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Yogi Bear
Yogi Bear"was the most popular television cartoon creation of
TV's early years. Created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, the "Yogi Bear" cartoons first appeared as a
component segment of "The Huckleberry Hound Show" in 1958. An inhabitant of Jellystone National Park, with his
little bear buddy. Boo Boo, Yogi was for the most part a sarcastic, rule-breaking bear with a great yearning for
picnic baskets who credited himself as being "smarter than the average bear."
After three seasons of cartoons on"The
Huckleberry Hound Show," Yogi appeared in his first spin-off
series in January 1961. "The Yogi Bear Show" was the third Hanna-Barbera series to be syndicated (January 30,
1961) nationally on local stations, sponsored by Kellogg's Cereals. "Top Cat," the fourth Hanna-Barbera series
to have Kellogg's as its sponsor, made its prime-time ABC-TV network debut later in the same year.
Featured along with Boo Boo and Yogi's friendly nemesis, Ranger
Smith, several of the newer cartoons introduced such bright new characters as Cindy Bear, Yogi's love interest,
and Park Ranger Tom Anderson. Ranger Smith's new assistant. Other animated segments included "Snagglepuss," the
happy-go-lucky Shakespearian mountain lion, and "Yakky Doodle," about a little duck and his bulldog buddy,
Chopper. Yakky was continually pursued by Fibber Fox, but always saved in the nick of time by Chopper. While
Snagglepuss resembled comedian Bert Lahr's cowardly lion from The Wizard of Oz, Yakky sounded as if he might
have been related to Walt Disney's Donald Duck. Vocals for the series were provided by Daws Butler, Don Messick,
Doug Young, Janet Waldo, and ventriloquist Jimmy Weldon, as Yakky Doodle.