I think in actually only a few really stood the test of time Hanna-Barbara are legends I'm not denying that but they had a quantity over quality mindset pushing out as many cartoons as possible trying to capture the success of other shows they made and most of the times it didn't work they even ripped off Scooby-Doo a show they made more times than I can count. They have iconic show The Flinstones, Scooby-Doo, The Jetsons, Tom & Jerry and to a lesser extent The Justice Friends, Johnny Quest, Yogi Bear & Huckleberry Hound but I think most of everything else for the most part is forgotten.
Its crazy how most of these cartoons are from the 1960's yet they ALL bring me back to my childhood in the 80's when they were always being syndicated. Every weeknight after school from 6 to 7 the Cartoon Express would be on the USA channel playing these classics in the late 80's. Great times.
My experience as well, in the early 80s. Still have fond memories of the OG Godzilla cartoon, and of course Scooby Doo when it was still a show about kids exposing crooked property developers with amazing cosplay skills.
Money, what else. That and people might get tired of it from time to time. Boomerang should play these as least 3 times a year. They're too good to leave off the air, with the possible exception of multiple rip-offs of like the Flintstones, Scooby Doo, the super friends, and numerous others. Just a bunch of lazy people trying to be hangers-on to grab a quick paycheck, that, in a nutshell, was one of the main reasons why the quality of cartoons has deteriorated so badly during the 70's, 80's, etc. As to why a lot of these cartoons are no longer on the air, one person in this group hinted at it, when a lot of these shows contributed to the violence of the times. But that could Also be said for things like "pro wrestling" , mma, etc.
I don't get that either for a while all the oldys was on boomerang but they not on in Wich they had a channel on cable dish for these cartoons these were the best
Huckleberry Hound, Pixie and Dixie and Mr Jinx, Yogi Bear and Booboo. My life would never have been complete without these characters at the start of it. Thank you.
As people said, in Latin America he is an Icon. In Brazil we love this caracter, maybe because the excellent dubbing work, made for the brazilian reality of the time. Great voices.
They had an impressive array of voice actors on some of their series. They included Scatman Crothers, Jodie Foster, Jamie Farr, Sally Struthers, Jackie Mason, Mel Blanc, Dom Delouise, Jack Burns, Tom Bosley, Paul Lynde, Tim Matheson, June Foray, and Casey Kasem.
I really miss when Cartoon Network was like THIS back in the 90's showing these classic cartoons and now there's no more Boomerang showing them either.
You said it. When The Cartoon Network was in its hay day (in the early 1990s), these classics found a home and were appreciated by a whole new generation of kids. It's too bad it it shows junk like "Teen Titans Go" (the original was better and edgy) and "Gumball" crap. I never like Scooby-Doo, which came out at the end of the 1960s; I believed in 1969.
@@Dimeropepe CN should really still be like THIS today! Most of the stuff it shows nowadays is just nonsense that don't make no damn sense and it's just plain pathetic and weird. The only one I like of today is Total Drama. By the way why don't you like Scooby-Doo?!
@@gibbs615 The reason why I didn't like "Scooby-Doo" is that it wasn't t funny to me. Shaggy and the Scooby-Doo merely stumbled around and, by chance or accident, captured the crooks. The other shows on the networks, such as "Secret Squirrel" (NBC) and "The Impossibles" (CBS), were clever take-offs of the spy movies of the 1960s. I'm glad someone mentioned & appreciated "Wait Till Your Father Gets Home". Cartoon Network (CN) began airing Canadian programs like the one you stated ("Total Drama Island") to a new generation of viewers. I think that is why CN put the classics on The Boomerang Network.
@@allenjones3130 I think Muttley was recycled many times in many cartoons, even if under a different name. And when I saw the Wacky Races clip again, I cracked up, I had forgotten about Penelope Pitstop, she's my kind of girl lol.
Hanna-Barbera brought so many cartoons on Saturdays. As a youth I watched most of their cartoon classics and my favourites are the Globetrotters, the Banana Splits and Hong Kong Phooey. RIP Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera
These were the days when Saturdays were something to look forward to. No school and a morning filled with cartoons! VHS, DVD, cable networks and now, streaming services, are what contributed to the eventual demise of Saturday morning programming. Today, kids can watch just about anything, at any time, on demand. There's no longer the anticipation of that special day at the end of the week. Kids today have missed out on that experience.
I really appreciate you doing this. Even tho I'm in my 20s, I still enjoy watching cartoons from time to time, and not just any cartoons, hanna-babara cartoons. They were the greatest imo.
I HAD A CHANCE to visit Hanna-Barbera & also Disney Studios in 1982 with my High School Animation Class. It was great seeing how things were created and talking to the animators. My class was invited because we had won so many animation awards nationally and worldwide.
I grew up in the 70s and 80s. I lived for Saturday morning cartoons and some live action shows. I've seen about 2/3 of these shows. When the SMC tribute album came out, I got a copy of the tape. When Cartoon Network came about, my friends and I watched whenever we could. Now that I have HBO Max, I can rejoice and binge on the classics. Thanks for the trip down Memory Lane! 😄
I remember getting excited in the 70 and 80s on usually a Friday night telling us what new cartoons would be coming soon. Each channel had their own spectacular roll out.
A big thanks to Mr William Hanna and Mr Joseph Barbera for all these unforgettable cartoons that entertained children and adults alike during this golden era of tv animation. They might not have had HD or CGI back then. But these old cartoons gave us everlasting memories of fun and happiness. Cartoons like scooby doo and wacky races are still popular.
The original Johnny Quest was really scary. It was a night time show and was waaaaay more adult than would be allowed today. Loved watching it back then.
JQ was originally shown on Saturday mornings like all the rest. Super violent though, like Gigantor, the Eighth Man, and the black and white Astro Boy.
Ooooh the nostalgia! I remember this one when I was younger during the 2000s. Although most of these were reruns in my time I still felt they were sooo ahead of my time.
Then a fairly abrupt stop at 16, once that drivers license were in hand. Some I recall knowing about after that, is about the extent of it. I do recall despising Scappy-Doo. I'd always thought the original run was one of the best Saturday morning cartoons ever and recall my abject disgust that that pandering aberration was shoehorned into the show. It was like a wrecking ball of disrespect on Scooby-Doo and on that part of my childhood.
