This Coitainy is a great follow-up on Stooge datas both the real Stooges in their live features and as the voice supplementers and the false voice supplementers alike for the cartoons like The New 3 Stooges & The Scooby Doo cartoons and The Robonic Stooges.
When Larry had a stroke & the Stooges broke-up, Hanna-Barbara had the Stooges guest star on two episodes of the new Scooby-Doo Movies, When Moe & Larry died, Hanna-Barbara gave the Stooges another cartoon series where they were Robotic Superheroes, Hanna-Barbara must have been really big Stooges fans to make cartoons dedicated to their legacy(even if they toned down the slap-stick violence to make them more kid-friendly).
Anything 3 Stooges was totally Awesome! The 70s Robonic 3 Stooges took me back to the New 3 Stooges Cartoons of the 60s even though Joe DeRita aka Curly-Joe who was a new fill in replacement Did really pick up in a lot of ways where original Curly Jerome Howard left off! Thank-You for sharing and God Bless!
Curly didn't live to see the Stooges become the legends they are now. But Larry and Moe did. Furthermore, Joe DiRita (who died in 1993 at age 81) was said to be the only Stooge that wasn't Jewish.
I remember this cartoon growing up Probably when I was still in elementary school and saw them in Boomerang an enjoyed the Ebony Black episode as well as the Mummy episode and the Jekyll Hyde one as well
Another great video and blast from the past. Great fun watching it. Major fan of the cartoons shown along with the Robonic Stooges and was a big fan of the trio's cartoon and their shorts naturally. There was even a comic I read of theirs about this time (the Sons of the Stooges). But can't recall a single episode. But wow what a voice cast. Jerry Mahoney's name was still a household name in my neck of the woods (though I'd only seen pics and his Beverly Hillbillies appearance. But wow, no clue that he was Tigger and Gargamel. Stilk 2,ofmmy favs ), Jabber Jaws was a must see and dcor our generation Frank Welker was & still is iconic. Can't wait to see his video. EDIT: Just had to add, though, as. Shemp fan I wish he'd been part of it. Even if just now in those comics you mentioned.
Thanks. I looked through the descriptions of those comics and I believe one of them had Shemp in it. I'm probably going to get some of those comics for my collection at some point.
@@tvcrazyman and @ivane5110 Shemp was in the original Three Stooges comic books. When this comic book debuted in the late 1940's it was still Curly, Larry and Moe, even though it was after Curly had retired. But at some point in the early 1950's it switched to Shemp, Larry and Moe. I don't know when these comic books ceased publication, or whether they did so because Shemp died or because of the infamous Comics Code going into effect in 1955. (And I don't know if these early comic books have ever been reprinted.) I remember seeing the cover of one of the later comic books in The Three Stooges Scrapbook (written by Moe's daughter Joan and her husband Norman Maurer), which I checked out of the library in 1996. The cover showed "The Famous Fathers" (now wearing glasses) and their teenage sons.
Voice actor that did Curly was the voice that did Scooby Doo Frank Welker. He voiced Frank Jones. I got it confused. He also was in the movie how to frame a fig with Don Knotts he played his best friend and he was the garbage man too.
Don Messick voiced Scooby Doo...Welker voiced Jabberjaw Fangface Iceman/Bobby Drake, Darkseid, Dynomutt, Dr. Ray Stantz, Dr. Claw, Slimer among others.
Being probably that Columbia/Sony holds the rights to the Stooges and that Hanna-Barbera produced the cartoon which is owned by Warner Discovery. I know Boomerang/Cartoon Network did show these toons as fillers as far as the mid 2000's. I'd love for these to be on DVD!
This was technically part of a Segment from a Live-Action Show called The Skatebirds. It also featured three other Segments on the Show, those being Wonder Wheels, Mystery Island, and Woofer & Wimper: Dog Detectives (which are just 10 Minute Edits from Clue Club, another Hanna-Barbera Show)! UPDATE: 0:23, I litteraly just mentioned them a second ago!
@@tvcrazyman I don't know if I could watch Mystery Island now because of the number Hanna-Barbera did on the beloved robot from Lost in Space. At least back then Tampa's WTOG 44 showed Lost in Space on Saturday afternoons, so later that day I could see the robot looking (and sounding) like his old self. (In Mystery Island the robot had a high-pitched British voice.)
