They were all toy commercials, though (going by the thread title, if not the first post by the OP).
The thread title, specifically, says “shows that were not just 30 minute commercials.”
You can rule out most every cartoon if you want something that had NO product attached to it ever, before or after – after all, the target audience is usually kids, and if you can get them to want a toy based on their favorite cartoon, so much the better, right (from the perspective of the makers)? Regardless of whether the cartoon was based on the toy, or the toy was based on the cartoon)
However, the title seems to only rule out cartoons where the show had no redeeming quality other than as a commercial for something. The first post by the OP reinforces this, asking which shows had decent storylines and character development, etc. That doesn’t mean that such a show has to exist outside of the realm of any commercial product associated with it to qualify in the category being asked for.
I don’t think that Dungeons and Dragons can really be considered a commercial for the game… The mechanics of the two were entirely different. If anything, I think it more likely that the show was an effort to cash in on the game’s popularity.
Another few to mention: Alf Tales, which re-told fairy tales and folklore starring Gordon Schumway, AKA Alf.
And just for the sake of completeness, the Punky Brewster cartoon wasn’t very good, but it also wasn’t tied to any particular products.
If you want toons that weren’t tied to any products, there are the lesser known shows such as Turbo Teen – an incredibly stupid concept about a teenager who transforms into a car when he gets wet. Ugh.
Most of the notable shows did have merchandising tie-ins, and for good reasons – it would have been foolish not to exploit their popularity.
No no, it was a commercial for the action figures, which were based directly on the cartoon characters.
I salute with you, sir! I was a big fan, although apparently the show is not well-remembered. The entire Kraft corporation has never produced so much cheese, but I was a fan (maybe because I liked reruns of F-Troop).
Or maybe it was the subject matter. I was a big fan of Monster Squad, with Fred Grandy, as well.
“Here I come to save the day!” Thank you for reminding me of that show. I’d forgotten all about it. Must have been all the acid I did in college.
Lol, forgot that one, ranks alongside Ulysses and Once Upon a Time.
In fact, all the big French series of the 80s/90s that I remember seem to qualify - anyone for Belle and Sebastien?
No, no, Prime Evil was from the cartoon which I never watched. I’m talking about the original live-action show from 1975.
Uh, because there was a huge abundance of merchandise accompanying the series the makes it quite obvious that that was the justification for its existence. Same reason why no one has mentioned the Paddy-Wagon driving, Technodrome fighting, dozens of mutant friends and enemies-having Ninja Turtles.
Yeah, I realize that alot of cartoons were meant to be commercials but I am talking about the cartoons, commercial or not, that put effort in stories and dialogue.
Like Gargoyles. I am sure there were merchandising for that but at least that show had a good story to it.
This is going off of memories from childhood, but I’m pretty sure the mechandising didn’t appear until after the cartoon was a hit. In any event, I certainly don’t think merchanidising was the raison d’etre for the show.
(And even if the toys were developed concurrently with the show, that’s not the same as something like He-Man or Transformers, where the show was developed after the toys as a way of increasing the toys’ visability and appeal.)
That’s my memory of the situation, as well. I don’t recall the RGB toys ever being particularly popular, either, but that might have just been peculiar to my circle of friends.
Despite the fact that there is a part of my brain that still knows Jem and the Holograms (& Misfits) songs (2nd law of thermodynamics - gone…maybe if they’d put it to the tune of “Twilight in Paris”), that was a commercial.
And any of the Disneys (Duck Tales, Chip ‘n’ Dale, etc.) were commercials for Disney - Disney videos, Disney music, Disney theme parks, future Disney movies. Not as blatant as GI Joe. But they were clearly designed to get you to beg your parents to take you to Disney world to go on the rides and see the characters “in person.”
Does anyone remember C.O.P.S?
That show was the shit.
Central Organization of Police Specialists! Fighting crime… in a future time!
(Character designs by superstar comic book artist Bart Sears!)
Mainframe was hot.
Though I was occasionally a bit—I think “skeeved out” is the word these days—watching that show, when forced to consider what chunks of body parts the main characters were missing. (“So…is that guy basically arms, legs, and a head hooked into a robot torso? Does he even have any guts left?” :eek: )
COPS had a mad scientist, with a transparent dome on his skull, who was negatively effected by sunspots. I think his name was Dr Badvibes.
Am I the only one to remember Blackstar? He was an astronaut that got pulled through a black hole and ends up on a world with a bunch of elfish looking characters. He must fight to get the other half of the Starsword, of which he has half, to save the world and find his way home.
I remember Blackstar, but the OP was looking for cartoons which were more than toy ads. Blackstar doesn’t IIRC qualify.