This spans the first 22 years of my life. Regular standard broadcast television as we know it was just over a decade old after staring up after the end of World War II. I was born almost three months before Ruff and Reddy debuted on a Saturday December 14, 1957 on NBC. But I didn't start seeing the show until I was five later in 1962 in reruns on Saturday mornings. But from the earliest fringes of my memory say about when I was about two around 1959-1960, my uncle reminded me from the waist up (while sitting down) I used to rock back and forth to beat of the intro music of the Huckleberry Hound show. It really threw me for a loop when The Flintstones, Top Cat and The Jetsons were featured in early prime-time. It was beyond me to understand H-B was trying to capture a broader demographic aside from kids like me. I did had a trace of awareness in me the back and forth dialogue among the characters was a couple notches more sophisticated and complex than usual. I was caught up in that kid-vid surge of early H-B shorts of Yogi Bear, Wally Gator, Touché Turtle & Dum Dum, Lippy the Lion & Hardy Har Har. By the early 1960s; "Heavens to Murgatroyd", it seems I had more than my fill of laughs from talking animals in silly, goofy and crazy situations. It was after viewing renowned Alex Toth's artistic influences in Space Angel that whet my appetite for science fiction action/adventure (getting caught up in the build up news coverage of US/USSR space race also helped) for this five year old in 1962. Seeing Toth's artistic style brought forth a comic book sense of design and realism style to television cartoons never seen before. The best was yet to come On a 1964 September Friday evening at 7:30, a day before my 7th birthday amid my usual channel flipping around I ran across some VERY strange imagery on ABC. Jonny Quest distinctive realistic illustrative style of Doug Wildey (along with additional artistic touches from Toth) blew my mind as I tuned in and became hooked. Toth's further work on Space Ghost, Birdman, Galaxy Trio and other characters took me 'OUT THERE'. His creation of The Herculoids is the pinnacle H-B animation for fantastic sci-fi/fantasy action expressivity and wide eyed escapism for me. By 1968, it was the grass roots tactics of Action for Children's Television (ACT) that irrevocably changed the landscape of the big three networks Saturday morning scheduling. Hindsight a couple decades later as I became a parent and grandparent myself, I came to understand and respect the various reasons and rationale of protecting what we kids be influenced by TV. Upon turning 11 back then, just couldn't stomach that tsunami of changes switch over to live action excessive goofy/silliness, music leaden themes, TV commercials brainwashing, more educational focus and TONED DOWN excessive violence. I think I started swearing to myself (not around adults) around that time. Hey, my early adolescence was flaring up as the 1970s rolled in for differences of focus for my time and attention. I couldn't get into Scooby Doo, because I working my own teenage mysteries without any clues...with less interest in cartoons. Although I did while in high school took some looks at Sealab 2020 (I couldn't believe it was so boring) while wondering how much any of the technological marvels of the series may come to pass as I become a old man at 63. In the 1990s my son and I at times watched Dexter's Laboratory, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (good but not as good as the original) and even the Powderpuff Girls. I never thought Saturday morning big three networks kid-vid programing would give way to cable networks like Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network. I can't get into the spinoff adult themed parodies (not funny to me) of Space Ghost Coast to Coast, Sealab 2021 and Harvey Birdman; Attorney at Law, but that's the remaining remnant of a 10 year old that is still in me. It is ironic The Banana Splits characters from 1968 would serve as plot device, which would serve as an R-rated movie parody of slasher films by 2019. It's just that the early Hanna-Barbera cartoons were a grand part of my own 'wonder years'...
something that not many of the Americans know is that the success of these cartoons increased because in Mexico a wonderful voice acting was done and that attracted a large public from Latin America
I'm not entirely sure how they could miss Caveman either. I don't know how successful it was in the States but here in the UK all the kids were hooked on it, shouting the catch line at the top of their voices in the playground. EDIT ah I think I see the problem now. It was only shown as a standalone cartoon in the States in 1980 - it was part of other shows before then. They were shown standalone by the BBC over here on Wednesday afternoons after school, about 4.30pm - we never got the special hour-long things, they were split up.
Concerning Captain Caveman it was shown with Scooby's All Star Laff-A-Lympics and Scooby's All Stars for season 1 and 2 with their own air time in season 3. Also missing The Smurfs, Richie Rich, Lucky Luke, Teen Wolf
I thought that too, so I looked it up and Captain caveman was originally on “Scoobies laugh-a-lympics” until the captain got his own show in 1980. But I agree, should have got a mention.
At least with the Flintstones, they produced the spin-off Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm and portrayed them as teenagers, unlike The Simpsons, where 22 seasons on the kids are still kids.
Wait Until Father Gets Home (1972 - 74) I remember my entire family watched. I was ten when it premiered. Have not seen it since but remember the theme song.
I remember dashing across the room to change the channel! Around 1970 is when I started drifting away from Saturday cartoons. After '72, I only remember Scooby, of course, Hong Kong Phooey, Jabberjaw, because he was so silly, and all the Globetrotters spinoffs.
I miss the Hanna-barbera cartoon the most classic best in the world i wish they make new series or bring them back there SOOOOO good to watch especially on Saturday morning cartoon show. I miss all favorite characters Hannah-Barbera never forget Yogi Bear Scooby Doo Huckleberry Hound Fred Flintstones Jetson and more
My childhood favorites were Kimba The White Lion and Speed Racer. Neither were HB, just as my favorite movie back then, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang wasn't Disney. The big producers churned middle-of-the-road content. Others might prefer Looney Tunes to HB.
Unless I missed it, or Hanna-Barbera didn’t produce it, I didn’t see the Hillbilly Bears on the list. They were faves of mine. So many shows that i nearly had forgotten, popped up on this list! Great to be reminded!
@@Hektols For once, somebody remembers & appreciates that forgotten cartoon from the early 1970s when it was shown on NBC. The late Tom Bosley provided the voice of the father. And, you're 100% correct that it was way ahead of "The SImpsons".
I was born in 2004 but I grew up knowing most of these cartoons cuz my dad was born in the early 1950s and grew up watching these cartoons so this is all nostalgia for me☺️❤️and I miss the old boomerang with the fun commercials🥺
I was 5 in '57, so I lived for Hanna-Barbera cartoons up into my early 20s...LOL For Halloween 1960, I went as Fred Flintstone and as Huckleberry Hound in 1961...and I still have many of the Hanna-Barbera comic books I've kept all this time...I think I still have the one where the Jetsons met the Flintstones at the 1964 NY World's Fair...and I still treasure my Flintstones metal Aladdin lunchbox from 1962! I saw the Harlem Globetrotters in '71 and still have the program with the cartoon Globetrotters on the cover!
This video is made for fans of Jellystone just to see who else they would add in future episodes. I really love their dedication and use of every Hanna barbera character ever that's lost in time.
Wow. Thank you so much for posting this. Many of the shows depicted I'd never heard of because they were not shown in the UK, but what I do remember was as a child in the 1970's and the repeats we did have, Saturday mornings was an absloute gem watching Wacky Races, Dastardly and Mutley, Huckleberry Hound, Hong Kong Phooey etc and my personal favourite Penelope Pitstop. Saturday mornings will never be the same again. Hanna Barbera bought so much happiness to kids in an age where 'PC' and 'woke' didnt exist.
@@Madbandit77 Yeah Hanna-Barbara definitely had a quantity or quality mindset back in the day of course you had notable classics like The Flintstones, The Jetsons and Yogi Bear but then there were hundreds of other shows that were really forgettable Pound Puppies, The Impossibles, Secret Squirrel, Wally Gator and so on and I haven't even mentioned the countless Scooby-Doo ripoffs.
I saw most of these when they aired the first time. Yeah, I'm old. Top Cat and Huckleberry Hound are 2 of my earliest memories. I had a HH spoon that I used for breakfast for many years. What I noticed watching this is how they tried to capitalize on big things happening elsewhere, like teen music groups of the late 60s, a certain motorcycle stuntman famous for big jumps in the early 70s, and the martial arts craze of the mid 70s spawned by a certain Chinese monk in the old west.
