Herculoids
Saturday Morning: 1967 - VIDEOS
Saturday mornings in 1967 were super. And I mean that literally. All eleven shows that premiered during this time featured one form of superhero or another. Be it heroes from the comic books, heroes of the jungle, prehistoric heroes, or alien animal heroes that shot hot lava balls from their horns. It was the heyday for these cartoons, and one that would be short-lived, thanks to outside sources who wished to limit the violence on the Saturday morning schedule. But, more on that in a later post.
Hanna-Barbera led the pack in animated fare with an amazing SIX hours of programming; three of those hours comprised of original material. Filmation was on their heels (and would gain even more next year) with 90-minutes of new shows. Broken down by network, both CBS and ABC, who had finally woken up and gotten into the Saturday morning game, offered four new shows each. NBC wasn't far behind with three new offerings.
Needless to say, the 1967-68 season was an exciting one for a child. So, if you were a child back then, and are interested in remembering what you watched, then grab you box of Quisp & Quake cereal and let's begin the journey.
Giant magazine lists ten great Hanna-Barbera intros - VIDEO
It looks like the guys at Giant magazine's web site are at it again, trolling YouTube for videos that you may not have thought of. This time, they've dug up ten intros to Hanna-Barbera shows, in tribute to Joe Barbera, who passed away a couple of days ago. Among the selections are the wonderfully un-PC intro to Hong Kong Phooey (I guess it was OK for Scatman Crothers to sing "ching chong" back in the seventies... Rosie O'Donnell was born in the wrong time, I guess), and intros to The Herculoids, the "so hip it's square" Flinstones Comedy Hour from '72 ("We'll have a groovy time!"), The Jetsons, and one of H-B's Scooby-Doo clones from the mid-'70s, Speed Buggy. There's also an intro from the live-action show Korg: 70,000 B.C.Speaking of Scooby, the intro they post is from a late-'70s revival of the show, which included the then-new character of Scooby-Dum. But they kind of miss the boat on this one; that's maybe the third-best intro, behind the originial Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? and my personal favorite, the oh-so-cheesy Scooby-Doo Movies from 1972. Remember the episodes with the Harlem Globetrotters, Sandy Duncan, Batman and Robin, and Tim Conway? That was from this series. In order to refresh your memory, I've embedded the intro to that after the jump.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
Most Popular Tags
From Our Partners
- 'Supernatural' Recap: Attack of the Clowns
- 'Nikita' Recap: Old Friends Reunited
- Cool Casting: John Goodman, Ryan Phillipe and Henry Ian Cusick on TV
- 'RuPaul's Drag Race' Preview: The Queens Film Infomercials, and 'Glee's' Amber Riley Guest Judges!
- VIDEO: 'Dancing with the Stars' Casting Rumors: Names and Wendy Williams' Opinions
- More From BuddyTV
- John Goodman, Roseanne Barr reunite in NBC pilot 'Downwardly Mobile'
- 'The Vampire Diaries' recap: In which Elena is starting to get on our nerves
- 'Fringe': 'Lost's Henry Ian Cusick cast
- 'Bones' will (finally!) return to FOX on April 5
- Matt Lauer wants $30 million per year to stay on 'Today'
- More From Zap2it
- Pilot Scoop: Michael B. Jordan Reunites with Friday Night Lights Boss on NBC's County
- Pilot Scoop: Shonda Rhimes' Gilded Lilys Period Drama for ABC Casts Blythe Danner, Others
- Pilot Scoop: Fox Orders Becki Newton Comedy from How I Met Your Mother Team
- Fringe Exclusive: Lost's Henry Ian Cusick Cast as [Spoiler] – But in Which Universe?
- New Girl Exclusive: Zooey Deschanel, Hannah Simone, Ryan Kwanten Talk Awkward First Dates
- More From TVLine
