Nice! These are the shows turning
Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
Showing posts with label Hot Wheels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hot Wheels. Show all posts
July 27, 2024
July 20, 2019
September 19, 2015
COMMERCIAL BREAK: HOT WHEELS
You've read the entries, now we recap what we've done with Toy Month with the commercials for the actual toys. Maybe you've seen some of them on Saturday mornings. Enjoy!
A collection of commercials from the toys' debut year.
A collection of 1969 commercials.
The 1970 commercials.
1971. Sensing a theme?
1972.
1974 Cutoff Canyon track set.
1975 Flying Colors.
1976 Super Chrome.
1977 Thrill Drivers Corkscrew set.
1978 Crisscross Crash track set.
1979.
A single 1980 commercial.
1981 commercial for The Hot Ones line.
1982 6-pack commercial.
1983.
1984 Toys 'R' Us Christmas commercial.
1985 Crack Ups.
1986 Dynamite Crossing.
1988.
1989 Super Chargers.
1990 Sto and Go sets.
1992 Streex featuring David Hasslehoff.
1993 Attack Pack Slimeinator.
1994 Color FX.
1995 Top Speed Accelerator Tube.
1996 Car Wash set.
1997 Planet Micro.
1998 Light Speeders.
1999 Mechanix Deluxe.
2000 Shark Park set.
2001 McDonald's promotion.
2002 Robo Wheels Crash Coaster set.
2003 World Race set.
2004 McDonald's promotion.
2005 Acceleracers AcceleDrome.
2006 Crazy Croc set.
2007 Monster Jam Flip and Crash.
2008 Super Slammers.
2009 Super Jump Raceway set.
2010 Trick Tracks set.
2012 Team Hot Wheels.
2013 Wall Tracks set.
2014 Double Jump Duel set.
2015 Nitrobot Attack set.
September 05, 2015
HOT WHEELS
HOT WHEELS
(ABC, September 6-December 20, 1969)
Ken Snyder Properties, Pantomime Pictures
MAIN CAST:
Bob Arbogast – Jack
“Rabbit” Wheeler, Doc Warren
Melinda Casey –
Janet Martin
Albert Brooks –
Mickey Barnes, Kip Chogi
Susan Davis – Ardeth
Pratt
Casey Kasem – Tank
Mallory, Dexter Carter
Nora Marlowe –
Mother O’Hara
Michael Rye – Mike
Wheeler
In 1968, Mattel
decided to get into the die-cast car business, then-dominated for the last
decade by Matchbox (which, interestingly
enough, would come to be owned by Mattel decades later). Opting to produce more
“tricked out” versions of cars in comparison to Matchbox’s true-to-life
productions, Mattel began their Hot Wheels line. 16 cars (known
as the Sweet Sixteen by collectors) were initially produced, with 11 of them
designed by car designer Harry Bentley
Bradley, as well as an orange track set to use the cars on.
![]() |
1967 International Collector's catalogue. |
With their bright paint jobs, dynamic design, and the
accessories that came with the track—from a motored supercharger to a
speedometer—the line proved more successful than anyone could have imagined.
Especially to Bradley, who had his doubts and quit Mattel to go back to the car
industry. For the next Hot Wheels wave, Bradley recommended his friend, fellow
car designer Ira Gilford. Gilford ended up designing some of Hot Wheels’
greatest cars, and the 1969 line
and accompanying
track sets cemented Mattel’s dominance of the small toy car market.
![]() |
Hot Wheels takes to the small screen. |
With their product line riding high, Mattel sought to
expand their brand recognition by tapping into the growing television market.
Developed by Ken Snyder, Fred Crippen and Eddie Smardan, and produced by
Ken Snyder Properties with Pantomime
Pictures, Hot Wheels became the
first product-based series. It focused on the Hot Wheels Racing Club; a group
of teenagers who worked on and raced cars under the supervision of Doc Warren
(Bob Arbogast).
![]() |
Ardeth, Jack, Janet and Mickey. |
Jack “Rabbit” Wheeler (Arbogast) was the son of
retired racing champ Mike Wheeler (Michael Rye) and the leader of the group. The
other Hot Wheels included his girlfriend Janet Martin (Melinda Casey), apprentice
mechanic Mickey Barnes, ambassador’s son Kip Chogi (both Albert Brooks), Wheeler’s
Motors mechanic Tank Mallory (Kasem), and tomboy and wannabe racer Ardeth Pratt
(Susan Davis). When not dealing with cars, the Hot Wheels hung out at Mother’s
soda shop, run by Mother O’Hara (Nora Marlowe). Their primary rivals were Dexter’s
Demons, led by former Hot Wheels member Dexter Carter (Casey Kasem).
![]() |
Dexter tries to recruit Ardeth. |
It was intended to be everything Speed Racer was not
with a focus on vehicle and driving safety from the Hot Wheels Club, juxtaposed
by the scheming and recklessness of the Demons. The series aired on ABC for a single season beginning on September 6,
1969. However, it stayed on ABC’s schedule well into 1971. Each episode was
broken up into two segments featuring a different story, and began with a cold
open leading into the first segment. The theme was composed by Mike Curb, while Jack
Fascinato did the series’ incidental music. Forward Records released the series’
soundtrack on LP.
![]() |
Hot Wheels promo. |
The show had reportedly undergone production before
Mattel came on board to sponsor it, allowing the Hot Wheels name, and they
probably would have been better off for it. During the show’s broadcast, rival
toy companies filed complaints with the Federal
Communications Commission that Hot
Wheels was nothing more than a 30-minute commercial for the product
(networks were only allowed 16 total minutes of children’s advertising per hour
at the time). The FCC decided that all airings of the show should be partially
logged as advertising time, despite ABC’s protests that the toys themselves
were never actually advertised. After two years of scrutiny and fighting, ABC
decided to pull the show.
![]() |
Hot Wheels the comic. |
During that time, DC
Comics decided to capitalize on the popularity of the toys and produced a comic book series based
on the show. The series only ran six issues, but it did feature some well-known
talents working on it; including Alex Toth,
Dick Giordano, Len Wein and Neal Adams. The first issue dealt with the
formation of the Hot Wheels Club.
EPISODE GUIDE (synopses not available at this time):
“Sky Sailor / The Funny Money Caper” (9/6/69)
“Surf’s Up / The Family Car” (9/13/69)
“The Jewel / The Buggy Ride” (9/20/69)
“Hit and Run / Ardeth the Demon” (9/27/69)
“Avalance Country / Tough Cop” (10/4/69)
“Underground Rough Ride / Diamonds Are a Girl’s Worst Friend”
(10/11/69)
“Get Back on that Hoarse / Dragon’s Tooth Peak” (10/18/69)
“Show-Off / Mata Hari Ardeth” (10/25/69)
“The Winner / The Hot Head” (11/1/69)
“Big Race / Fire Fighters” (11/8/69)
“Fake Out Stake Out / Front Wheel Time Bomb” (11/15/69)
“It Takes A Team / Like Father, Like Son” (11/22/69)
“Danger Around the Clock / Hotter Than the Devils” (11/29/69)
“Race to Space Monkey A-Okay / Big Heart, Little Hearts” (12/6/69)
“Hitchhike to Danger / The Doc Warren Trophy Race” (12/13/69)
“Drag Strip / Slicker-Slicks” (12/20/69) -
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