Timestamps: 0:00 The ruff and reddy show 0:11 the huckleberry hound show 0:21 the quick draw McGraw show 0:31 the Flintstones 0:41 the yogi bear show 0:51 top cat 1:01 the Hanna-Barbera now cartoon series 1:11 the jetsons 1:21 the magilla gorilla show 1:31 jonny Quest 1:41the peter potamus show 1:51the atom ant / secret squirrel shos 2:01sinbad jr and his magic belt 2:11laurel and hardy 2:21frankenstein jr and the impossible 2:31space ghost and dino boy 2:41the space kidettes 2:51the abbott and costello cartoon show 3:01birdman and the galaxy trio 3:11the herculoids 3:21shazzan 3:31fantastic four 3:41moby dick and mighty mightor 3:51samson & goliath 4:01the banana splits adventure 4:11the adventures of Gulliver 4:21the new adventures of Huckleberry finn 4:31wacky races 4:41the perils of Penelope pitstop 4:51dastardly and muttley in their flying machines 5:01cattanooga cats 5:11scoopy doo 5:21harlem globetrotters 5:31josie and the pussycats 5:41where's huddles 5:51the pebbles and bamm-bamm show 6:01the hair bear bunch 6:11funky phantom 6:21amazing chan and chan clan 6:31wait 'till your father gets home 6:41flintone comedy hour 6:51roman holidays 7:01sealab 2020 7:11the new scooby doo movies 7:21josie and the pussycats in outer space 7:31speed buggy 7:41butch Cassidy and the Sundance kids 7:51yogi's gang 8:01super friends 8:11goober and the ghost chasers 8:21inch high, private eyes 8:31jeannie 8:41the addams family 8:51hong kong phooey 9:01devlin 9:11partridge family 2209 a.d 9:21these are the days 9:31valley of the dinisaurs 9:41wheelie and the chopper bunch 9:51korg: 70,000 bc 10:01 the new tom and jerry/grape ape/mumbly show 10:11the scoopy doo/dynomutt hour 10:21clue club 10:31jebberjaw 10:41taggart's treasure 10:51fred Flinstone and friends 11:01scooby's all-star laff-a-lympics 11:11cb bears 11:21the skatebirds 11:31the all-new super friends hour 11:41the Hanna-Barbera happy hour 11:51the funny world of fred and bunni 12:01the all new popeye hour 12:16yogi's space race 12:26challenge of the super friends 12:36godzilla 12:46go go globetrotters 12:56the new fred and barney show 13:06fred and barney meet the thing 13:16sergeant tk yu 13:21america vs the world (cancelled) 13:31casper and the angels 13:41the new shmoo 13:51the super globetrotters 14:01scooby doo and scrappy doo 14:11the world greatest super friends 14:21amigo and friends
The only show to last more than three seasons in a row was the Flintstones. Some came back for more seasons but it was unique for the company. It even had its spinoff Pebbles and Bam Bam for two more seasons after its run as well as the Flintstones Comedy Hour for two more years. Late the Popeye Hour had 5 years as well. Ninety-two shows in all and only two made it that far. Amazing.
Top cat Huckleberry Hound Yogi Bear Dastardly and Muttley Scooby Doo Flinstones The Jetsons Captain Caveman Hong Honk Phoey Josie and the pussycats Wacky Races The Hair bear bunch The addams family Popeye My childhood!
That line was originally from The Three Stooges. It was good to see it become a running gag in other shows. Must admit, I'm not completely sure the Stooges were the first to use it, but I believe they were.
I'm 34 now, but I distinctly remember back in the 90s when I was a child watching not all but some of these classic unforgettable cartoons and enjoying every bit of it. My personal favorites were The Flintstones, the Jetsons, Top Cat Scooby-Doo, Josie & the Pussy Cats, The Addams Family, Popeye.
Jonny Quest had the coolest theme music, even rivaling shows like "Mission: Impossible" or "Hawaii Five-O". Honorable Mentions for cool cartoon show theme music: "Spiderman" (1967-1970) and "Pink Panther" (1969-1970, and later incarnations).
People in Jonny Quest got killed in the cartoons! Not like Fred Flintstone gets slammed with a Boulder by Wilma and Fred is sporting a big ass lump. Then next scene it was gone. Loved Jonny Quest.
It was the fantastic era of Batman, Star Trek, Time Tunnel, the Monkees, and others. I was in kindergarten at the time and remember watching Hanna-Barbera classics like Atom Ant, Secret Squirrel, Space Ghost, Frankenstein Jr., Herculoids, Birdman, etc. It was an exciting and inspiring time to be a child.
I AGREE! I was there-remember these and other classics like Captain America, Iron Man, Gigantor and The 8th Man(what you can call pre-anime, from Japan, back in the 1960s); these gems were "all the rage" for us kids; WTF happened to make it all go away? I mean, there's never been ANYTHING even equal, much less better, than these classic shows that we were blessed to have seen and have had a part of our lives.
@@charlesbrazell2136 Don’t forget “Marine Boy” (which was the first Japanese cartoon that I ever saw), and fantastic shows like “Thunderbirds” and “Joe 90”.
@@caryheuchert I remember such fun Japanese cartoons like Astro boy, supercar, and a bit of rip-off of the Godzilla movies, ultra man. The music of those shows I still remember from time to time. A few of those were made in a puppet-style way. Nice to have memories. You mentioned iron Man, Thor, hulk, sub - Mariner, etc. With the possible exception of hulk, the other ones were not quite ready for cartoons until Marvel re-made them in the 80's & 90's. The last few riffs of the ending song of the hulk cartoon of the 60's sounded like a song from a bar, no offense intended. And, on the intro and ending song of the 60's cartoon of iron Man, that sounded like a slapping fight between 2 six- year olds, (" he fights and fights with repulsor rays"), again, no offense intended. Just a little history for all of you.
If we were good when our older sister was watching us she’d let us put our small tv in the bedroom. We’d watch the Flintstones at night or Gomer Pyle. But the best part was waking up in the morning with the tv in our room so we could stay in bed eating cereal and watching Saturday morning cartoons. Life was good.
@@darryljames4919 You spell it 'Jonny' Quest. There's no 'h' in the kid's name. It was a 'weekly' TV show, that was aired on the ABC-TV Network, in what we now call "Prime Time".
So sad, The memories growing up are gone, but not forgotten. The kids nowadays will never know the fun, about waking up early on Saturday mornings to watch their favorite cartoons. Thanks for the memories.
That intro was incredible. The character designs were by Alex Toth (who also did Space Ghost and many other iconic adventure shows of the time). The Model Sheets he made are things of beauty and a Master Class in characterc design.
Shoutout to Cartoon Network for featuring a lot of these cartoons to fill their slots. It introduced a whole new generation to otherwise forgotten cartoons.
@@davidcook5254 ...almost as bad as me taking 30 years to figure out the pun with the Hillbilly Bears' children...shagg and floral rugg. (Shag rug and floral rug...30 years...very slow on the uptake.)
@@ruthresetar5940 I never liked The Banana Split show because those dresses looked sooo FUCKING CREEPY! Specially the Gorilla, I HATED HIM! But I did liked the cartoons that they brought to the show, specially the live action show Danger Island.
