett family even got John Kricfalusi and several of the "Mighty Mouse" veterans involved. Unfortunately due to executive meddling and John K.'s infamous perfectionism leading to production delays, this show didn't last very long, and "A Pup Named Scooby-Doo" ended up outliving this until 1991.
@@FelixSullivan Unfortunately, failing to mention him does nothing to change or prevent his misdeeds, which were unrelated to the creation of this show. John K., for better or worse, was an integral part of how this show came to be. He and Bob Clampett had stuck up a friendship before Clampett's death, and Bob's widow/Bob Clampett Prods. pushed for John K. to be one of the lead artists on this show when they were trying to get ABC to greenlight it. One wonders if this show would have been more successful had John K. not been a part of it, but to ignore his involvement is an oversight.
Look at the timing directors. Michael Lah is here. Tex Avery's animator through the 1950's and the first animator hired by Hanna-Barbera for their cartoon studio.
Butt why is this cartoon so so vastly Superior to SpongeBob SquarePants
@@saladfingersdirector1130 Some of the crew who worked for this show later helped with many cartoons (including SpongeBob).
No way it’s bin too many years Stop lying 🤥
@@saladfingersdirector1130 Don't blame me. Blame the credits.
I ain’t blamin u
Crazy that this was Billy West's first character
This is the only DiC show that I know of to use a real Orchestra.
The New Adventures of Beany And Cecil Is An American Animated Children's Television Series Produced By DIC Animation City/ John K. It Aired From September 10 1988 to October 8 1988 On ABC. This Program Was Given a TV-Y Rating Due To Funny Cartoon For All Children. The First Season 1 Has 5 Episodes.
And there were three episodes unaired
@@harrygardner7257 ...and IIRC, for John K. being himself (if it's not perfect, its not worth airing)
Hard to believe Beany & Heero Yuy are voiced by the same person.
The revival of Beany & Cecil was cancelled & replaced by reruns of The Flintstone Kids.
0:54 - Cecil spoofs the MGM lion!
Must be the pilot episode of this short-lived revived
DIC Animation City-Spümcø-
Bob Clampett Productions
“Beany & Cecil” series cause of the classic colorized footage from The early ABC Weekly Primetime & Saturday Morning tv series
“Matty’s Funday Funnies with Beany & Cecil” @ 0:37.
Also this episode was originally aired on KOVR • TV 13, a local ABC TV Network station in Stockton & Sacramento, CA. In 1988 before a episode of the 2nd long-running Saturday Morning cartoon show on ABC right after “School House Rock” & “The Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show”: Disney’s “The New Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh” @ 0:18 & 21:56.
Spümcø was founded _after_ this.
You said it.
@@yosefdemby8792 True.
True to the 9th power!
Princess Princess and Beany do make a cute pair, but let's not forget about Beany's original girlfriend, Baby Ruthie.
17:28 Obviously John Kricfalusi's stab at Chuck Lorre.
But if John was only a producer on this, and this episode was written by Chuck Lorre, then wouldn't that just mean it's Chuck's stab at himself?
@@d-manthecaptain1382 There's a lot to unpack here. In the Golden Age of animation, cartoons were not scripted. They were written straightaway at storyboards. Now, starting in the 1960's, and throughout the 70's and 80's, was considered the Dark Age of animation. Most scripters on these crass garbage animated television shows were indifferent to animation, with ambitions to something higher in television.
Chuck Lorre was one of these people. In fact, he only took this job because of a Writers' Strike! John Kricfalusi, the head director and producer on the show, called his scripts the worst in cartoon history. There were conflicts between Kricfalusi, Lorre, and the network. Either Lorre quit or was fired, and he said all his scripts were rewritten without his permission. And besides, Kricfalusi would keep adding jokes in the storyboard, where he believed a cartoon should be written.
Credit goes to Thad Komorowski's book _Sick Little Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren and Stimpy Story_ .
@@yosefdemby8792 Interesting.
Great breaking 4th wall moment!
