They're… they're pretty hard to watch. Especially the episodes that are reduced to 8 minutes, and it's just Shaggy, Scooby, and Scrappy, and they fight a genuine ghost or something.
They're… they're pretty hard to watch. Especially the episodes that are reduced to 8 minutes, and it's just Shaggy, Scooby, and Scrappy, and they fight a genuine ghost or something.
For a blog project, over the last 9 months, I've re-watched every Scooby-Doo episode from Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? (1969) up through A Pup Named… (1988).
TESTIFY!!!!!!!
Mystery, Inc. is hands-down my favorite—and, dare I say, best—incarnation of the series, and Cohn did knock-out work. She is Velma, as far as I'm concerned. (Hell, I'd even say Lillard gives Kasem a run for Best Shaggy.)
Welker is An Animation Institution, no doubt. The man is a treasure.
No mention of the switch in Velma's voice actress, from Mindy Cohn to Kate Micucci?
Everybody knows Dikachu.
"The Slap-Rap" practically writes itself!
"Nightmare On My Street" was a sham.
Yes, "at times".
It'll get my moolah!
As a kid who loved The Love Boat wayyyyy too much, this is absolutely one of my favorite things in a long List Of Favorite Things.
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhh, you're telling me.
Great, great catch.
I have never listened to a podcast in my entire life.
It's Dead Or Alive, by Takashi Miike.
If it was nothing but two hours (with an extra hour on the DVD release, natch) of archival footage showing Sitterson and Hadley doing their jobs over the years, I'd be a happy customer.
Since season 1, there have been lines about "don't get bitten or scratched".
Should've watched that instead, I reckon!
Strand is the mysterious, menacing, cypher-esque black guy role that usually goes to actor Steven Williams. Hell, it's essentially a rip-off of Williams' shtick.