The Addams Family and Jeannie clips were from The New Scooby-Doo Movies, not the animated series themselves. And the clip from Season 1 of Superfriends is actually from the 80's.
My favorite moment of Superfriends is seeing the origins of Lex Luthor. Whenever a friend goes bad, I think it's similar to how Superman lost Lex Luthor as a friend!
Vaya, y pensar que algunas de las caricaturas aquí presentadas , ya se televisaban antes que yo naciera; y otras nunca las conocí en la televisión local. Gracias por compartir estos recuerdos. 😀👉👍
It's so surprising to me that many of these shows were produced for only a year or two yet became classics that have endured for decades.
I remember waiting all summer for the next season only to be heart broken when there were no new episodes
It depends on when you grew up. Most of these I hated....Sorry
I think in actually only a few really stood the test of time Hanna-Barbara are legends I'm not denying that but they had a quantity over quality mindset pushing out as many cartoons as possible trying to capture the success of other shows they made and most of the times it didn't work they even ripped off Scooby-Doo a show they made more times than I can count. They have iconic show The Flinstones, Scooby-Doo, The Jetsons, Tom & Jerry and to a lesser extent The Justice Friends, Johnny Quest, Yogi Bear & Huckleberry Hound but I think most of everything else for the most part is forgotten.
@@PeterGriffin11 Well, for the record, I did say "many" not " all".
good for kids and like ir too
Its crazy how most of these cartoons are from the 1960's yet they ALL bring me back to my childhood in the 80's when they were always being syndicated. Every weeknight after school from 6 to 7 the Cartoon Express would be on the USA channel playing these classics in the late 80's. Great times.
My experience as well, in the early 80s. Still have fond memories of the OG Godzilla cartoon, and of course Scooby Doo when it was still a show about kids exposing crooked property developers with amazing cosplay skills.
HOLD ON THAAAAAR!
These take me back to my childhood in the late 90s and early 00s
Magilla Gorilla, Squidlididdly Diddly,Atom Aunt, Secret Squirrel,Touchet Turtle,Super Chicken. Anyone remember these ?
@@eddieboggs8306 Rocky and Bullwinkle?
I can't for the life of me understand why Boomerang abandoned such incredible shows.
Hannah Barbera is the best!!!! ✨✨✨
I know. I loved those classic cartoons.
Boomerang SUCKS! Plus my cable took it off the Silver package and put it on the Gold Package. I'm not about to pay $400.00 for cable tv.
Money, what else. That and people might get tired of it from time to time. Boomerang should play these as least 3 times a year. They're too good to leave off the air, with the possible exception of multiple rip-offs of like the Flintstones, Scooby Doo, the super friends, and numerous others.
Just a bunch of lazy people trying to be hangers-on to grab a quick paycheck, that, in a nutshell, was one of the main reasons why the quality of cartoons has deteriorated so badly during the 70's, 80's, etc.
As to why a lot of these cartoons are no longer on the air, one person in this group hinted at it, when a lot of these shows contributed to the violence of the times. But that could Also be said for things like "pro wrestling" , mma, etc.
I don't get that either for a while all the oldys was on boomerang but they not on in Wich they had a channel on cable dish for these cartoons these were the best
@@Doll676 yeah you gotta pay for the old cartoons now..
Huckleberry Hound, Pixie and Dixie and Mr Jinx, Yogi Bear and Booboo. My life would never have been complete without these characters at the start of it. Thank you.
How about Mighty Mouse?
Back when Saturdays mornings were worth getting up early for!.. Of course with a bowl of one's favorite cereal.
Amen, brother.
Party On Garth !!! With a bowl of Capn Crunch !!😁
Eating Quisp & Quake cereals.
No school and a morning filled with cartoons!
@@bustyrandit I was going to say what you said. Saturday mornings in the 60s. Golden!
I came into the world at the right time (1957) to enjoy all these wonderful cartoons.
1967 for me.
TRP...you were born near the end of the MGM Tom & Jerry cartoon series run.
I came in into the world in 1950, still watch them everyday
@The Rose PageSt: Right behind you. Born in 1958.
Here-Hear!!
I came into the world 10 years later and still watched all of these
Top Cat is honestly mega underrated.
Not in latinamerica, here is fondly remembered
That’s what if there more popular shows tho I’d say he’s as iconic as huckleberry hound
In Mexico, it is one of the most beloved American cartoons, partly because of the excellent dubbing work, the adaptation.
As people said, in Latin America he is an Icon. In Brazil we love this caracter, maybe because the excellent dubbing work, made for the brazilian reality of the time. Great voices.
Mr Famous
Agrees
ẞ
They had an impressive array of voice actors on some of their series. They included Scatman Crothers, Jodie Foster, Jamie Farr, Sally Struthers, Jackie Mason, Mel Blanc, Dom Delouise, Jack Burns, Tom Bosley, Paul Lynde, Tim Matheson, June Foray, and Casey Kasem.
Jeannie had Mark Hamill
Paul Winchell
Let's not forget the great Don Messick.
@@OzmaOfOzz Plus Daws Butler
BEA BENADERET
never knew that these two men could have ever produced so much material
If I remember correctly, they did something like 100 shows.
They started in the late 50s and for a while in the 70s had several shows on a once. They really cranked them out over decades!
And most of it was children shows not today’s
@@The-Mr-Man-Man What about it?
Actually, they started in the 40s with Tom and Jerry cartoons for MGM before leaving to start their own company.
Wow, my entire childhood in 15 minutes!
I really miss when Cartoon Network was like THIS back in the 90's showing these classic cartoons and now there's no more Boomerang showing them either.
You said it. When The Cartoon Network was in its hay day (in the early 1990s), these classics found a home and were appreciated by a whole new generation of kids. It's too bad it it shows junk like "Teen Titans Go" (the original was better and edgy) and "Gumball" crap. I never like Scooby-Doo, which came out at the end of the 1960s; I believed in 1969.
@@Dimeropepe CN should really still be like THIS today! Most of the stuff it shows nowadays is just nonsense that don't make no damn sense and it's just plain pathetic and weird. The only one I like of today is Total Drama. By the way why don't you like Scooby-Doo?!
@@gibbs615 The reason why I didn't like "Scooby-Doo" is that it wasn't t funny to me. Shaggy and the Scooby-Doo merely stumbled around and, by chance or accident, captured the crooks. The other shows on the networks, such as "Secret Squirrel" (NBC) and "The Impossibles" (CBS), were clever take-offs of the spy movies of the 1960s. I'm glad someone mentioned & appreciated "Wait Till Your Father Gets Home". Cartoon Network (CN) began airing Canadian programs like the one you stated ("Total Drama Island") to a new generation of viewers. I think that is why CN put the classics on The Boomerang Network.
@@Dimeropepe Scooby-Doo was always one of the top favorite classics and is STILL popular today! Also Boomerang should still be on the air today too.
@@Dimeropepe I love The Secret Squirrel 🐿
Wacky Races was one of the coolest cartoon shows ever!
Dick Dastardly was a great comic villain! And I loved Dick's sidekick, Muttley!
