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.
For the history of Yogi the Bear, check out the post here.
Yogi’s
Space Race was Yogi Bear’s (Daws Butler) second ensemble series with him as
the title character after Yogi’s
Gang, and the first to be comprised of several different segments. The
titular Space Race was a reworking of
Hanna-Barbera’s
earlier Wacky Racesconcept that tried
to latch onto the popularity of Star
Wars(as evidenced by the font used for the series’ title). However,
instead of being comprised entirely of all-new characters like Wacky Races,
Space Race mixed in some returning
classics to go with the rookies.
Promotional pamphlet about the show.
Yogi traded in his hunt for picnic
baskets in Jellystone Park for racing through space. However, his partner
wasn’t frequent sidekick Boo Boo. Rather, he was given the new partner of Scare
Bear (Joe Besser); a small bear scared of practically everything, as his name
implied. Huckleberry Hound (Butler) was partnered with Quack-Up (Mel Blanc),
who was crazy and clumsy and served as their team’s pilot. Musical shark Jabberjaw
(Frank Welker) was partnered with Buford (also Welker), a lazy bloodhound
belonging to the mystery-solving Cindy Mae (Pat Parris) and Woody (Dave
Landsburg). Their ship included a speed-boosting track powered by Burford
running on it (which, naturally, was seldom-used).
The Space Racers in their ships.
Newly-created for the series was the
trio of Nugget Nose (Welker), the gold-obsessed ghost of a prospector who was
very protective of his partners, Wendy (Marilyn Schreffler) and Rita (Parris).
There was also the racing quartet of Captain Good and his pet cat sidekick,
Clean Kat (both Welker). No, that’s not a typo or a case of seeing double. See,
Captain Good and Clean Kat seemed to be the ultimate personifications of
good sportsmanship and defenders of everything right, but with the push of a
button the pair became Phantom Phink and his pet dog sidekick, Sinister Sludge.
In their dastardly dual identities, the pair would stop at nothing to achieve
victory in the race. And, unlike with Dick Dastardly and Muttley in Wacky Races—whom they were clearly modeled after—they actually won some
races. Although they never went out of their way to make everyone believe their
dual identities were separate people, none of the racers or the narrator (Gary
Owens) knew they were the same. Other Hanna-Barbera characters made
appearances, such as the gigantic Grape Ape (Bob Holt),
Fred Flintstone (Henry Corden) and Barney Rubble (Blanc). Bob Singer and Willie Ito served as the show’s
character designers.
Jabberjaw activating Buford power.
Yogi’s
Space Race debuted on NBC
on September 9, 1972 as a 90-minute program. Along with the Space Race segment, the show included Galaxy
Goof-Ups, which saw Yogi, Scare, Huckleberry and Quack-Up as inept
intergalactic police officers; The
Buford Files, starring Buford and his owners solving mysteries ala Scooby-Doo;
and The
Galloping Ghost, highlighting the adventures of Nugget and his friends.
The running gag of Space Race was
that the prize the race’s winner won was usually terrible in some way; such as
a self-massaging bed that beat the stuffing out of whoever used it, winning a
trip somewhere where they actually had to work, or a trip with less-than-ideal
travel accommodations (makes you wonder why they kept racing). Despite being
the title character, Yogi only won two races. In fact, the winningest racing
team was Captain Good and Clean Kat with three victories (five if you count the
two from their alter egos). Although, considering the prizes, maybe it was no
mistake the series’ villain was the ultimate “winner”.
A tale of split personalities: Captain Good and Clean Kat vs. Phantom Phink and Sinister Sludge.
Nugget Nose re-evaluating why he hangs out with a couple of teenagers.
NBC cancelled the series before it
concluded airing its only season. To make it more maneuverable on the schedule,
Galaxy Goof-Ups was broken off into its own series on November 4,
reducing Space Race to a 60-minute program for the remainder of its
initial run. When the series entered the rerun cycle, it was further broken up
into the half-hour Yogi’s Space Race and Buford and the Galloping
Ghost that February. Space Race left the NBC schedule that March,
with Goof-Ups following shortly after. Buford and the Galloping Ghost
lasted until the debut of the 1979 season. Beginning in the late 1980s, Space
Race was seen in on USA
Cartoon Express,
Nickelodeon,
Cartoon Network and Boomerang. Although it hasn’t been
released to DVD, the entire Space Race segment is available to stream on
Amazon
Prime Video.
“The
Saturn 500” (9/9/78) – Yogi Bear and Scare Bear win a trip to Mars where a snow
bear keeps chasing them.
“The
Neptune 9000” (9/16/78) – Captain Good and Clean Kat win a ship that converts
into a bag for easy storage—with Captain Good inside of it.
“The
Pongo Tongo Classic” (9/23/78) – Yogi and Scare win dinner at the Ritz for the
low, low cost of having to do the dishes after.
“Nebuloc
– The Prehistoric Planet” (9/30/78) – Phantom Phink and Sinister Sludge win a
chance for a famous artist to paint them. Literally.
“The
Spartikan Spectacular” (10/7/78) – Captain Good and Clean Kat win a cruise,
however they have to travel with the cargo.
“The
Mizar Marathon” (10/14/78) – Jabberjaw and Burfod win a self-massage bed that
just a little too rough.
“The
Lost Planet of Atlantis” (10/21/78) – Huckleberry Hound and Quack-Up win
tickets to an amusement park where they have to be the dunking clowns.
“Race
Through Oz” (10/28/78) – Captain Good and Clean Kat win a computerized date and
end up matched with the Wicked Witch of the West.
“Race
Through Wet Galoshes” (11/4/78) – Captain Good and Clean Kat win floor tickets
to a concert—as in they have to lay on the
floor.
“The
Borealis Triangle” (11/11/78) – Phantom Phink and Sinister Sludge win a trip to
a ski lodge where they have to pull a sleigh.
“Race
to the Center of the Universe” (11/18/78) – Nugget Nose, Wendy and Rita win a
vacation at the very dude ranch where they work.
“Race
Through the Planet of the Monsters” (11/25/78) – Phantom Phink and Sinister
Sludge win roles in a movie where they had to perform the most dangerous
stunts.
“Franzia”
(12/2/78) – Huckleberry and Quack-Up with tickets for a ride on a luxury jet;
however, nobody ever said the seats were inside
of it.
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