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The Flintstone Comedy Hour (1972)

The Flintstone Comedy Hour poster

The Flintstone Comedy Hour (1972)

Overview

The Flintstone Comedy Hour is a one-hour Saturday morning cartoon anthology series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions. The program originally aired on CBS as an hour-long show from September 9, 1972 to September 1, 1973 on CBS. The show's first half-hour included new segments featuring Fred & Barney, short gags, vignettes by the cast of Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm and songs performed by the new Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm band called "The Bedrock Rockers" followed by four new episodes and reruns of The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show in the second half-hour. The show also featured bad-luck Schleprock, Moonrock, Penny, Wiggy and the Bronto Bunch from The Pebbles and Bamm Bamm Show. Mickey Stevens replaced Sally Struthers as the voice of Pebbles in four new episodes of The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show and in brief in-between segments, Struthers at the time being fully committed to her role as Gloria Stivic on All in the Family. And this was the final spin-off to feature Alan Reed as the voice of Fred Flintstone because he died in 1977 four months before Fred Flintstone and Friends began to air on October 3, 1977 and he was replaced by Henry Corden who would voice Fred until his own death in 2005.


Starring Cast


Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Leans Traditional
Political: Center
Diversity: Low

Viewer Rating
7.3

Overview

The Flintstone Comedy Hour is a one-hour Saturday morning cartoon anthology series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions. The program originally aired on CBS as an hour-long show from September 9, 1972 to September 1, 1973 on CBS. The show's first half-hour included new segments featuring Fred & Barney, short gags, vignettes by the cast of Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm and songs performed by the new Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm band called "The Bedrock Rockers" followed by four new episodes and reruns of The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show in the second half-hour. The show also featured bad-luck Schleprock, Moonrock, Penny, Wiggy and the Bronto Bunch from The Pebbles and Bamm Bamm Show. Mickey Stevens replaced Sally Struthers as the voice of Pebbles in four new episodes of The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show and in brief in-between segments, Struthers at the time being fully committed to her role as Gloria Stivic on All in the Family. And this was the final spin-off to feature Alan Reed as the voice of Fred Flintstone because he died in 1977 four months before Fred Flintstone and Friends began to air on October 3, 1977 and he was replaced by Henry Corden who would voice Fred until his own death in 2005.


Starring Cast

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Leans Traditional

Primary

The show's primary focus on lighthearted family comedy and episodic misadventures in a prehistoric setting means it lacks any discernible political agenda, making it ideologically neutral.

This animated series from the 1970s features a cast primarily composed of traditional, white characters without any explicit diversity initiatives or race/gender swaps. The narrative focuses on comedic situations within a Stone Age setting and does not engage in critical portrayals of traditional identities or incorporate explicit DEI themes.

Secondary

The Flintstone Comedy Hour, a children's animated series, does not include any explicit or implicit LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on traditional family dynamics and comedic situations typical of its era, without addressing queer identity in any capacity.

The Flintstone Comedy Hour, an animated children's series from the late 1970s, does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The content is consistent with typical children's programming of its era, focusing on the comedic adventures of the Flintstone and Rubble families without addressing gender identity.

The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.

The Flintstone Comedy Hour is a continuation of The Flintstones franchise, featuring the established characters such as Fred, Wilma, Barney, and Betty. No canonical characters from the original series or source material have their gender altered in this iteration.

The Flintstone Comedy Hour (1972) continued the established animated characters from The Flintstones (1960). All main characters maintained their original visual depictions and voice actors, consistent with their established race in prior canon. No characters were portrayed as a different race.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

7.3

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
6.5
The Movie Database logo
8.0

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

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