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The episode "Speed Buggy Went That-a-Way" was featured on the Warner Bros. Presents DVD compilation Saturday Morning Cartoons – 1970's Volume 1 and released on May 26, 2009. [43] As part of the Warner Bros. Home Entertainment's Archive Collection, the complete Speed Buggy series was made available on DVD as a four-disc set. [3]
Speed Buggy: 16 US 1973 Traditional Star Trek: The Animated Series: 22: US 1973–1974 Spin-off of Star Trek: Traditional Super Friends: 16: US 1973 Traditional The Wombles: 60: UK 1973–1975 Stop-Motion Yogi's Gang: 17 US 1973 Spin-off of The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie: Traditional Zero Tester: 66 Japan 1973–1974 Anime
[3] The Nitwits is about an elderly superhero named Tyrone (voiced by Arte Johnson ) who, by public demand, re-emerged from retirement to again fight crime, taking cases at his own discretion with help from his wife Gladys ( Ruth Buzzi ) and his hopping cane which he called "Elmo" which, among other things, helped Tyrone and Gladys to fly.
Cartoon Network's first original series was The Moxy Show and the late-night satirical animated talk show Space Ghost Coast to Coast (the latter moving to Adult Swim at launch in September, 2001). The What a Cartoon! series of showcase shorts brought the creation of many Cartoon Network original series collectives branded as " Cartoon Cartoons ...
A Laff-A-Lympics Presto Magix dry transfer game was released in 1978 by Papermate that featured Scooby-Doo, Shaggy, Captain Caveman, Blue Falcon, Babu, Speed Buggy, Yogi Bear, Wally Gator, Huckleberry Hound, Hokey Wolf, Mr. Jinks, Quick Draw McGraw, Mumbly, Dread Baron, Orful Octopus, Mrs. Creepley, Dastardly Dalton, Snagglepuss and Mildew Wolf.
There will also be a two-part special that will feature Cartoon Network characters called "Crisis on Infinite Mirths" and it will also serve as the season finale. [7] [8] The first half of season three was released on Max on February 22, 2024. [9] The second half of season 3 will be released on March 6, 2025. [10]
Like a great deal of Hanna-Barbera's 1970s output, the format and writing for Jabberjaw was similar to that for Scooby-Doo, [3] Josie and the Pussycats and Speed Buggy. [4] The show also drew inspiration (in the use of a shark as a character) from the overall shark mania of the mid-1970s [5] caused by the then-recent film Jaws.
Like most 1970s-era Saturday morning cartoon series as well as The Brady Bunch show itself, The Brady Kids contained an adult laugh track. The opening sequence in the first season featured the fourth season "grid" familiar to The Brady Bunch viewers, without the center column that is normally occupied by the adults (Mike, Carol and Alice).