If you know anything about 1980s cartoons, then you know that He-Man and the Masters of the Universe was a half-hour commercial for Mattelâs Masters of the Universe toys. Pretty much the same could be said about Transformers and GI Joe â both of which were actually decent cartoons that unfortunately would later gear episodes around the latest character or vehicle to his the stores.
This list isnât about those shows, however. The 1980s was filled with insipid creations capitalizing on wildly popular toys, movies and flavor-of-the-month stars. It had some great ones, of course. (My favorites were Robotech, Galaxy Rangers, Voltron, Sliverhawks, GI Joe and Transformers. Yep, I liked big robots and guns.) But the majority of them were turkeys. Why? Take any video game, popular show, person or toy and you can easily make a cartoon series about it. More correctly, you can make a quick buck and inflict mind-numbing insanity on helpless children who donât know any better by taking a video game, popular show, person or toy and easily making a cartoon series out of it. This list presents the worst of the lot. If you werenât a kid during the 1980s for whom TV was a grand babysitter, be very, very glad.
A yellow mouth floats around a maze than never changes, eats little dots and avoids capture by four ghosts. The more screens you clear the higher your score and the faster the four ghosts come at you. Sounds like the PERFECT concept for a kids show, donât you think? Even when I was a member of the target audience, I thought The Adventures of Pac-Man was incredibly lame.
Iâll admit: Iâm a fan of Lucasâ Star Wars: Clone Wars series that airs on Cartoon Network. (The movie, though â ugh.) SW: CW works because it takes one of the best aspects of the prequel trilogyâthe Clone Troopers and their Jedi generalsâand builds a series around it. (The early 2000sâ miniseries Star Wars: The Clone Wars also followed this template and was therefore excellent.) Not so with Star Wars: Ewoks, which took arguably the silliest part of the original trilogy, the Ewoks, and built a show around them. Iâm one of those curmudgeons who didnât buy the âteddy bears defeat the Empireâ storyline in Return of the Jedi (even when I was a kid), and this show is just nauseating to Star Wars nuts like me. And the companion show, Star Wars: Droids, was actually respectable compared to this nausea-inducing show.
The Dukes of Hazard used to be one of the great dumb shows on TV. There were thrilling car chases, Daisy Duke, Uncle Jessieâs wisdom, Boss Hoggâs greedy schemes, Enosâ lovelorn looks, great lessons of right and wrong, a fabulous guest star most weeks⌠OK, OK, it was all about the car chases and Daisy Duke. So, what better way to capitalize on this cartoonish hit live-action show? Make it into a real cartoon. Not with Bo and Luke, but Coy and Vance â the cousins who showed up when Bo and Luke left Hazard County over contract disputes ⌠er, to ride the NASCAR circuit. About the only redeeming thing about this travesty is that the original cast provided the voices. And when Bo & Luke returned to the actual show, their characters showed up on the cartoon.
Apparently, we nasty humans coveted the magic and technology of the Gummi Bears, and hunted them down and ate them in vast, fruit-flavored quantities. The remnants of that once proud, tasty civilization turned to fighting evil from their magical castle. Michael Eisner supposedly got the idea for this show while his son was eating Gummi Bears.
I pity the fool who hasnât heard of this insipid excuse for a cartoon. (Sorry, couldnât resist.) As the theme song sings â repeatedly â the show is about Mr. T. Well, sort of. T is the bodyguard/father figure for a travelling team of gymnasts who go from town to town, fighting bad guys with their unstoppable skills and learning a new life lesson every episode. And I LOVED it as a kid.
A hit video game became a bad cartoon and an even worse feature film. The Super Mario Bros. wrenched their way onto Saturday morning TV starting in 1989. Amazingly, celebrities would âstop byâ to hang with brothers Mario and Luigi in the live-action segments of the show, including Vanna White, Magic Johnson and Sgt. Slaughter. If you listen to the bad rap theme in German, it actually sounds more comical than sad. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qp1Lbmutry0
Hey, Iâve got a great idea for a kidâs show: Letâs feature a mentally unstable Vietnam Vet who is a one-man killing machine, able to take out hundreds of National Guardsmen and NVA in a single swoop. Weâll have many explosions and bad guys getting shot, dismembered, sliced open. Heck, yeah, the body count will be awesome! Oh⌠Too much? Tone it down? OK, letâs just make a Rambo cartoon as a cheap GI Joe-wannabe where no one ever gets hurt. Weâll still have explosions and weâll still have Stalloneâs huge knife that could gut an elephant but weâll never, ever see it get bloody. And get this: The name of Ramboâs primary enemy is so secret that âsecretâ is in the name: S.A.V.A.G.E., which stands for Secret Administrators of Vengeance, Anarchy and Global Extortion. Thatâs the kind of name that gets you beat up in Evil Villain High School.
Can you dig it, man? Owww! As the great (âgreat?â Hmm) Wolfman Jack narrates, The Fonz, his dog âMr. Koolâ (seriously) and a âfuture chickâ named Cupcake get zapped through time in a time machine. Helping them âget back to 1957â are Ralph Malph and Richie (apparently, Potsie was smart enough to avoid this farce). Ugh. Do you remember when Fonzie literally jumped the shark on the real Happy Days? This is much worse.
