Talk:A Pup Named Scooby-Doo

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Note: Content for this article was previously split from Scooby-Doo series guide.

I think I do not want too add this information to the article, while doing so, is that I will be blocked.

"Although, "A Pup Named Scooby Doo" (PNSD) failed in 1991, while they ran out of plots, but he appears almost grown-up in any way.


65.54.xxx.xxx 8 Feburary 2006

Contents

[edit] Continuity Errors

Are there any continuity errors of this cartoon show?

  • I am not sure. Maybe you should ask The Weather Channel, despite they only do weather, how would I know they be running cartoons during Storm Stories? I have to check out what is on TWC.

--65.54.154.116 06:35, 1 August 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Age in the Series

In A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, the characters, Shaggy, Velma, Fred, and Daphne are minors, and they're adults in the other Scooby-Doo stuff. --PJ Pete

[edit] Unaired Halloween episode?

Does anyone have proof about this 'unaired halloween episode' that supposedly ran on Halloween, 2006? I can't find any information about by googling, so unless someone can give some proof that it aired, I'm going to take information about it out of the article. Joltman 18:54, 22 November 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Inspired by Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures?

Would this be worth mentioning at all? John Kricfalusi made mention on his blog recently that when he was working on Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures with Ralph Bakshi; A Pup Named Scooby Doo came out a year after their show aired and copied various aspects of it...

He said (as quoted from his blog):

"The show [Mighty Mouse] came out and had cartoonist humor all over it. And all kinds of "plots" that didn't follow the 12 legal ones all the regular cartoon writers had memorized. No skate boards, no celebrity cameos, no "parodies" of Spielberg movies. We did have a cheesy kid character and we made Pearl Pureheart feisty and liberal, I guess to appease the Network, but we made fun of these contrived elements all the time. Cartoonists are basically artists with a sense of humor. We make fun of everything and everyone all the time. The show influenced the whole TV business. The following year, the Scooby Doo writers at HB copied the superficial elements of it and offered up A Pup Named Scooby Doo. All of a sudden they were doing things that everyone told me you couldn't do in cartoons a couple years before: "Breaking the 4th wall. Takes. Wonky backgrounds. Satire. etc."

Here's a link to the full blog entery here: http://johnkstuff.blogspot.com/2007/03/writing-for-cartoons-4-ideas-origin-of.html#links

-Do I really need to ad a name? 1:53am, 23 March 2007(UTC)