Oh yeah... I love those RS episodes, especially some of the early ones where Simon looked like the version from the Christmas Special. I mean, they hung out with Mr. T and Dolly Pardon for one thing. Plus, let's face it, back under RS, they had more voice actors... Peter Cullen and Tress MacNeil among others... very familiar 1980's VA's were in those old ones. And the animation was better too.
Yep, that's what I said earlier, they also had the likes of June Foray, Alan Young, Johnny Haymer... the MWS and DiC episodes had Ross and Janice's associate producer practically doing all of the voices, and he did not do very good ones. Honestly, neither did Ross for that matter, I know just about every episode, he voiced at least one of the one-shot characters, but he never even tried to do some kind of a voice, maybe an accent or a twang, but never a voice, which makes so many of the one-shot guest characters sound just like Dave. I swear, they MUST have lost tons of dough on
The Chipmunk Adventure, that's why the show seemed cheapened afterwards.
And agreed again, the overall animation and production design of the RS episodes were really high quality and detailed, it took them a while to get the character designs quite right, but then again, a lot of animation studios were like that, like compare early Rocky and Bullwinkle from 1959 to later Rocky and Bullwinkle of 1964. DiC, again, the animation was cheap and somewhat "looser" than RS, not to mention the backgrounds and designs were considerably simplistic, like plain solid walls, or smooth floors as opposed to detailed wallpaper and textured grain on the wood floors.
DIC's best stuff was the movie parodies, Back to Alvin's Future especially... but I virtually never watch Cadet's Regrets (DIC or MWS, I forget, only saw it once) on the ALVVIIIIIIN collection.
I actually watched that one day after having not watched it in a long time, it was a MWS episode, but that's actually where I got my facts mixed up, because during the end titles, there's a tagline at one point that says like "In Association With Ruby-Spears Enterprises", so I thought perhaps they did branch out from them. I DO know that RS WAS an off-shoot of HB, as Joe Ruby and Ken Spears, and a number of their staff worked for HB backin the 60s and 70s; I read recently that both Ruby and Spears were actually the real creative maestros behind some of HB's hits, like Scooby-Doo. I think they attended a ComicCon here recently, attending with Sid & Marty Krofft.