Tuesday, November 22, 2016

History of Cartoon Network (Part 2)

In 1994 World Premiere Toons (later renamed What a Cartoon!) was announced. This show was co-produced by Cartoon Network and Hanna-Barbera. It featured new 7 minute cartoon shorts (about the same length as an average Looney Tune or Merrie Melodie). Such cartoons as Courage The Cowardly Dog, The Powerpuff Girls, Johnny Bravo and Dexter's Laboratory would eventually grow out of this. The show came to be in February 1995. The Powerpuff Girls in Fuzzy Lumpkins was the first short to air.

Though The Moxy Show was the first original show to be made for Cartoon Network, it was a Hanna-Barbera production. The first one to be made for Cartoon Network was Space Ghost: From Coast to Coast. Intrestingly this show borrowed it's characters from a 1960's Hanna-Barbera cartoon show simply called Space Ghost. This show featured a wacky, irreverent, and adult-aimed sense of humor, that showed what future Cartoon Network originals would be like. This show premiered on April 15, 1994.

1994 was a special year for Flintstones fans. On May 7th, Cartoon Network showed The Flagstones the original unaired pilot for the show (The name was changed to The Flintstones for the actual show, because Hi and Lois (a popular newspaper comic) creator, Mort Walker felt the name was too close to his fictional families name of the Flagsons). Then on May 19 though May 22, the channel aired all 167 episodes of The Flintstones back to back. I know what all of my fellow Flintstones fans are thinking, "Can they please do this again" and I would be lying if I didn't say that I wasn't thinking the same thing. By the way here's a video of the pilot I mentioned earlier.
  From January 23rd to January 29th in 1995, Cartoon Network did it's first (and last) annual Dog Bowl (to compete with the Super Bowl of course (and as a Cartoon lover, who doesn't care to watch sports this sounds much better to me)). This was hosted by Morocco Mole and Fred Hickman (a real life sports announcer (yeah I had to look him up too, then again I'm not a sports fan))  Competing in this dog bowl were Hong Kong Fooey (Number one super guy), Scooby Doo, Doogey Daddy, Huckleberry Hound, Precious Pup, Muttley, Spike (from Tom and Jerry cartoons), Droopy, Two Stupid Dogs, and Two Curious Dogs (from some of Chuck Jones' early Merrie Melodies). Cartoon Network fans themselves voted for who they liked best. A hour of two dogs (a half-hour each) would air each day and whoever won that round would air again the next day, until a winner was decided. The winner was Scooby Doo. Let me know who you would have voted for. I would have personally gone for Droopy, but Huck would have been a very close second. All of them would good choices though.



So more Cartoon Network history coming up. Until then Peace love and cartoons.

        
-Michael J. Ruhland

Resources Used
http://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/cartoon-network-timeline-first-three-years/
http://deadspin.com/5100372/the-curious-case-of-fred-hickman (To see who Fred Hickman was).

No comments:

Post a Comment