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Wind-Up Wilma is a 1981 animated television special and the third of The Flintstone Specials limited-run prime time revival of The Flintstones produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions. The special premiered on NBC on October 4, 1981. [1] In the special, Wilma Flintstone is recruited to play on Bedrock's baseball team. [2]
Wilma is tempted to drift away from her usual playmates Freddy, Barney and Betty and join up with a gang of older kids whose leader, Stoney, uses marijuana. However, Wilma resists the peer-pressure tactics of the pre-teen pothead and instead seeks advice from her parents, who tell her that a real friend wouldn't offer her drugs, while her true ...
It is an alternative incarnation of the studio's original animated series The Flintstones. The series depicts juvenile versions of the main characters from the original show. [1] It aired from September 13, 1986, to November 14, 1987, on ABC. [2] It was the first Flintstones series not to have a laugh track.
Jean Vander Pyl was the original voice artist of Wilma and played the role until her death in 1999, [18] after which Tress MacNeille took over as Wilma's voice. In The Flintstone Kids Wilma was voiced by Julie McWhirter Dees and Elizabeth Lyn Frasier at different points. In the live-action film The Flintstones, Wilma was played by Elizabeth ...
First released on The Flintstones: The Collector's Edition on VHS in 1994, it made its television debut on Cartoon Network on May 7, 1994, [1] and aired again on Boomerang in November 2006. It was released on DVD in 2001 and again in 2004. Notes: This was the original pilot episode for The Flintstones, but was never shown with the original ...
Stephen Root should yabba-dabbo-do! just fine as the voice of Fred in Bedrock, Fox’s in-the-works follow-up to The Flintstones. Amy Sedaris, meanwhile, is set to voice Wilma in the prospective ...
The Flintstones was the most financially successful and longest-running network animated television series for three decades, until The Simpsons surpassed it in 1997. [6] In 2013, TV Guide ranked The Flintstones the second-greatest TV cartoon of all time, after The Simpsons. [7]
3. Keebler Fudge Magic Middles. Neither the chocolate fudge cream inside a shortbread cookie nor versions with peanut butter or chocolate chip crusts survived.