That was another cartoon I used to watch. I actually did a video on that one a while back. - ruclips.net/video/nJk5tRyBqOI/видео.htmlsi=d337IyBaNmS-h57n
I actually enjoyed the Robonic Stooges. Sure, it's basically a redo of The Impossibles (and, knowing H-B, they probably reused the animation a LOT) and everything was reused again when they did the same goldang thing with the Harlem Globetrotters, but the Stooges are still a lot of fun whatever their format, and the voice talent was pretty good. The New Three Stooges was pretty poor, though, except for the live action bits - even if the Stooges were really too old for the slapstick by that time. The problem was they didn't do enough of those to supplement all the cartoons they made, so the live action repeated constantly. And the cartoons on their own were simply not worth returning to.
I read that they made a lot fewer live action segments so when people turned the show on and they saw the live action part repeated again, they thought the show was a re-run and stopped watching which hurt the ratings.
I saw this show dozens of times on Boomerane in the 2000s, and it was fine. My only complaint is that they didn't have Robo Shemp. I wonder what actor would have voice him?
As a kid this series confused me.all dead by 1975 i figured the plot was they reanimated their deceased remains with modern electronic technology.i bet a lot of kids were confused if they knew the actual fate of the real 3.
@pl5624 and @tvcrazyman Bill Mumy, who can sometimes be a little crude, when talking about younger people discovering Lost in Space for the first time and not knowing how long ago it was made, said something like "When we watched the Three Stooges when we were kids, we didn't know that Curly was rotting in the ground before we were born.".
@user-sq4jz9up6g They probably couldn't have because of the restrictions on "violence" in Saturday morning cartoons at the time. When Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera showed some of the original Tom and Jerry cartoons to one of the TV networks, the response was something like "They'd kill us if we showed those today.". So instead we got new Tom and Jerry cartoons in which Tom and Jerry were pals instead of adversaries
Thanks, I can definitely see doing something on those shows in the future. I've been meaning to do something with the Land of the Lost already. If I can get enough goofs that would be a fun subject to work with.
"The Robotic Stooges" (along with "Dynomutt, Dog Wonder") was obviously an uninspired attempt by Hanna-Barbera to piggyback off of the enormous success of ABC's hit action/adventure series "The Six Million Dollar Man" and its equally successful spinoff "The Bionic Woman."
@user-xq5vx7rs4w Moe, Larry and Curly Joe temporarily parted ways with Columbia Pictures and made Snow White and the Three Stooges (in color and CinemaScope) at 20th Century Fox. With no more Three Stooges feature films to release, Columbia put together Stop! Look! and Laugh! with clips from the Stooges shorts with Curly and new framing footage with Paul Winchell and Jerry Mahoney, and children's TV host Officer Joe Bolton and Knucklehead Smiff. They also padded it out with the Marquis Chimps performing Cinderella. (But it still seems like a pretty short movie, though I've only seen it chopped up with commercials.) The Stooges weren't too happy that Columbia did this behind their backs. (But I didn't know that there was a lawsuit.) They must have made peace with Columbia because they returned and made four more feature films.
Who would of thunk it that the idea for inspector Gadget came from the Three Stooges.
Andy Heyward did start at Hanna-Barbera.
This Coitainy is a great follow-up on Stooge datas both the real Stooges in their live features and as the voice supplementers and the false voice supplementers alike for the cartoons like The New 3 Stooges & The Scooby Doo cartoons and The Robonic Stooges.
I love cartoons
When Larry had a stroke & the Stooges broke-up, Hanna-Barbara had the Stooges guest star on two episodes of the new Scooby-Doo Movies,
When Moe & Larry died, Hanna-Barbara gave the Stooges another cartoon series where they were Robotic Superheroes,
Hanna-Barbara must have been really big Stooges fans to make cartoons dedicated to their legacy(even if they toned down the slap-stick violence to make them more kid-friendly).
Big Stooges fan, never heard of this toon. Thanks for the great video as always!
Thanks for watching!
@@tvcrazyman 👍🔥
Anything 3 Stooges was totally Awesome! The 70s Robonic 3 Stooges took me back to the New 3 Stooges Cartoons of the 60s even though Joe DeRita aka Curly-Joe who was a new fill in replacement Did really pick up in a lot of ways where original Curly Jerome Howard left off! Thank-You for sharing and God Bless!
Curly didn't live to see the Stooges become the legends they are now. But Larry and Moe did.
Furthermore, Joe DiRita (who died in 1993 at age 81) was said to be the only Stooge that wasn't Jewish.
Yep, that was on The Skate Birds on CBS. Told you.
Loved this cartoon back in the day 😀
Wouldn't it be cool if they had a 70's channel that reproduced Saturday mornings exactly as they were aired originally?
