How's THAT for a contrary post?
Anyway, you know you love some show that no one actually knows/cares/has heard about. Something that either flew under the radar or got canned quickly that you love that becomes awkward to bring up in conversation. I'll start...
Toonsylvania- Brilliant show that was on Fox Kids (meaning it got shoved off the schedule for Power Rangers pretty quickly), and the forgotten of the "Steven Spielberg Presents" cartoons (possibly due to it not being produced by Warner Bros and Amblin, but rather Dreamworks). We had the likes of Bill Kopp and Mike Peters behind the show (Mike created the zombie family segment), and the voice talents of David Warner, Brad Garret, and Wayne Knight (not to mention Billy West and a host of other Voice acting favorites). Somehow the red headed stepchild of Dreamworks Animation because it wasn't a movie.
Super Dave Hero for Hire- Anyone else remember that wacky DIC produced show? I know Toon Disney reaired the thing at one point early on.
The Good Guys- (or is it the Other Guys... I get those two confused)... the one where Bradley Whitford and Tom Hanks's son were low level crime fighters that were constantly under the watch of the higher ups. Really should have been on cable or something. It was too brilliant for the network.
Ultimate Muscle- I shoved it down your throats enough that I freaking loved this thing. Too bad kids were only interested in anime dubs where animals fight animals, cards fight cards, tops fight tops, or some other stupid toy fighting another stupid toy to watch a show where wrestlers actually fight each other.
The Plastic Man Comedy Show- I dunno if this actually was popular when it came out, but I never hear anyone talking about it. A 1979 super hero series that actually makes good use of the "You can't hit anyone on TV" crap that was going on at the time. Vastly superior to DC's other cartoons at the time, and with sharp writing by (among others) Mark Evainier (they mention the Kloppman Diamond... he got it in there even before Garfield and Friends).
Better off Ted- Okay... it has a cult following that's pretty decent, but it was not the show that caught on with audience like it should have. Again, a cable quality show that was too smart for the room.
Anyway, you know you love some show that no one actually knows/cares/has heard about. Something that either flew under the radar or got canned quickly that you love that becomes awkward to bring up in conversation. I'll start...
Toonsylvania- Brilliant show that was on Fox Kids (meaning it got shoved off the schedule for Power Rangers pretty quickly), and the forgotten of the "Steven Spielberg Presents" cartoons (possibly due to it not being produced by Warner Bros and Amblin, but rather Dreamworks). We had the likes of Bill Kopp and Mike Peters behind the show (Mike created the zombie family segment), and the voice talents of David Warner, Brad Garret, and Wayne Knight (not to mention Billy West and a host of other Voice acting favorites). Somehow the red headed stepchild of Dreamworks Animation because it wasn't a movie.
Super Dave Hero for Hire- Anyone else remember that wacky DIC produced show? I know Toon Disney reaired the thing at one point early on.
The Good Guys- (or is it the Other Guys... I get those two confused)... the one where Bradley Whitford and Tom Hanks's son were low level crime fighters that were constantly under the watch of the higher ups. Really should have been on cable or something. It was too brilliant for the network.
Ultimate Muscle- I shoved it down your throats enough that I freaking loved this thing. Too bad kids were only interested in anime dubs where animals fight animals, cards fight cards, tops fight tops, or some other stupid toy fighting another stupid toy to watch a show where wrestlers actually fight each other.
The Plastic Man Comedy Show- I dunno if this actually was popular when it came out, but I never hear anyone talking about it. A 1979 super hero series that actually makes good use of the "You can't hit anyone on TV" crap that was going on at the time. Vastly superior to DC's other cartoons at the time, and with sharp writing by (among others) Mark Evainier (they mention the Kloppman Diamond... he got it in there even before Garfield and Friends).
Better off Ted- Okay... it has a cult following that's pretty decent, but it was not the show that caught on with audience like it should have. Again, a cable quality show that was too smart for the room.