tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post1387610994998414499..comments2024-03-27T01:21:03.543-07:00Comments on Yowp: Tally Ho, CarloYowphttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09264605351878574044noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-7152815012253947502018-07-07T15:19:52.304-07:002018-07-07T15:19:52.304-07:00Yogi Bear animated by Michael Lah is soooooooo fun...Yogi Bear animated by Michael Lah is soooooooo funny! <br /><br />rodineisilveirahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07751345474415214163noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-81125598465814008082018-07-05T19:53:06.005-07:002018-07-05T19:53:06.005-07:00Since I was born well after the color transition, ...Since I was born well after the color transition, I grew up watching these cartoons in color, by that point faded really well.Matt Burbhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03009742300869787091noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-49220428664289163402018-07-05T16:18:28.183-07:002018-07-05T16:18:28.183-07:00Bill and Joe used color from the get-go with Ruff ...Bill and Joe used color from the get-go with <i>Ruff and Reddy</i>, but there were a few made-for-TV cartoon shows in the pre-Huck era that were savvy enough to eschew black & white tonalities (<i>Colonel Bleep</i>, the Shull Bonsall produced <i>Crusader Rabbit</i>, <i>The Boing-Boing Show</i>, etc.). Yet the extra time and expense were for naught, as they (including R and R) were eventually phased out of syndication for their juvenile tone and primitive visuals. (Don't believe The B-B Show was ever repeated, at least in its original form). top_cat_jameshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06365510398800837335noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-52056422511586708462018-07-05T12:16:30.882-07:002018-07-05T12:16:30.882-07:00I love Carlo Vinci I love Carlo Vinci Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11813803755312657393noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-90201444885906224852018-07-05T09:34:18.760-07:002018-07-05T09:34:18.760-07:00We didn't get our first color set till...oh..m...We didn't get our first color set till...oh..maybe 1968. So, all my formidable years as a child, were watching all cartoons in black and white. Had a lot of catching up to do after we bought the set. Always thought Yogi's early facial art was interesting. " Tally Ho Ho Ho " is in the top-10 of my favorite Yogi shorts. Errolnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5403931334822730200.post-82649496815064707332018-07-04T19:29:28.531-07:002018-07-04T19:29:28.531-07:00It's interesting to me that Yogi's earlies...It's interesting to me that Yogi's earliest cartoons feature his facial design reminiscent of the Disney/Mickey Mouse hairline for his face (which itself is simply an imitation of a human's hairline on an animal) simply because it's seemingly the only overt Disney influence on the H-B cartoons. (And of course, Felix the Cat predates Mickey, and though his design has no white around his eyes, it surely was the reason Oswald, and Mickey afterward, looked the way they did then.) The M-G-M character design was certainly the basis for H-B's, so much so that they were able to simply transplant some of the characters from one series to the other. About the only adjustment was to markedly decrease the number of characters whose cheeks overlapped their muzzle areas (Ruff, Dixie, Blab and Yakky are the only ones I can think of, offhand, though there might be others among the supporting characters), from MGM's nearly 100%, if you include the bulldog design shared by Spike and Reddy.Mike Tiefenbacherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04102752875776872720noreply@blogger.com