The Swingin’ 70s were more of a tightrope walk for animation
studios. Racial uprisings, high-profile assassinations and an unpopular war had
made advocacy groups want to ensure their children had a safe place to retreat
from the horrors of the real world. They chose to make television that place by
pressuring networks to make all content geared towards their kids as harmless
as possible. And with only the three major networks to provide them work (at
the time), studios had no choice but to comply.
|
Scene from the "I'm Just a Bill" segment of the educational Schoolhouse Rock. |
Gone were the days of the highly-lucrative action-oriented cartoon.
There could be no punches. No slapstick pratfalls. No deep space battles. There
could only be good, safe, educational content that pushed a pro-social message
such as anti-bullying, anti-drugs, honesty, reading, etc. If it happened to be
entertaining in the process, well, that was just a bonus. Really, only Filmation weathered this
change effortlessly as their content had already been approached in that manner
from the outset. Founder Lou
Scheimer came from a client-based creative background, such as making
commercials, rather than generally more adult-geared theatrical cartoons like
the others involved with television animation, making him more used to
producing content via strict guidelines than his contemporaries.
|
Famous headline quote from President Ford to a nearly-bankrupt New York City. |
Another impact on animation studios was the economic downturn and
rampant inflation. Where once cartoons were the cheaper alternative that made
them appealing to the networks, it suddenly became a reality that live-action
programming could now be made for just as much—if not cheaper—AND
quicker. As a result, a lot more live-action shows made specifically for
Saturday mornings appeared throughout the decade. This proved a boon for Sid & Marty Krofft Productions,
whose unique costume designs on Hanna-Barbera’s The
Banana Splits Adventure Hour earned them recognition and several shows to
their credit. Hanna-Barbera and Filmation also tried their hands at live-action
programming in a combination of shows and specials. Other cheap alternatives
were game shows like Runaround, educational shows like the revival of Mr.
Wizard, and news-oriented programs like Take a Giant Step (later
Talking with a Giant).
|
Filmation's live-action Shazam/Isis Hour. |
The economic downturn also saw the loss of more animation jobs in
America, with work heading to cheaper areas like Mexico, Japan, China, Korea,
Australia and other countries. Some studios had already done this “runaway production”
from the outset--namely Jay Ward Productions
and Total TeleVision
with Gamma
Productions in Mexico--while others had to in order to meet increasing
workloads, like Hanna-Barbera with their Australian division
and later the Japanese studio of Wang Film
Productions. Filmation, for the duration of its existence, strove to keep
animation jobs domestic and only outsourced one of their projects--1981’s
The New Adventures of Zorro--when they found themselves with too much
work at one time.
|
ABC's 1970 comic book advertisement. |
But Saturday mornings kept rolling on and the networks kept investing
heavily in them. Comic and newspaper ads continued to run and the Saturday
morning preview specials became an annual event, with each network airing one
almost every September to usher in their new line-ups. The networks also wooed
in celebrities not usually associated with cartoons or kids’ shows—such as
stage and film actor Charles
Nelson Reilly, musician Rick
Springfield, the Harlem
Globetrotters basketball team, boxer Muhammad
Ali, musical group The Jackson 5ive
and more—with the hopes of attracting their existing fanbases to the network
and the promise of those celebrities finding new fans among the regular viewers.
Did it work? Well, you tell us.
No comments:
Post a Comment