Loved that show. I always rooted for The Ant Hill Mob.
Say less for Top Cat!
@@allenjones3130 **wheezy chuckle**
@@allenjones3130 I think Muttley was recycled many times in many cartoons, even if under a different name. And when I saw the Wacky Races clip again, I cracked up, I had forgotten about Penelope Pitstop, she's my kind of girl lol.
O My God, what a NOSTALGIA !!! I grew up with these beautiful cartoons: I've seen them ALL. INFINITE THANKS HANNA & BARBERA. Sebastiano 1973, Italy.
Hanna-Barbera brought so many cartoons on Saturdays.
As a youth I watched most of their cartoon classics and my favourites are the Globetrotters, the Banana Splits and Hong Kong Phooey.
RIP Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera
Banana Splits , oh yeah !
It’s amazing how influential a lot of these cartoons were considering a lot were only on the air for a year or two.
These were the days when Saturdays were something to look forward to. No school and a morning filled with cartoons!
VHS, DVD, cable networks and now, streaming services, are what contributed to the eventual demise of Saturday morning programming. Today, kids can watch just about anything, at any time, on demand. There's no longer the anticipation of that special day at the end of the week. Kids today have missed out on that experience.
Something us old people knew well and the kids of today will never experience.
I really appreciate you doing this. Even tho I'm in my 20s, I still enjoy watching cartoons from time to time, and not just any cartoons, hanna-babara cartoons. They were the greatest imo.
Lol I'm 40 just download over 100GB of Looney Tunes and Hanna Barbara cartoons + Popeye
Many of these shows were started and ended before I was born but there still all from my childhood. Thanks for the memories!
truly the Golden Era of cartoons, made Saturday mornings awesome
The 1960s was the Golden Era. I was 3 - 13 yrs.old.
Yeah, the 1970’s weren’t as great. The Scooby-Doo sequels and imitations particularly showed how much they had beaten that horse to death.
I HAD A CHANCE to visit Hanna-Barbera & also Disney Studios in 1982 with my High School Animation Class. It was great seeing how things were created and talking to the animators. My class was invited because we had won so many animation awards nationally and worldwide.
I grew up in the 70s and 80s. I lived for Saturday morning cartoons and some live action shows. I've seen about 2/3 of these shows. When the SMC tribute album came out, I got a copy of the tape. When Cartoon Network came about, my friends and I watched whenever we could. Now that I have HBO Max, I can rejoice and binge on the classics. Thanks for the trip down Memory Lane! 😄
Make Saturday mornings great again. Bring these back lol
I remember getting excited in the 70 and 80s on usually a Friday night telling us what new cartoons would be coming soon.
Each channel had their own spectacular roll out.
Those preview shows were something to look forward to.
@@kevinpayton2664 Back when the big 3 networks ruled the airwaves with nothing but an outdoor antenna (or rabbit ears)
The music is the background in these cartoons is so creative. I remember them as a child. Love all of them.
A big thanks to Mr William Hanna and Mr Joseph Barbera for all these unforgettable cartoons that entertained children and adults alike during this golden era of tv animation. They might not have had HD or CGI back then. But these old cartoons gave us everlasting memories of fun and happiness. Cartoons like scooby doo and wacky races are still popular.
The original Johnny Quest was really scary. It was a night time show and was waaaaay more adult than would be allowed today. Loved watching it back then.
JQ was originally shown on Saturday mornings like all the rest. Super violent though, like Gigantor, the Eighth Man, and the black and white Astro Boy.
Nickelodeon and Hanna Barbara were the best in their primes. It so said these eras don't last😢😢😢.
OMG I remember most of these cartoons!!! They were a big part of my childhood!!!
I was born in 1961, so these were my Saturday morning cartoons growing up.
Same here! I was born in November 1961. I understand that well
I was born in November 1991 exactly 30 years later and I’m fortunate to have got to see this classics air on Cartoon Network back in the day.
Me too! Saturday mornings, a big bowl of sugary cereal then off on bike adventure 😁!
@@supernova1969 Another Scorpio... November 7th for me.
Me too!
I was born November '62 and I lived for Saturday mornings.
There was no better time to be a kid.
Ooooh the nostalgia! I remember this one when I was younger during the 2000s. Although most of these were reruns in my time I still felt they were sooo ahead of my time.
Born in 1962 and I can't believe how many of these I remembered...
Then a fairly abrupt stop at 16, once that drivers license were in hand. Some I recall knowing about after that, is about the extent of it. I do recall despising Scappy-Doo. I'd always thought the original run was one of the best Saturday morning cartoons ever and recall my abject disgust that that pandering aberration was shoehorned into the show. It was like a wrecking ball of disrespect on Scooby-Doo and on that part of my childhood.
This takes me back to my childhood from the 1970s I watched most of these cartoons every Saturday morning
This spans the first 22 years of my life. Regular standard broadcast television as we know it was just over a decade old after staring up after the end of World War II. I was born almost three months before Ruff and Reddy debuted on a Saturday December 14, 1957 on NBC. But I didn't start seeing the show until I was five later in 1962 in reruns on Saturday mornings.
But from the earliest fringes of my memory say about when I was about two around 1959-1960, my uncle reminded me from the waist up (while sitting down) I used to rock back and forth to beat of the intro music of the Huckleberry Hound show.
It really threw me for a loop when The Flintstones, Top Cat and The Jetsons were featured in early prime-time. It was beyond me to understand H-B was trying to capture a broader demographic aside from kids like me. I did had a trace of awareness in me the back and forth dialogue among the characters was a couple notches more sophisticated and complex than usual.
I was caught up in that kid-vid surge of early H-B shorts of Yogi Bear, Wally Gator, Touché Turtle & Dum Dum, Lippy the Lion & Hardy Har Har. By the early 1960s; "Heavens to Murgatroyd", it seems I had more than my fill of laughs from talking animals in silly, goofy and crazy situations.
It was after viewing renowned Alex Toth's artistic influences in Space Angel that whet my appetite for science fiction action/adventure (getting caught up in the build up news coverage of US/USSR space race also helped) for this five year old in 1962. Seeing Toth's artistic style brought forth a comic book sense of design and realism style to television cartoons never seen before. The best was yet to come
On a 1964 September Friday evening at 7:30, a day before my 7th birthday amid my usual channel flipping around I ran across some VERY strange imagery on ABC. Jonny Quest distinctive realistic illustrative style of Doug Wildey (along with additional artistic touches from Toth) blew my mind as I tuned in and became hooked. Toth's further work on Space Ghost, Birdman, Galaxy Trio and other characters took me 'OUT THERE'. His creation of The Herculoids is the pinnacle H-B animation for fantastic sci-fi/fantasy action expressivity and wide eyed escapism for me.
By 1968, it was the grass roots tactics of Action for Children's Television (ACT) that irrevocably changed the landscape of the big three networks Saturday morning scheduling. Hindsight a couple decades later as I became a parent and grandparent myself, I came to understand and respect the various reasons and rationale of protecting what we kids be influenced by TV. Upon turning 11 back then, just couldn't stomach that tsunami of changes switch over to live action excessive goofy/silliness, music leaden themes, TV commercials brainwashing, more educational focus and TONED DOWN excessive violence. I think I started swearing to myself (not around adults) around that time.
