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.
Best known as the original Dennis the Menace, he voiced Prince Turhan in
the Arabian Knights segment of The Banana Splits Adventure Hour;
Terry Dexter in Here Comes the Grump; and teenaged Bamm-Bamm Rubble in The
Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show and The Flintstone Comedy Hour (1972).
She starred as Penny in The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show and The
Flintstone Comedy Hour; Elektra 6000, Shazalle and additional voices in The
Fonz and the Happy Days Gang; Miss Burns in Rick Moranis in Gravedale
High; Talula LaTrane in Yo Yogi!; Ammonia Pine in Darkwing Duck;
Mother Goose in Mother Goose and Grimm/Grimmy; Mame Slaughter in Captain
Planet and the Planeteers; and Golda Meir in Histeria! She also
provided additional voices in Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1979), The
Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show, The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries, Snorks, Bobby’s World and Monster in my Pocket: The Big Scream.
As we celebrate, we figured we'd also take the opportunity to celebrate the various other programs enjoying anniversaries this year (at least at an interval of 5). Some we've covered, some we'll get to covering sooner or later, but all of them represent Saturday morning. As we roll further down the line, we get up there in years as we hit 45. These are the shows your parents (or even grandparents, depending on your age) were enjoying once upon a time.
Take a walk down memory lane with us, and feel free to share your memories in the comments, or over on our Facebook group or Facebook page. We'd love to hear from you!
Now, without further ado, join us in celebrating...
For a history of The Flintstones franchise, check out the post here.
They grow up so fast.
The characters of Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm.
With The
Flintstonesdoing well in syndicated reruns—particularly on Saturdays—CBS executive Fred Silverman approached Hanna-Barbera in 1970 about doing a revival. However, he wanted to
make it a teen-oriented and musical series to try and duplicate the successes
of Filmation’s Archieseries and their
own Josie
and the Pussycats. Joe Ruby and Ken
Spears were assigned the task of making the
modern Stone Age family even more modern. They radically aged the children of
their principle characters to teenagers, and gave them a gang of friends that
could play together as a band whenever the story required it. The result was The
Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show.
Pebbles, Bamm-Bamm and their gang cruising around Bedrock.
The
Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show debuted on CBS on September 11, 1971. It focused
on the wacky misadventures of teenaged Pebbles Flintstone (Sally Struthers),
her neighbor and boyfriend Bamm-Bamm Rubble (Jay North), and their friends:
Moonrock Crater (Lenny Weinrib), a genius inventor; Penny Pillar (Mitzi
McCall), an overweight girl obsessed with being thin; and Wiggy Rockstone (Gay
Hartwig), a girl who lived by the daily horoscopes. Often, they would find
themselves in sticky situations made even stickier by Pebbles’ schemes to get
them out of trouble, which often backfired (a callback to the schemes of her
father in the original series). Other times, they were at odds with Pebbles’
rival, snobbish Cindy Curbstone (Hartwig), and a biker gang called The Bronto
Bunch. The elder Flintstones and Rubbles made the occasional appearances on the
show, but they were no longer the focus. Another thing of note is that while
Bamm-Bamm did seem to pull off the occasional impossible feat here and there,
the super strength he was originally depicted with as a baby was significantly
played down.
Groovin' to the beat.
As The Flintstones focused on
the juxtaposition of the modern world set amongst a Stone Age backdrop, so too
did Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm. Along with everything viewers had come
to expect of the franchise, the show was heavily influenced by its time period.
Lingo, teen idols, drag racing and various activities the kids did for fun were
taken from the trends of the 1970s. The series was written by Neal
Barbera, Walter Black, Larz Bourne, Tom Dagenais, Bob
Ogle, Larry Rhine and Dick
Robbins, with story direction by Brad Case, Carl
Fallberg, Cullen Houghtaling, Alex
Lovy, Lew Marshall, Paul
Sommer and Irv Spector. The music was composed by Hoyt Curtin and Ted
Nichols. It was one of the first Hanna-Barbera
productions to utilize their new limited laugh track.
Proving
successful, CBS decided to expand their Flintstones franchise with the
creation of The Flintstone Comedy Hour. Along with new adventures
featuring the elder characters, the Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm characters
were given new shorts and a band called “The Bedrock Rockers” that performed
during the show in between segments. Reruns of Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm aired
as the second half-hour of the Comedy Hour. As Struthers had become
committed to her role on the sitcom All in the Family before the original first episode ever even aired, Mickey Stevens replaced her for all the new material produced for
the Comedy Hour. When the show was renamed The Flintstone
Comedy Show, ThePebbles and Bamm-Bamm reruns were
dropped from its format and later aired as part of the weekday syndicated Fred Flintstone and
Friends. It would make the rounds later on
cable channel Boomerang.
“Gridiron Girl Trouble” (9/11/71) – Bamm-Bamm’s dogosaurus follows
them to school, and hiding him from the dogcatcher lands Pebbles into playing
in the big football game.
“Putty in Her Hands” (9/18/71) – Pebble’s attempt at sculpting falls
flat. She convinces Bamm-Bamm to pose as her sculpture to fool Cindy, but
statue Bamm-Bamm ends up stolen crooks.
“Frog for a Day” (9/25/71) – Pebbles studies witchcraft to prove her
authenticity when her role in a play is cut back resulting in her believing she
accidentally turned Barney into a frog.
“The Golden Voice” (10/2/71) – Pebbles forces Bamm-Bamm to sing for
her band after hearing him in the shower. Unfortunately, the only place
Bamm-Bamm CAN sing is in the shower.
“Daddy’s Little Helper” (10/9/71) – Believing Fred about to be fired,
Pebbles gets a job at the gravel pit in order to help save his job. However,
she ends up costing him a promotion instead.
“Focus Foolery” (10/16/71) – Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm stumble on a bank
robbery, forcing them to hide out in a baby pageant with Bamm-Bamm posing as a
baby.
“Pebble’s Big Boast” (10/23/71) – Pebble’s brags about knowing a big
rock group to Cindy and is tasked with getting them to play at her party.
“The Grand Prix Pebles” (10/30/71) – Pebbles accidentally gives away
Fred and Barney’s new super fuel. Retrieving it, the kids discover a flaw in
the formula they must fix before the big race.
“The Terrible Snorkosaurus” (11/6/71) – Pebbles fails to sell a
snorkosaurus to Sea Rock World and hides it in her swimming pool, forgetting
Fred has a pool party planned for his boss.
“Schleprock’s New Image” (11/13/71) – Pebbles tries to help jinx
Schleprock change his luck, but her help only leads to endless mishaps
befalling the gang.
“Coach Pebbles” (11/20/71) – Pebbles and her girl friends takes over
coaching the little league team when Fred loses his voice, but their lack of
baseball knowledge brings the team down.
“No Cash and Carry” (11/27/71) – A con man posing as chief of store
security convinces the gang to steal from a department store as part of an
effort to help test his operatives.
“Wooly the Great” (12/4/71) – Moonrock’s super shampoo gives Pebble’s
pet elephant the ability to fly. After Wooly causes Fred to get angry at him,
Wooly runs away to join the circus.
“Mayor May Not” (12/11/71) – Pebbles becomes honorary Mayor of Bedrock
and attempts to improve the city…with disastrous results.
“They Went That Away” (12/18/71) – Pebbles volunteers her friends and
family to watch Uncle Hatrock’s ranch while he’s away, and she unknowingly
hires cattle rustlers as ranch hands.
“The Birthday Present” (1/1/72) – Wooly buries Wilma’s present,
causing Pebbles to believe it was stolen by their neighbors, the creepy
Gruesomes.