Omg that would be awesome be worth getting up early on Saturday again lol 🤣🤣
I remember this cartoon growing up
Probably when I was still in elementary school and saw them in Boomerang an enjoyed the Ebony Black episode as well as the Mummy episode and the Jekyll Hyde one as well
Wow, something I really didn't know about The Three Stooges, and I thought I knew it all, by now anyway, thanks!
Another great video and blast from the past. Great fun watching it. Major fan of the cartoons shown along with the Robonic Stooges and was a big fan of the trio's cartoon and their shorts naturally. There was even a comic I read of theirs about this time (the Sons of the Stooges). But can't recall a single episode. But wow what a voice cast. Jerry Mahoney's name was still a household name in my neck of the woods (though I'd only seen pics and his Beverly Hillbillies appearance. But wow, no clue that he was Tigger and Gargamel. Stilk 2,ofmmy favs ), Jabber Jaws was a must see and dcor our generation Frank Welker was & still is iconic. Can't wait to see his video. EDIT: Just had to add, though, as. Shemp fan I wish he'd been part of it. Even if just now in those comics you mentioned.
Thanks. I looked through the descriptions of those comics and I believe one of them had Shemp in it. I'm probably going to get some of those comics for my collection at some point.
@@tvcrazyman and @ivane5110 Shemp was in the original Three Stooges comic books. When this comic book debuted in the late 1940's it was still Curly, Larry and Moe, even though it was after Curly had retired. But at some point in the early 1950's it switched to Shemp, Larry and Moe. I don't know when these comic books ceased publication, or whether they did so because Shemp died or because of the infamous Comics Code going into effect in 1955. (And I don't know if these early comic books have ever been reprinted.)
I remember seeing the cover of one of the later comic books in The Three Stooges Scrapbook (written by Moe's daughter Joan and her husband Norman Maurer), which I checked out of the library in 1996. The cover showed "The Famous Fathers" (now wearing glasses) and their teenage sons.
Voice actor that did Curly was the voice that did Scooby Doo Frank Welker. He voiced Frank Jones. I got it confused. He also was in the movie how to frame a fig with Don Knotts he played his best friend and he was the garbage man too.
Also the Voice of Dr. Claw from Inspector Gadget.
😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
As well as Dynomutt Dog Wonder and JabberJaw from the shows of the same name@@davidwesley2525
Don Messick voiced Scooby Doo...Welker voiced Jabberjaw Fangface Iceman/Bobby Drake, Darkseid, Dynomutt, Dr. Ray Stantz, Dr. Claw, Slimer among others.
7:24 I can't wait for the Frank Welker video.
Neither can I!
I THOUGHT I WAS HAVING A MANDELLA EFFECT! I KNEW HANNA BARBARA MADE ONE
Joe Baker was also one of "The Kopykats"
Not sure why this never got released on DVD
It does deserve an official DVD release.
@@tvcrazyman It shouldn't be that hard to do.
Being probably that Columbia/Sony holds the rights to the Stooges and that Hanna-Barbera produced the cartoon which is owned by Warner Discovery. I know Boomerang/Cartoon Network did show these toons as fillers as far as the mid 2000's. I'd love for these to be on DVD!
@@thahman187 Does that also explain why Hanna-Barbera's Jeannie wasn't released on DVD, too??
7:10, I still like Frank Welker the most
This was technically part of a Segment from a Live-Action Show called The Skatebirds.
It also featured three other Segments on the Show, those being Wonder Wheels, Mystery Island, and Woofer & Wimper: Dog Detectives (which are just 10 Minute Edits from Clue Club, another Hanna-Barbera Show)!
UPDATE: 0:23, I litteraly just mentioned them a second ago!
I would like to see a full episode of Mystery Island. I just found that clip researching. That is one I had forgotten about.
@@tvcrazyman So would I
bro said "what if I 'WELL ACTUALLY' the video before I even watch it"
@@smurfyx What's your point?
@@tvcrazyman I don't know if I could watch Mystery Island now because of the number Hanna-Barbera did on the beloved robot from Lost in Space. At least back then Tampa's WTOG 44 showed Lost in Space on Saturday afternoons, so later that day I could see the robot looking (and sounding) like his old self. (In Mystery Island the robot had a high-pitched British voice.)
I remember they did the same thing with the Harlem Globetrotters they made the Super Globetrotters
That was another cartoon I used to watch. I actually did a video on that one a while back. - ruclips.net/video/nJk5tRyBqOI/видео.htmlsi=d337IyBaNmS-h57n
I actually enjoyed the Robonic Stooges. Sure, it's basically a redo of The Impossibles (and, knowing H-B, they probably reused the animation a LOT) and everything was reused again when they did the same goldang thing with the Harlem Globetrotters, but the Stooges are still a lot of fun whatever their format, and the voice talent was pretty good.