Yeah, after he left Ralph Bakshi before producing the 2nd season of Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures for CBS.
And Now It's Beany And Cecil A Bob Clampett Cartooooooooooooooooooooooooooon
But that animation is on POINT
It looks like the original with a bit more cartoony-ness to some of the characters and more budget
Never saw this one.
And of course, John K as producer.
For those who don't know, this is who John K is: www.buzzfeednews.com/article/arianelange/john-kricfalusi-ren-stimpy-underage-sexual-abuse
And also, of course,
Harriet Beck,
Sody Clampett,
John Kricfalusi,
And Andy Heyward are the creator and executive producers of this short-lived ABC Saturday morning cartoon show, too.
@@jamieimai9328 John K is short for John Kricfalusi, y'know. You didn't have to say it twice.
3:46 its the three headed cyber freep
This revival is missing the clever puns.
Okay so this is basically just SpongeBob but if it was out of water a lot plus the creator of Ren and Stimpy has also worked with some of the people who worked on SpongeBob like Vincent Paul Weller and Bob camp
Not gonna lie, the character's personalities are way better in this series than the original
Cecil the sea sick sea sir pint breaks the 4th wall @ 14:20.
It's spelled "serpent"!
@@yosefdemby8792 -- "Sir Pint" would be funny, though. Like, a knight who consumes inordinate amounts of ale, and every time he hiccups drunkenly, his visor falls down and pinches his nose.
You said it! Awesome video, through!
Some of the bad guys seen in the Club Bad scene appear to be parodies of Doctor Doom, Joker, Frankenstein's Monster, Red Skull, Doctor Octopus, Jason Voorhees, Darth Vader, and Ming the Merciless.
And also. The man disguised as a maid in three stooges if a body meets a body
Dunno about the timing with all the marvel heroes
Anybody notice the name “Chuck Lorre”in the writing credits?
Grace Under Fire, Dharma and Greg, BIG BANG THEORY, and his most beloved credit, writing the TMNT theme lyrics
@@BigEOT3 He Even Worked on The Toxic Crusaders Cartoon.
Zut alor!!!
I recall ABC wanted to replicate the success CBS was having with "Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures", so they ordered two Saturday morning cartoons for the 1988-89 that were inspired by that series: this from DiC, and "A Pup Named Scooby-Doo" from Hanna-Barbera. DiC and the Clampett family even got John Kricfalusi and several of the "Mighty Mouse" veterans involved. Unfortunately due to executive meddling and John K.'s infamous perfectionism leading to production delays, this show didn't last very long, and "A Pup Named Scooby-Doo" ended up outliving this until 1991.
12:20 mud slide
You forgot to list John K. in the description.
No, I _chose_ not to mention him in the description
Why would you choose not to mention one of the main people behind the show?
@@spongebobrocks125 uh, probably because of what he did to underaged girls
@@FelixSullivan Unfortunately, failing to mention him does nothing to change or prevent his misdeeds, which were unrelated to the creation of this show. John K., for better or worse, was an integral part of how this show came to be. He and Bob Clampett had stuck up a friendship before Clampett's death, and Bob's widow/Bob Clampett Prods. pushed for John K. to be one of the lead artists on this show when they were trying to get ABC to greenlight it. One wonders if this show would have been more successful had John K. not been a part of it, but to ignore his involvement is an oversight.
@@kevinwood5317 that, and it's partially his fault that the show failed.
These pale in comparison to the originals
12:35-12:45
Too much Kricfalusi in this, but I don't think that could be avoided.
And that's why that reboot was extremely short-lived.
Voice acting bad but dishonest john kinda cute
Maurice LaMarche, doing sort of a Groucho Marx/Howard Stern fusion for Dee-Jay's voice.
@Rose Beon Believe it or not, Billy West provided the voice of Cecil.
Not all of the voice acting is bad. Billy West and Maurice lamarche are decent. It is true that the others were lacking though.
@@wturner777 I could hear Stimpy in his voice.