I was lookin' through the wondrous television archive that is Youtube, and I happened upon several 60s cartoons that I had never heard of. One of them was "Beany and Cecil", created by
Bob Clampett, who is best known for directing several Looney Tunes shorts from the 1930s and 40s.
The wild thing is, this show predated Muppet Babies for a couple decades to be the first cartoon series based on a puppet show. Back in the 50's, puppet shows were the surrogate cartoon program. As that Sam Singer thing can attest to. Beany and Cecil is based off the puppet series Time for Beany:
So, if you didn't get the joke on the Pinky and the Brain episode "Puppet Rulers," the
entire episode is just to be one big inside joke goof on Bob Clampett, down to the line "If I could come up with any ideas, I wouldn't be a puppeteer."
And of course John K would be behind a reboot of a Bob Clampett cartoon series.
There's more depth to the story of why it was canned so quickly, and it's the usual John K-isms. Battles with the network, the show going over budget...that sort of thing. He didn't quite have the creative freedom he thought he would. You can see little cracks of his style escaping, but being shoved back in line with the network. And the thing is, he left production of Mighty Mouse: the New Adventures for this. And the staff of that show managed to sneak a subtle reference to this in the second season episode where Mighty Mouse gets trapped in the television. Beany and Cecil with swapped sizes pops up as a single frame while the kid's flipping through the channels.
But then you look at Crusader Rabbit, the very first televised cartoon, and there's a great deal more effort to it compared to Sam Singer's stuff. There's actual backgrounds, for one, and a great deal of wit to it that would make its way to the co-creator's next show, Rocky & Bullwinkle.
Sam Singer's stuff was meant to be cheap. Crusader Rabbit had signs of what was to come with Rocky and Bullwinkle, but still had that early TV show feel to it. It was of course better done on every level than the Pelican "cartoon". Jay and his crew were one of the founders of why 1960's animation was such a breakthrough for television animation, right along side Hanna Barbera. Things happened fast in that decade. And it ended with some really bat*&^$ insane super hero action shows, including a Fantastic Four series ripped straight from the bat*&^$ insane comics at the time.
Then the parental groups formed, the 70's happened.... ick.