Hey, my early adolescence was flaring up as the 1970s rolled in for differences of focus for my time and attention. I couldn't get into Scooby Doo, because I working my own teenage mysteries without any clues...with less interest in cartoons. Although I did while in high school took some looks at Sealab 2020 (I couldn't believe it was so boring) while wondering how much any of the technological marvels of the series may come to pass as I become a old man at 63. In the 1990s my son and I at times watched Dexter's Laboratory, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (good but not as good as the original) and even the Powderpuff Girls. I never thought Saturday morning big three networks kid-vid programing would give way to cable networks like Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network.
I can't get into the spinoff adult themed parodies (not funny to me) of Space Ghost Coast to Coast, Sealab 2021 and Harvey Birdman; Attorney at Law, but that's the remaining remnant of a 10 year old that is still in me. It is ironic The Banana Splits characters from 1968 would serve as plot device, which would serve as an R-rated movie parody of slasher films by 2019.
It's just that the early Hanna-Barbera cartoons were a grand part of my own 'wonder years'...
Watched about 90 percent of these, the ones 1977 and newer not, started working, I'm 66 now. Thanks for all the great memories.
something that not many of the Americans know is that the success of these cartoons increased because in Mexico a wonderful voice acting was done and that attracted a large public from Latin America
Indeed. Chilean here. I recognized a bunch. Was the Mexico connection the reason why Cantinflas was at the end?
I'm 52yrs old and I grew up with these cartoons in the 70s and 80s re-runs ....The 60s and 70s cartoons are my favorite
OH MY!!!!. I remember all of these shows!!!! So Cool. I sill want to see them today.
you missed two ! Galaxy goof ups and Captain Caveman and the teen angels!
I'm not entirely sure how they could miss Caveman either. I don't know how successful it was in the States but here in the UK all the kids were hooked on it, shouting the catch line at the top of their voices in the playground.
EDIT ah I think I see the problem now. It was only shown as a standalone cartoon in the States in 1980 - it was part of other shows before then. They were shown standalone by the BBC over here on Wednesday afternoons after school, about 4.30pm - we never got the special hour-long things, they were split up.
Concerning Captain Caveman it was shown with Scooby's All Star Laff-A-Lympics and Scooby's All Stars for season 1 and 2 with their own air time in season 3. Also missing The Smurfs, Richie Rich, Lucky Luke, Teen Wolf
Captain Caveman. I watched it occasionally. I probably enjoyed the 60s and early 70s the most. Classic cartoons.
@@jpbernier4196 those were 1980's ?
@@HughJass-313 Season 1 and 2 1977-1978. Season 3 1980. After with The Flintstone Comedy Show 1980-1982 followed by The Flintstones Kids 1986-88
Gosh That was an incredible trip down memory lane, some of the most entertaining cartoons of all time.
Thank you so much for making this. It brings back such nice memories of when I was a kid. I wish I could buy a DVD of these cartoons.
You really did my boy Captain Caveman dirty like that
I thought that too, so I looked it up and Captain caveman was originally on “Scoobies laugh-a-lympics” until the captain got his own show in 1980. But I agree, should have got a mention.
It's also missing Midnight Patrol, Capital Critters, Pac-Man and Pound Puppies.
At least with the Flintstones, they produced the spin-off Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm and portrayed them as teenagers, unlike The Simpsons, where 22 seasons on the kids are still kids.
Think of each episode as a day then it's not as bad 700 episodes that maybe 3 years
Same with Family Guy
Wait Until Father Gets Home (1972 - 74) I remember my entire family watched. I was ten when it premiered. Have not seen it since but remember the theme song.
cool
It was the great grandaddy of The Simpsons!😊
I remember dashing across the room to change the channel! Around 1970 is when I started drifting away from Saturday cartoons. After '72, I only remember Scooby, of course, Hong Kong Phooey, Jabberjaw, because he was so silly, and all the Globetrotters spinoffs.
6:59 Boy, 2020 sure was a lot less fun than we thought it would be...!
So there was a reason people wanted to live underwater...
They lived under water because of covid, lol.
Well it aged well….
I miss the Hanna-barbera cartoon the most classic best in the world i wish they make new series or bring them back there SOOOOO good to watch especially on Saturday morning cartoon show. I miss all favorite characters Hannah-Barbera never forget Yogi Bear Scooby Doo Huckleberry Hound Fred Flintstones Jetson and more
Metv has Sunday The Flintstones & The Jetsons!😄
These shows are as old as I am I sure miss them so much they are sure enjoy to watch 😊
Hanna-Barbera made the best cartoons. I watched many of them new, as a child.
My childhood favorites were Kimba The White Lion and Speed Racer. Neither were HB, just as my favorite movie back then, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang wasn't Disney. The big producers churned middle-of-the-road content. Others might prefer Looney Tunes to HB.
Great video! I was flooded by so many memories that this 15 minutes were among the best in 2021! Thank you very much indeed!
Been looking back at a lot of Hannah Barbara animation lately and I’m only realizing now how many of these defined my childhood
How right you are!
I Loved all these cartoons when I was a little Boy and if they still somehow still showed these nowadays I'd still be watching them❤❤!
Unless I missed it, or Hanna-Barbera didn’t produce it, I didn’t see the Hillbilly Bears on the list. They were faves of mine. So many shows that i nearly had forgotten, popped up on this list! Great to be reminded!
Yeah I remember the hillbilly bears !
No, you're right. It's a segment of The Atom Ant Show.
@@WillVasquez777 oh yeah I forgot about atom ant
Pa Bear (mumbles incoherently) heh-heh-heh.
6:58 -- Hey where are these underwater cities they promised us??? They're now a year overdue!
Sealab 2021 was a much better show. Sealab 2020 is so boring.
He really predicted 2020 and 2021
Wait Till Your Father Gets Home is one of the most underrated shows ever, in or out of Hanna-Barbera.
Agree, it was the Simpsons before the Simpsons.
@@Hektols For once, somebody remembers & appreciates that forgotten cartoon from the early 1970s when it was shown on NBC. The late Tom Bosley provided the voice of the father. And, you're 100% correct that it was way ahead of "The SImpsons".
Did I hear Happy Days father figure "Howard Cunningham" Tom Bosley in that clip?
@@Hektols Actually, I think it was modeled after "All in the Family".
Yep...loved that show!
I was born in 2004 but I grew up knowing most of these cartoons cuz my dad was born in the early 1950s and grew up watching these cartoons so this is all nostalgia for me☺️❤️and I miss the old boomerang with the fun commercials🥺
Same
This is a Great follow-up on Hanna Barberra Characters.Also not just for Nostalgia sake too.
I was 5 in '57, so I lived for Hanna-Barbera cartoons up into my early 20s...LOL For Halloween 1960, I went as Fred Flintstone and as Huckleberry Hound in 1961...and I still have many of the Hanna-Barbera comic books I've kept all this time...I think I still have the one where the Jetsons met the Flintstones at the 1964 NY World's Fair...and I still treasure my Flintstones metal Aladdin lunchbox from 1962! I saw the Harlem Globetrotters in '71 and still have the program with the cartoon Globetrotters on the cover!
