The 80s may feel like yesterday, but they their end came with these 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.
July 13, 2024
July 10, 2021
CHICK VENNERA DEAD AT 74
You can read the full story here.
He played Sammy in Foofur; Twitch in an episode of Batman: The Animated Series; Johnny T. Rex in an episode of Darkwing Duck; Pesto, Sparrow and Joe P. in various episodes of Animanaics (1993) and an episode of Pinky and the Brain; a chauffer in an episode of Batman Beyond; and Ferret in episodes of Static Shock. He also provided additional voices in The Karate Kid: The Animated Series.
May 03, 2021
BILLIE HAYES DEAD AT 96
May 13, 2020
SATURDAY MORNING MASTERS: BUSTER JONES
BUSTER
JONES
Notable
Roles: Black Vulcan, Spaghetti Man/Twiggy Sander, Blaster,
Doc, Zap, Winston Zeddemore, Lothar
Born
Edward Jones, he began his career playing music with various bands around the
world before ending up in Washington, DC as a DJ. In 1972, he shifted into a
career on camera with a role in the film The Marshal of Windy
Hollow. In 1973, he was recruited
by Dick
Clark to host the short-lived spin-off to American
Bandstand called Soul Unlimited,
which was designed to compete with Soul Train by
appealing to that program’s audience. In 1977, after a stint doing voiceover
for commercials, Jones’ agency sent him out for an interview and he landed the
role of Hanna-Barbera’s
original character, Black Vulcan, in the Super
Friends franchise. Hanna-Barbera
later tagged him as the voice of Harlem Globetrotter Twiggy Sanders
in the series The
Super Globetrotters. In 1981, he began
a long association with Marvel Productions,
Sunbow
Productions and Hasbro
when he lent his voice to the syndicated Spider-Man,
then
went on to have multiple roles in G.I.
Joe: A Real American Hero, Transformers and
Jem.
Jones’
biggest role, however, came in 1988 when he replaced Arsenio Hall
as the voice of Winston Zeddemore in The
Real Ghostbusters; which he would reprise in two episodes
of the follow-up, Extreme
Ghostbusters. After a few more minor
roles in the likes of Batman:
The Animated Series and The Twisted
Tales of Felix the Cat, Jones largely disappeared from the spotlight after
1998 as job
offers dried up; getting mostly music gigs and starting up his own record
company, Buster Jones Records. He died at his home in North Hollywood in 2014
at the age of 70.
Saturday
Credits:
The All-New Super Friends Hour
Challenge of the Superfriends
The Super Globetrotters
Spider-Man (1981)
Superfriends: The Legendary Super Powers Show
The Flintstone Kids
Jem
The Real Ghostbusters
The Karate Kid (1989)
The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat
The New Batman Adventures
March 01, 2020
LUIS ALFONSO MENDOZA DEAD AT 55
July 06, 2019
July 25, 2015
THE KARATE KID: THE ANIMATED SERIES
Joey Dedio – Daniel LaRusso
Robert Ito & Pat Morita (narration) – Keisuke Miyagi
Janice Kawaye - Taki
![]() |
Taki, Miyagi and Daniel. |
Before the third movie’s release,
Columbia partnered with DiC Entertainment
and Saban
Entertainment to build on the franchise’s popularity with an animated series.
Developed by Dan Distefano,
it was originally going to be a 65-episode daily syndicated series until it was
reduced to a standard 13-episode Saturday morning cartoon. Forgoing the
tournament aspect central to the plots of the films, the show was done as a
quest show as Daniel (Joey Dedio) and Miyagi (Robert Ito) pursued a miniature
shrine with mystical powers after it was stolen from a temple in Okinawa. The
shrine traveled around the world and bestowed powers upon those who ended up
with it, and usually found a way to elude the heroes just before they could
retrieve it. Along the way, they usually ended up having to help those they
encountered with problems besides the ones tied to the shrine. Joining them on
their hunt was an Okinawan girl named Taki (Janice Kawaye), who bore a
resemblance to Daniel’s girlfriend from the second movie, Kumiko (Tamlyn Tomita). Morita was the
only actor from the films to reprise his role, providing an opening narration
from his character’s perspective to introduce the episode’s plot (with the
exception of the 8th episode).
![]() |
The shrine in sinister hands. |
The Karate Kid debuted on NBC on September 9th, 1989; nearly
three months after the release of the third movie. It was written by David Ehrman, Michael Maurer, Richard Merwin, Dorothy Middleton, Sean Roche, Matt Uitz, Chris Weber
and Karen
Willson, with Middleton and Maurer serving as story editors. The opening
titles were done by Larry Houston,
who served as the series’ producer and director. Russ Heath served as the
character design supervisor, with designs done by Fred Carillo and Dale Hendrickson. Haim Saban and Shuki Levy provided the series’
music.
Waterfront training. |
With the movie franchise already on the way out with its audience, it
came as no surprise when the repetitive nature of the show failed to win them
back; especially going up against Slimer!
and the Real Ghostbusters (also produced by DiC) and Pee-wee’s
Playhouse in its timeslot. It was cancelled after its single season.
The series never saw release on home media, but in 2009 Sony Pictures, Columbia’s new parent
company, released the series to digital streaming platforms such as iTunes, Neftlix
and Hulu, and Sony’s own streaming service, Crackle. Dedio and Kawaye would go on to
star together again as Wheeler and Gi, respectively, in Captain Planet and the Planeteers, on which Ito would guest star.
In 1994, the original Karate Kid franchise gained its final
chapter in The Next Karate Kid. The film
was the first to not feature Daniel, be written by Kamen or directed by
Avildsen. Instead, it was written by Mark Lee and directed by Christopher Cain. It focused on
Miyagi visiting Boston, Massachusetts and
training the granddaughter of his former commanding officer during WWII, Julie (Hilary Swank). The film, while a
breakout role for Swank, was even more poorly received than the third movie and
only earned $15.8 million.
In 2010, Columbia attempted to revive the franchise with a reboot movie
starring Jaden Smith and
produced by his parents, Will
and Jada. The film, written by Christopher Murphey and directed
by Harald
Zwart, focused on Jaden’s character, Dre Parker, moving to Beijing, China and being
rescued from bullies by janitor Mr. Han (Jackie
Chan). Han trained Dre in the ways of Kung Fu (despite the film’s title)
and Dre entered a tournament where he competed against Master Li (Rongguang Yu) and his merciless
students. Despite mixed reviews, the film was a box office success and a sequel
had been announced, although it would end up being cancelled.
Cobra Kai promotional poster. |
Beating that sequel was the unexpected continuation of the original franchise, Cobra Kai. The series followed Johnny and Daniel 34 years after the events of the first movie; running 6 seasons across YouTube Red (now YouTube Premium) and Netflix. Although not canon with the franchise, the animated series was referenced in Cobra Kai’s third season with the appearance of the shrine in a dojo in Okinawa. In 2025, Columbia released Karate Kid: Legends, written by Ron Lieber and directed by Jonathan Entwistle. It united Daniel and Mr. Han in training Li Fong (Ben Wang) in a new style combining both their disciplines so that he could win an upcoming tournament.
Originally posted in 2015. Updated in 2025.