The New Three Stooges was pretty poor, though, except for the live action bits - even if the Stooges were really too old for the slapstick by that time. The problem was they didn't do enough of those to supplement all the cartoons they made, so the live action repeated constantly. And the cartoons on their own were simply not worth returning to.
I read that they made a lot fewer live action segments so when people turned the show on and they saw the live action part repeated again, they thought the show was a re-run and stopped watching which hurt the ratings.
@kali3665 "That Little Old Bomb Maker" was a little better than the rest , probably because Jay Ward was involved in its making.
Pure cinematic genius. Better than Citizen Kane!
I don’t remember the skate birds, but I remember the robotics stooges and the live action series
Anyone else feel they were introduced to the real live original Stooges through this cartoon?
I saw this show dozens of times on Boomerane in the 2000s, and it was fine. My only complaint is that they didn't have Robo Shemp. I wonder what actor would have voice him?
Imma pee off some people but…
I like this show, I find it funny. Very underrated, granted Hanna Barbera’s got a lot of those!
I remember the Skatebirds Curly sounds like Jabba Jaws
I would watch some boomerang first exposure to Three Stooges. Didn’t really know if they were actors before this they were made as robots.
I saw the cartoon in 1980.
As a kid this series confused me.all dead by 1975 i figured the plot was they reanimated their deceased remains with modern electronic technology.i bet a lot of kids were confused if they knew the actual fate of the real 3.
You know I can't remember if I knew they were all passed away or not. I was pretty young so it might not have registered.
@pl5624 and @tvcrazyman Bill Mumy, who can sometimes be a little crude, when talking about younger people discovering Lost in Space for the first time and not knowing how long ago it was made, said something like "When we watched the Three Stooges when we were kids, we didn't know that Curly was rotting in the ground before we were born.".
Only the two Joes were alive by this point
I barely remember the Robonic Stooges but not the Skate Birds or the others. 🤓😎✌🏻
They should have run the real Stooges they would have gotten more kids to watch
@user-sq4jz9up6g They probably couldn't have because of the restrictions on "violence" in Saturday morning cartoons at the time. When Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera showed some of the original Tom and Jerry cartoons to one of the TV networks, the response was something like "They'd kill us if we showed those today.". So instead we got new Tom and Jerry cartoons in which Tom and Jerry were pals instead of adversaries
I don't remember this awesome
this channel is very good. Congratulations ! I wanna a link to watch the skatebirds full episodes, Please my Friend. A hug.
I'd like to see full episodes of the Skatebirds as well.
What other cartoon you gonna make after this
I'm not sure. Maybe wait for some requests for a particular series, I guess.
Can you do a video about goofs and bloopers for...
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
Land of the Lost
The original Battlestar Galactica
Thanks, I can definitely see doing something on those shows in the future. I've been meaning to do something with the Land of the Lost already. If I can get enough goofs that would be a fun subject to work with.
"The Robotic Stooges" (along with "Dynomutt, Dog Wonder") was obviously an uninspired attempt by Hanna-Barbera to piggyback off of the enormous success of ABC's hit action/adventure series "The Six Million Dollar Man" and its equally successful spinoff "The Bionic Woman."
Do you know of anywhere to watch episodes of Robonic Stooges? Thanks.
I got my DVD of the show off of Ebay. I don't think I ever found a place to watch it online.
Je me souviens, je devais avoir 3 ou 4 ans
Who was sued for stop look and laugh?
@user-xq5vx7rs4w Moe, Larry and Curly Joe temporarily parted ways with Columbia Pictures and made Snow White and the Three Stooges (in color and CinemaScope) at 20th Century Fox. With no more Three Stooges feature films to release, Columbia put together Stop! Look! and Laugh! with clips from the Stooges shorts with Curly and new framing footage with Paul Winchell and Jerry Mahoney, and children's TV host Officer Joe Bolton and Knucklehead Smiff. They also padded it out with the Marquis Chimps performing Cinderella. (But it still seems like a pretty short movie, though I've only seen it chopped up with commercials.) The Stooges weren't too happy that Columbia did this behind their backs. (But I didn't know that there was a lawsuit.) They must have made peace with Columbia because they returned and made four more feature films.
Oh Oh... It's OOO..
I love your deep dive vids but HB should have not made this one....
things were getting pretty droll over there by the late 70s.
Never watched it. It was too rediculous, even to my childish mind. After the movies they did, no way!