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"Cap." Well, I'm about to say something, and you're welcome to say "Cap" if you want, but I swear it's true: I think the stable of Hanna-Barbera characters are better than the Looney Tunes and ...
First, Scooby-Doo meeting Shaggy was the heart of ‘Scoob!’ Lieberman had plans for other Hanna-Barbera characters, but we’ll get to that. His first priority was the core Scooby-Doo gang ...
Animator Joseph Barbera, half of the legendary duo of Hanna-Barbera has died. Barbera, 95, created a host of cartoon characters, from the Flintstones to the Jetsons and Tom and Jerry. After ...
had Bugs Bunny and the Looney Tunes cast, Hanna-Barbera Productions had its own prolific stable of beloved television and cartoon characters spanning the decades. Check out our slideshow list to ...
What follows are excerpts from a never-finished British television documentary, an oral-history account of the glory days of Hanna-Barbera animation ... to have cartoon characters over to the ...
The most prominent reminder of this connection is Kings Island, which Taft built in 1972 to showcase the Hanna-Barbera characters. Taft Broadcasting began in 1937 as Radio Cincinnati, Inc., an off ...
Indeed, many of Hanna-Barbera's characters were designed in such a way that animating them would take less time. Most ...
Hanna-Barbera classic TV characters are getting a new injection of life this year, but not in the animation sphere. DC Comics, whose parent company Warner Bros. also owns the Hanna-Barbera library ...
Warnermedia exec Tom Ascheim recently described properties like the Hanna-Barbera catalog as “the ... raided the hallowed studio’s library of characters for its new HBO Max show Jellystone!, ...
Animation pioneer and legend William Hanna, who revolutionized television animation along with his partner Joseph Barbera, creating hundreds of enduring characters such as Yogi Bear, Huckleberry ...
By Rick Porter Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and other classic Looney Tunes characters are getting a new life on HBO Max. The WarnerMedia streaming platform also will gather a host of Hanna-Barbera ...
It is 49 years since Joseph Barbera and William Hanna made their first cartoon for television, a cat and dog caper called The Ruff and Reddy Show, but their work is still being shown around the world.