This is probably one of the best tribute one can make for Bill Hanna [and Joe Barbera].
Clue Club was H-B, but George of the Jungle and Super Chicken were Jay Ward. Not sure about Osmonds and Jackson 5.
Rankin-Bass, I believe.
This has been said but I’ll repeat, anything with “kids” in it you knew would suck. The Flintstone Kids and others I still shudder at how bad they were.
Hey, wasn’t Thundar the Barbarian a HB cartoon? That one rocked, I still like it.
IIRC, in the movie, the snake leader (Serpentor?) threw a snake type weapon and hit (Hank, Frank?) in the chest and there was blood!
And is it just me, or were there only about 5 or 6 voice actors for all the HB cartoons? Agreed Mel Blanc did TONS of voices, but you hardly ever recognized them. I swear Shaggy was reincarnated in 100 different cartoons over the years.
I should clarify, I know Mel Blanc was WB and not HB, but my point was that he was able to do tons of voices and almost never be recongnizable.
“I’d hate to have to correct someone whose…”
Yes, the fault of my own hazy memory. I have a tendency to equate the 1970’s with HB.
Don’t fret youself. Mel Blanc did do a couple of voices for HB toons. Barney Rubble (Flintstones) and Mr. Spacely (Jetsons) immediately come to mind.
Let me try that link again. . .
Mel Blanc did do a couple of voices. . . .
Pixie & Dixie where on the Huckleberry Hound show.
I remember “Ruff & Reddy”, but I think they where only a segment on another show.
G.I. Joe: Those guns (which must have been a ripoff of the blasters in the Star Wars movies) were amazing. On the rare occasions one of those shots actually hit someone, they barely left a burn mark, but that same shot absolutely demolished a vehicle, even a tank. There were more than a few injuries, but no fatalities that I know of. Of course, there’s a reason you don’t want too many casualties…'cause you can’t use them in later episodes!
The Pirates of Dark Water: I happened to enjoy this cartoon very much. I’ve always thought that animation was the ideal medium for fantasy adventure (Xena: Warrior Princess notwithstanding), and PODW was wonderfully entertaining. Some of the episodes were almost disturbing for a cartoon (I’ll always remember A Drop of Darkness…I was dazed for hours), and I was thrilled to find a cartoon that daring. I believe Conan the Adventurer was also on at this time, and it was terrific as well (before it was replaced by that execrable “kid friendly” version).
Any and all “kids” remakes - Bleah, blech, yuck. Several hundred times over. I absolutely despised these unfunny, contrived, mindless wastes of time. As far as I’m concerned, Tiny Toon Adventures remains the only “kiddified” show that was anything but awful.
Paul Frees was one of their regulars, was he not? Or was he too busy being every animated cereal mascot? (Not a slam—he did great work.)
60’s? hmmm i’m only 23 but i remember Cool McCool, i only liked watching the parts where they showed his dad though 
And in that list, let’s not forget Kidd Video, the charming story of a real life garage band turned into cartoon on the Flypside who are then assisted by a leg warmer wearing pixie.
Also in the 80’s was the famed cartoons made from arcade games including:
Q*Bert
Pac-Man
Pitfall
Pole Position
Donkey Kong
And probably one or two more I can’t recall at the moment.
I don’t really have anything to add, except that my username does NOT derive from the cartoon mentioned in Joph’s post.
Thank you.
Speak the word, brother rat! That cartoon was so cool, I used to set an alarm clock to wake up on Saturday mornings to watch it.
“In the year 1994, from out of space, comes a runaway planet, hurtling between the Earth and the moon, unleashing cosmic destruction. Man’s civilization is cast in ruin. Two thousand years later, Earth is reborn. A strange new world rises from the old. A world of savagery, super-science, and sorcery. But one man bursts his bonds to fight for justice. With his companions, Ookla the Mok and Princess Ariel, he pits his strength, his courage, and his fabulous sunsword, against the forces of evil. He is Thundarr, the Barbarian!”
Daws Butler did a HUGE amount of work for H-B, particularly in the early days. It was noticible even to we kiddies that Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Snagglepuss, Quickdraw McGraw, Elroy Jetson and others sounded remarkably similar. (No slight to the man - he was one of the best)