Being a young kid in the 70s,was the best childhood ever....
I can't believe how many of these i had forgotten about over the decades. Thank you for reminding.
The Fantastic Four cartoon was demented perfection. And all their 1960's cartoons have such a cool vibe.
This video is made for fans of Jellystone just to see who else they would add in future episodes. I really love their dedication and use of every Hanna barbera character ever that's lost in time.
Man I miss when Cartoon Network used to play these shows when I was a kid 😞😞😞
I miss my younger childhood when most of the 70s shows first ran. DAMN. I m old.😁
I could always count on my local TV station to have these!
Me too😞
@@gibbs615 Me three😢
@@dreamguardian8320 Someone needs to twitt Twitter about that.
Wow. Thank you so much for posting this. Many of the shows depicted I'd never heard of because they were not shown in the UK, but what I do remember was as a child in the 1970's and the repeats we did have, Saturday mornings was an absloute gem watching Wacky Races, Dastardly and Mutley, Huckleberry Hound, Hong Kong Phooey etc and my personal favourite Penelope Pitstop. Saturday mornings will never be the same again. Hanna Barbera bought so much happiness to kids in an age where 'PC' and 'woke' didnt exist.
BRING BACK ALL THESE SHOWS
Uh...no. Most of them were cranked out so much, you really can't tell the difference between one from the other.
Cartoon Network Action Ones for Adult Swim.
@@Madbandit77 Like they rip themselves off
@@Madbandit77 Yeah Hanna-Barbara definitely had a quantity or quality mindset back in the day of course you had notable classics like The Flintstones, The Jetsons and Yogi Bear but then there were hundreds of other shows that were really forgettable Pound Puppies, The Impossibles, Secret Squirrel, Wally Gator and so on and I haven't even mentioned the countless Scooby-Doo ripoffs.
YES PLEASE DO
All these cartoons we grew up on after school on Saturday morning.We couldn't wait for these great cartoons.
I saw most of these when they aired the first time. Yeah, I'm old. Top Cat and Huckleberry Hound are 2 of my earliest memories. I had a HH spoon that I used for breakfast for many years. What I noticed watching this is how they tried to capitalize on big things happening elsewhere, like teen music groups of the late 60s, a certain motorcycle stuntman famous for big jumps in the early 70s, and the martial arts craze of the mid 70s spawned by a certain Chinese monk in the old west.
Yup. Exactly.
Timestamps:
0:00 The ruff and reddy show
0:11 the huckleberry hound show
0:21 the quick draw McGraw show
0:31 the Flintstones
0:41 the yogi bear show
0:51 top cat
1:01 the Hanna-Barbera now cartoon series
1:11 the jetsons
1:21 the magilla gorilla show
1:31 jonny Quest
1:41the peter potamus show
1:51the atom ant / secret squirrel shos
2:01sinbad jr and his magic belt
2:11laurel and hardy
2:21frankenstein jr and the impossible
2:31space ghost and dino boy
2:41the space kidettes
2:51the abbott and costello cartoon show
3:01birdman and the galaxy trio
3:11the herculoids
3:21shazzan
3:31fantastic four
3:41moby dick and mighty mightor
3:51samson & goliath
4:01the banana splits adventure
4:11the adventures of Gulliver
4:21the new adventures of Huckleberry finn
4:31wacky races
4:41the perils of Penelope pitstop
4:51dastardly and muttley in their flying machines
5:01cattanooga cats
5:11scoopy doo
5:21harlem globetrotters
5:31josie and the pussycats
5:41where's huddles
5:51the pebbles and bamm-bamm show
6:01the hair bear bunch
6:11funky phantom
6:21amazing chan and chan clan
6:31wait 'till your father gets home
6:41flintone comedy hour
6:51roman holidays
7:01sealab 2020
7:11the new scooby doo movies
7:21josie and the pussycats in outer space
7:31speed buggy
7:41butch Cassidy and the Sundance kids
7:51yogi's gang
8:01super friends
8:11goober and the ghost chasers
8:21inch high, private eyes
8:31jeannie
8:41the addams family
8:51hong kong phooey
9:01devlin
9:11partridge family 2209 a.d
9:21these are the days
9:31valley of the dinisaurs
9:41wheelie and the chopper bunch
9:51korg: 70,000 bc
10:01 the new tom and jerry/grape ape/mumbly show
10:11the scoopy doo/dynomutt hour
10:21clue club
10:31jebberjaw
10:41taggart's treasure
10:51fred Flinstone and friends
11:01scooby's all-star laff-a-lympics
11:11cb bears
11:21the skatebirds
11:31the all-new super friends hour
11:41the Hanna-Barbera happy hour
11:51the funny world of fred and bunni
12:01the all new popeye hour
12:16yogi's space race
12:26challenge of the super friends
12:36godzilla
12:46go go globetrotters
12:56the new fred and barney show
13:06fred and barney meet the thing
13:16sergeant tk yu
13:21america vs the world (cancelled)
13:31casper and the angels
13:41the new shmoo
13:51the super globetrotters
14:01scooby doo and scrappy doo
14:11the world greatest super friends
14:21amigo and friends
The only show to last more than three seasons in a row was the Flintstones. Some came back for more seasons but it was unique for the company. It even had its spinoff Pebbles and Bam Bam for two more seasons after its run as well as the Flintstones Comedy Hour for two more years. Late the Popeye Hour had 5 years as well. Ninety-two shows in all and only two made it that far. Amazing.
Top cat
Huckleberry Hound
Yogi Bear
Dastardly and Muttley
Scooby Doo
Flinstones
The Jetsons
Captain Caveman
Hong Honk Phoey
Josie and the pussycats
Wacky Races
The Hair bear bunch
The addams family
Popeye
My childhood!
Me too it so classic times me as kid as 4 years old and now I am adult now I see on TV from 1981 to 1989 it all grown up.
My favorite Hannah-Barbera gag-
“I’m getting out of here!!!”
“Me too!!!”
“Me three!!!”
That line was originally from The Three Stooges. It was good to see it become a running gag in other shows.
Must admit, I'm not completely sure the Stooges were the first to use it, but I believe they were.
From "Scooby Doo meets the Addams Family" :
" I'm Gomez ! "
"I'm Morticia ! "
Shaggy : "And I'm leaving ! "
Another classic.
Remember this gag?
I'm writing a letter to my grandfather.
What? You can't write
That's alright my grandfather can't read.
I'm 34 now, but I distinctly remember back in the 90s when I was a child watching not all but some of these classic unforgettable cartoons and enjoying every bit of it. My personal favorites were The Flintstones, the Jetsons, Top Cat Scooby-Doo, Josie & the Pussy Cats, The Addams Family, Popeye.
I own almost all of those cartoons on DVD!!!! Memories!!!!
Thank you guys for bringing back so many memories of my childhood you guys are amazing 😊
Jonny Quest had the coolest theme music, even rivaling shows like "Mission: Impossible" or "Hawaii Five-O".
Honorable Mentions for cool cartoon show theme music: "Spiderman" (1967-1970) and "Pink Panther" (1969-1970, and later incarnations).
