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Post by Daemonic Jackal on Jun 3, 2006 23:01:24 GMT
nme your favourites
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Post by krusty ketchup on Jun 5, 2006 13:04:21 GMT
sharky and george
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Post by Wight witch on Jun 5, 2006 13:20:05 GMT
#Sharkey, and George detectives of the sea# do dee do dum!!!!
I never really was a cartoon person poor me I guess I was neglected
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Post by DreamDangerously on Jun 5, 2006 15:57:26 GMT
Pinky and the Brain, Invader Zim, Spongebob.
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Post by Jimjamz on Jun 5, 2006 16:00:46 GMT
Fairly Odd Parents!
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Post by Kneetroll on Jun 5, 2006 16:46:20 GMT
Oh my god I love: (can I have claymation too?) Sharkey and George Pinky and the Brain Pingu (I still watch this lol) Thundercats Trapdoor Dogtanion Button Mooooon Tom and Jerry - NEVER gets old!!! God I love so many cartoons you'd never thing I was almost 23 lol
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Post by Jimjamz on Jun 5, 2006 16:49:25 GMT
Oh my god I love: (can I have claymation too?) Sharkey and George Pinky and the Brain Pingu (I still watch this lol) Thundercats Trapdoor Dogtanion Button Mooooon Tom and Jerry - NEVER gets old!!! God I love so many cartoons you'd never thing I was almost 23 lol Omg! Was Trapdoor the one with the theme tune that went "There was a dark dark street with a dark dark house..." Im sure Ive discussed this on here before, I have a slight sense of deja vu
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Post by matt on Jun 5, 2006 16:50:56 GMT
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Post by Jimjamz on Jun 5, 2006 16:52:19 GMT
Aaaaah...I see.
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Post by matt on Jun 5, 2006 16:54:56 GMT
Still class ones though.
Although my childhood was ruled by:
Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles (my biggest childhood obsession) The Real Ghostbusters Thundercats Pottsworth and Company (best theme tune ever) Animaniacs Tiny Toon Adventures (hiarious)
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Post by Jimjamz on Jun 5, 2006 16:58:07 GMT
Tiny Toon Adventures! ;D My favourite childhood ones were:
Rugrats Rockos Modern Life Care Bears My Little Pony Hey Arnold!
My childhood obsession was deffo Power Rangers though ;D
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Post by matt on Jun 5, 2006 17:00:21 GMT
I used to love Power Rangers.
I liked the old Sonic cartoon with Scratch and Grounder. Watching the repeats on POP it's really badly written...but you do get some really odd moments of witty briiliance:
Grounder: "It's a good thing Robotnik made me persistent!" Scratch: "He made me persistent! He made you too dumb to quit!"
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Post by Jimjamz on Jun 5, 2006 17:01:59 GMT
I've never actually watched Sonic on TV...I LOVED the Sega game though, I spent about half my childhood on that. Who was your favourite Power Ranger ;D
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Post by matt on Jun 5, 2006 17:11:13 GMT
Tommy.
The only one with depth.
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Post by fenris on Jun 5, 2006 19:46:01 GMT
My all-time favourite cartoon series is Clue Club. Never heard of it? I'm not surprised - I seem to be the only person who remembers it.
Hanna Barbera produced numerous cartoon series over several decades. Some of their characters became household names: Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Top Cat, The Flintstones, etc. Others are well known, but only to fans and TV buffs. For example Hong Kong Phooey, Dastardly & Muttley, Dynomutt, The Hair Bear Bunch, Captain Caveman, The Jetsons, and Snagglepuss.
But some just never caught on, and rest in undisturbed obscurity. Clue Club is one such example, one of several attempts Hanna Barbera made to cash in on the success of their own hit series, Scooby Doo, Where Are You?
Clue Club concerned a group of teenagers - and two dogs - who investigated apparently ghostly hauntings, strange disappearances, bizarre crimes and 'locked room'-type mysteries. The two dogs were both bloodhounds, called Woofer and Whimper: the former wore a deerstalker and imagined himself a real detective, and the latter just resignedly went along with whatever Woofer said.
The show's format was different from Scooby Doo in a number of ways: instead of travelling back & forth across the country via Mystery Machine, the Clue Clubbers stayed in the same small town (as a result, the local sheriff was a regular character). Also, Woofer and Whimper only talked amongst themselves and never interacted with humans, effectively making them 'normal' dogs (deerstalker aside). And the youngest member of the Club - a pre-teen girl - never accompanied the others on investigations, but stayed at home, carrying out research and working on theories using a Seventies-standard room-sized computer.
Airing in the States in 1976, the show only lasted one season. In the UK, some of the ITV regions showed it on weekday mornings during the summer holidays one year when I was small. That's when I saw it, and all these years later I still have clear memories of several of the episodes.
As far as I'm aware, that was the only time Clue Club was ever screened over here. I don't think it's ever turned up on any of the satellite channels, unless someone knows different.
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