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The Four Color issue numbers were #1067 Yogi Bear (December 1, 1959), #1104 Yogi Bear Goes to College (June 1, 1960), #1162 Yogi Bear Joins the Marines (April 1, 1961), #1271 Yogi Bear's Birthday Party (November 1, 1961), #1310 Huck and Yogi Winter Sports (1962) (also featuring Huckleberry Hound), and #1349 Yogi Bear Visits the U.N. (January 1 ...
Yogi Bear: Great Balloon Blast, a port of Pop'n Pop, was released for the Game Boy Color in North America on December 17, 2000. It features playable characters Yogi Bear, Boo-Boo Bear, and Cindy Bear, characters from Hanna-Barbera's animated television series The Yogi Bear Show.
1869 – Thomas Ross developed a small and transparent phenakistiscope system, called Wheel of life, which fitted inside a standard magic lantern slide. A first version, patented in 1869, had a glass disc with eight phases of a movement and a counter-rotating glass shutter disc with eight apertures.
Yogi's Frustration (1983) [1] Yogi Bear (1987) Yogi Bear & Friends in The Greed Monster (1989) Yogi's Great Escape (1990) Yogi Bear's Math Adventures (1990) Yogi's Big Clean Up (1992) Adventures of Yogi Bear (1994) Yogi Bear's Gold Rush (1994) Yogi Bear: Great Balloon Blast (2000) Yogi Bear: The Video Game (2010)
The Yogi Bear Show is an American comedy animated television series, and the first entry of the Yogi Bear franchise, produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions. A spin-off of The Huckleberry Hound Show , the show centers on the adventures of forest-dwelling Yogi Bear in Jellystone Park.
Hanna-Barbera Educational Filmstrips is a series of filmstrips of educational material produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions' educational division. The series ran from 1977 to 1980 for a total of 26 titles, featuring the studio's animated characters from The Flintstones, The Yogi Bear Show, The Jetsons, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, The Banana Splits, Cattanooga Cats, and Jabberjaw.
Yogi Bear's Gold Rush (European title: Yogi Bear in Yogi Bear's Goldrush) is a 1994 2D platform game developed by British studio Twilight for the Game Boy. A Game Gear version was also made, but it was unreleased.
This is an incomplete list of comics based on television programs.Often a television program becomes successful, popular or attains cult status and the franchise produces spin-offs that often include comics.