100% agree! Jonny Quest's theme has always been in my top 5!
The Pink Panther theme was written by Henri Mancini who was a well recognized composer. It's worth watching Peter Gunn just to hear his scoring.
That Jonny Quest theme just screams danger, excitement and intrigue.
People in Jonny Quest got killed in the cartoons! Not like Fred Flintstone gets slammed with a Boulder by Wilma and Fred is sporting a big ass lump. Then next scene it was gone. Loved Jonny Quest.
Add Battle of the Planets theme to that.
Thanks for the memory. I used to watch that Godzilla show, totally forgot about it.
Eu gostaria de NukiTYP5 apenas um show 2007 nos anos 2000
Memories of Saturday morning, I remember every single one
It was the fantastic era of Batman, Star Trek, Time Tunnel, the Monkees, and others. I was in kindergarten at the time and remember watching Hanna-Barbera classics like Atom Ant, Secret Squirrel, Space Ghost, Frankenstein Jr., Herculoids, Birdman, etc. It was an exciting and inspiring time to be a child.
I AGREE! I was there-remember these and other classics like Captain America, Iron Man, Gigantor and The 8th Man(what you can call pre-anime, from Japan, back in the 1960s); these gems were "all the rage" for us kids; WTF happened to make it all go away? I mean, there's never been ANYTHING even equal, much less better, than these classic shows that we were blessed to have seen and have had a part of our lives.
@@charlesbrazell2136 Don’t forget “Marine Boy” (which was the first Japanese cartoon that I ever saw), and fantastic shows like “Thunderbirds” and “Joe 90”.
@@caryheuchert I remember such fun Japanese cartoons like Astro boy, supercar, and a bit of rip-off of the Godzilla movies, ultra man. The music of those shows I still remember from time to time. A few of those were made in a puppet-style way. Nice to have memories.
You mentioned iron Man, Thor, hulk, sub - Mariner, etc. With the possible exception of hulk, the other ones were not quite ready for cartoons until Marvel re-made them in the 80's & 90's.
The last few riffs of the ending song of the hulk cartoon of the 60's sounded like a song from a bar, no offense intended.
And, on the intro and ending song of the 60's cartoon of iron Man, that sounded like a slapping fight between 2 six- year olds, (" he fights and fights with repulsor rays"), again, no offense intended.
Just a little history for all of you.
ATOM ANT
If we were good when our older sister was watching us she’d let us put our small tv in the bedroom. We’d watch the Flintstones at night or Gomer Pyle. But the best part was waking up in the morning with the tv in our room so we could stay in bed eating cereal and watching Saturday morning cartoons.
Life was good.
Don't forget Johnny Quest cam on at night also,☺️
@@darryljames4919It’s still one of my favorite shows!
@@darryljames4919 One of the best adventure cartoons ever produced.
@@darryljames4919 You spell it 'Jonny' Quest. There's no 'h' in the kid's name. It was a 'weekly' TV show, that was aired on the ABC-TV Network, in what we now call "Prime Time".
@@WalterDWormack214 my bad
So sad, The memories growing up are gone, but not forgotten. The kids nowadays will never know the fun, about waking up early on Saturday mornings to watch their favorite cartoons. Thanks for the memories.
Johnny Quest was awsome.
💞🇱🇰
That intro was incredible.
The character designs were by Alex Toth (who also did Space Ghost and many other iconic adventure shows of the time).
The Model Sheets he made are things of beauty and a Master Class in characterc design.
Yup Johnny Quest had real adventures
Too bad they were forced to add that stupid dog, Bandit.
@@lanceash no...I love Bandit they shouldn't add you to this comment section. Lol🤣🤣🤣🤣
Shoutout to Cartoon Network for featuring a lot of these cartoons to fill their slots. It introduced a whole new generation to otherwise forgotten cartoons.
It’s because Turner had bought Hanna-Barbera and they created the channel.
The Wacky Races was my favorite from 1968 til today. Always wanted to drive the Bullet Proof Bomb or the Converticar.
It took me quite a while to figure out professor pat pending was a play on patent pending 😁😁😁
...Dick Dastardly v. Professor Fate...which is better?
@@albertpeterson5585 Hands down DD.
@@davidcook5254 ...almost as bad as me taking 30 years to figure out the pun with the Hillbilly Bears' children...shagg and floral rugg. (Shag rug and floral rug...30 years...very slow on the uptake.)
YES THIS FANTASTIC VIDEO BRINGS BACK SO MANY GREAT MEMORIES
THANKS FOR POSTING THIS
The Banana Splits played several more series, such as Danger Island, Squidly Diddly, Winsome Witch, and many others.
Also "The 3 Musketeers", an animated-segment.
Arabian Knights as well.
I loved the entire Banana Splits show.
@@ruthresetar5940 I never liked The Banana Split show because those dresses looked sooo FUCKING CREEPY! Specially the Gorilla, I HATED HIM!
But I did liked the cartoons that they brought to the show, specially the live action show Danger Island.
Uh oh jongo!
Heaven’s to Mergitroid!
Exit stage left...
@@ronswansonsdog2833 Right maybe even!
very nice
@jason royale He wasn't!?
FunFact: Mergitroid is Betsy's husband
The Addams Family and Jeannie clips were from The New Scooby-Doo Movies, not the animated series themselves. And the clip from Season 1 of Superfriends is actually from the 80's.
My favorite moment of Superfriends is seeing the origins of Lex Luthor. Whenever a friend goes bad, I think it's similar to how Superman lost Lex Luthor as a friend!
ua-cam.com/video/wlMwc1c0HRQ/v-deo.html
Nop, they had their own shows too.
1973
Such fond memories!!❤❤ I “religiously “ watched every one of these Saturday morning shows!!🥰💖💕
I love this 💯 brought back a lot of memories 😍
Thanks for the trip! A total blast from the past!
I love that in some point the shows were completely random "it's a dog and a monkey solving mysteries in space"
I forgot about so many of these...staples of my childhood Saturday morning and after school.
What great stuff! Clever, imaginative, innovative shows that filled us with glee!
Those classics defined by childhood will miss you badly 😢
I miss this.
Now i have to Watch ME-TV so i can get the classic cartoons.
Johnny Quest, Moby Dick & Mightor were awesome too!
We're at a point now where even 70-year olds watched cartoons on TV when they were kids... the world is so old now
Getting older is a blessing,,be thankful for every day The Most High gives you !🙏😇
@@darryljames4919 Amen to that!
More like people watched reruns of most these in the 90s and 2000s on Cartoon Network and boomerang
Can't you just feel your hair turning Grey? And your liver spots growing?
Vaya, y pensar que algunas de las caricaturas aquí presentadas , ya se televisaban antes que yo naciera; y otras nunca las conocí en la televisión local. Gracias por compartir estos recuerdos. 😀👉👍
H-B also did the opening animation to "Bewitched".
I just loved it when they got EVERYONE together for the Laff-A-Lympics!
The Clip for the Superfriends (1973) was from the 1980s.
Yep it had Firestorm in it. That makes it an 80's clip. If they had a clip with Wendy and Marvin in it that was the first season of the Superfriends.
So happy to reminisce and reflect