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Boomtown was a children's show on WBZ-TV in Boston, Massachusetts that ran Saturday and Sunday mornings from 1956 through 1974, and was hosted by singing cowboy Rex Trailer. Trailer was hosting a children's series in Philadelphia for Westinghouse ; when the series lapsed in 1956, Trailer was given a choice of two other Westinghouse stations ...
Saturday-morning and Sunday-morning cartoons were largely discontinued in Canada by 2002. In the United States, The CW continued to air non-E/I cartoons as late as 2014; [ 1 ] among the "Big Three" traditional major networks, the final non-E/I cartoon to date ( Kim Possible ) was last aired in 2006.
KARK-TV: Bozo's Big Top (Replaced much of NBC's Saturday Morning lineup) KARK-TV: Candy the Clown (with Gary Weir) KARK-TV: Captain KARK (with Lloyd Denney) KKYK: Clowntown USA (with Gary Weir) KARK-TV: Lorenzo the Tramp (with Gerry Wheeler) KATV: Mr. Specs' Cartoon Caravan (with Bruce Smith) KATV: Romper Room ("Miss Sylvia", "Miss Linda")
Here’s a nostalgic look at classic cartoons that once ruled the airwaves. From classics in the 1950s and '60s to more recent favorites from the 1980s and '90s, these toons are sure to bring back ...
Time for Timer is a series of seven short public service announcements broadcast on Saturday mornings on the ABC television network starting in 1975. The animated spots feature Timer, a tiny cartoon character who is an anthropomorphic circadian rhythm, the self-proclaimed "keeper of body time."
Messick and Butler became the main long-time voice actors of H&B cartoons. [14] The series was set to be the opening and closing acts for a half-hour children's program airing on Saturday mornings. [10] While they had screened the pilot episode prior to broadcast, Hanna later admitted he was nervous as to how the public would respond.
It was the first cartoon based on a video game. [2] It was the highest-rated Saturday morning cartoon show in the US during late 1982. [3] Upon its debut, it was watched by an audience of over 20 million children in the US, in addition to adults. [4] The show also inspired the 1984 arcade game Pac-Land.
There were also "bumpers," mini-cartoons between the main cartoons that featured Quick Draw and other main characters on the show. Michael Maltese wrote the stories of all the episodes. Screen Gems, the television division at the time of Columbia Pictures, originally syndicated the series. It ran on Saturday mornings on CBS for one season, 1965-66.