A group of teenage friends and their Great Dane (Scooby-Doo) travel in a bright green van solving strange and hilarious mysteries, while returning from or going to a regular teenage function... Read allA group of teenage friends and their Great Dane (Scooby-Doo) travel in a bright green van solving strange and hilarious mysteries, while returning from or going to a regular teenage function.A group of teenage friends and their Great Dane (Scooby-Doo) travel in a bright green van solving strange and hilarious mysteries, while returning from or going to a regular teenage function.
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Did you know
- TriviaVelma's famous line, "My glasses, I can't see without them!" was not originally scripted for the show. During a table read for the voice artists, Velma's voice-over actress Nicole Jaffe, who was near-sighted as well, lost her glasses and uttered a variation of what became Velma's famous catchphrase. The writers liked the line so much that Velma losing her glasses became one of the show's trademark gags. Velma loses her glasses in the first episode, What a Night for a Knight (1969), but the actual line is first spoken in Decoy for a Dognapper (1969).
- Alternate versionsThe re-run prints that first aired on CBS in 1971 feature standardized opening title music for all first season episodes. A number of the first season episodes feature alternate opening (and/or closing) theme music (see trivia). Excepting prints aired on cable between 1990 and 1998 (which were time-compressed copies of the original broadcast prints, all but the first two missing their laugh tracks), all re-runs of this show use the 1971 prints.
- ConnectionsEdited into Scooby Goes Hollywood (1979)
- SoundtracksScooby-Doo, Where Are You! (Main Title)
Words and Music by David Mook and Ben Raleigh
Featured review
The Greatest Cartoon Of All Time
I loved this cartoon as a kid. Never mind the fact that the ghosts were never real, the series had a lot of good stuff, it had a creepy Gothic atmosphere, spooky ghosts and at least one step in reality most of the time. The early episodes all had a least one scientific fact in them, such as how dry ice made fog. They were also who-done-it's as you were made to believe who the bad guy was going to be as the story made the switch; the Caveman episode the best example of the last minute switch. It also had a major babe in Daphne Blake, the stunning redhead who made all the guys tune in to the show. I guess the show could have also had Fred Jones for the girls. The series did suffer a lot as the atmosphere was lessened and made more cheerful. Several of the stories became even more outlandish as you realized that the crooks in the monster suits were their own worst enemies. I just can't believe that realisticly that there costumes could have been that convincing. Plus, scaring off these kids were never going to do it. Why didn't they just help the kids along their way instead of being so suspicious and scaring them off. Of course, the one thing that really ruined the show was the screaming mutt. Why the creators didn't ditch him off the side of the road after the very first unpopular response is a bigger mystery than all the others.
helpful•92
- Thor2000
- May 2, 2001
- How many seasons does Scooby Doo, Where Are You! have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime22 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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