Do you remember how the Professor could build a radio from a coconut but couldnât make a simple patch for a boat? Well, turns out he could build a spaceship, which takes the dippy seven off the island to a planet far, far away. The entire original cast is back (except Tina Louise, who fancied herself as an important actress well before getting stranded in TV rerun-land). And, as usual, our intrepid castaways meet strange and exciting people each weekâbut still canât get off the island, er, planet, because the Professorâs skill with spaceship repair is about as good as it is with boat repair. Yes, itâs that silly. No, wait: The theme song is even sillier.
Great idea for a cartoon: A show built around a wildly popular cube-shaped puzzle that most people could solve only by taking it apart. Except in the cartoon, the cube has magical powers! With all due respect to the showâs creators, this has to be the most ridiculous concept for a childrenâs cartoon EVER. Even the theme was by the awful ’80s boy-band Menudo (the starting point for Ricky Martin). I canât say any more. Just watch the intro clip.
Notable extras: She-Ra: Princess of Power, a half-hour commercial for a toy line spun off a successful cartoon made about a toy line; Hulk Hoganâs Rock ânâ Wrestling, a cartoon about a cartoonish âsportâ; Police Academy; The Garbage Pail Kids (lasted only a couple of episodes and never seen in the U.S.); and My Little Pony, a marketing tie-in as nakedly transparent as He-Man.





















I disagree. I thought the Gummi Bears was AWESOME!
Wow these all look super lame, especially #1. I guess its number 1 for a reason
I LOVED this list! Truly awful! Remember the Ghostbusters cartoon? That was one of the rip offs I enjoyed.
You mean the Filmation version? OMG that version STUNK ON ICE!! FACT Filmation & DIC had a little disagreement on Ghostbusters both wanted the titleforyhier show bit Filmation was based on the Live action series from the 1970's and DIC version was based on the megahit movie. So DIC hadto rename it The Real Ghostbusters and you guessed it T.R.G became as successful as it's namesake movie.
toecutter – actually, Gobots existed before Transformers. That's why it's not on this list.
I was a 90's kid, But I remember some of these- Gummie Bears actually wasn't half bad.
As for the Ewoks… I vaguely remember watching that as a child, but I don't remember any of it ^^;
I think I saw the super mario brother's show one or twice before it was taken off the air…
Gah… I feel old D:
I'm kind of surprised that the brief Legend of Zelda series didn't make it on the list.
I mean, 'Excuuuuuuuuse me, Princess" has to be the most annoying line in tv history…
i don't even remember any of these except gummi bears!
i will join the around half of the commenters who loved it, i'm pretty sure i watched it if it was on after school well into jr. high.
and i don't think it had any direct tie-in with any candy company marketing gummi bears, it was instead the first major animated series made by disney.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gummi_bears
I think you forgot the transformers show… not sure if that was in the 80s, though
Wow…the Rubik's cartoon is terrible.
Gummi Bears was a great show, great quality, totally off on putting that one on this list… have you actually ever seen it?
heheh, the Mr. T. cartoon IS the same as ScoobyDoo..
Wow – the 80's. I am so glad to have been alive in the 70's and 80's just for the shows. It was a GREAT time to be a kid – and there was no shortage of kids TV. I have only see Gummie Bears and Mr. T bacause non of the rest made it across the pond (thank goodness) as we were awash wish so many other greats at the time. Hasn't there been an 80's cartoon list? Surely there must be? Surely!
@psychosurfer (46): You got it.
BTW, are the Recommended List box items selected at random or what? *****ography?
Must type slower…
I was, thankfully, past the age of enjoying kiddie cartoons by the time most of these came out.
I grew up on "real" cartoons; Bugs Bunny, Tom & Jerry, The Jetsons, Johnny Quest, Pink Panther.
My favorite cartoon characters where, still are, the Pink Panther (I used to have every cartoon on VHS — then my kids wore them out) .. and the Warner Brothers character of Marc Anthony with Pussy Foot the kitten … who, by the way, is my avatar.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnEeCOZMbko
oh my god. making a disgusted, creepy face right now.
Gummi Bears – seems the opinions are against me, but I still hated it. Yes, I did see it.
I loved the Adventures of the Gummi Bears! The theme really brings back memories…
Someone should do a list of discontinued 80's breakfast cereals… my hubby and I were talking about it the other night… hilarious.
@gabi319 (45): I´m trying to remember what the song said (sorry, Websense blocks videos at work so I cant play them). Anyone care to enlighten me?
It´s hilarious to see so many people enjoyed the Gummi Bears. I loved the show too. I used to wish I had a stockpile of Gummiberry Juice so I could bounce around too…
And I declare a no-holds-barred death match to any who dares criticize the Thundercats!
"SW: CW works because it takes one of the best aspects of the prequel trilogy—the Clone Troopers and their Jedi generals—and builds a series around it. (The early 2000s’ miniseries Star Wars: The Clone Wars also followed this template and was therefore excellent.)"
The redundancy confused the hell out of me for a while
great list thoughh.
awww adventures of the gummi bears?! that was my favorite show when i was 3 years old. thats so depressing..haha
I loved the Gummi Bears! It was one of my favorite cartoons when I was little.
Ugh, The Mario Bros. show. My little brother watched it. Even though I was only nine or ten I knew it was it cheesey and I was embarrassed for the actors on it. The only episode I remember is one where Princess, and Toad went to a Milli Vanilli concert. They were wearing t-shirts that said "Milli Vanilli" on them. That one got dated real fast.
Thank you catchick @ 73. Now that's what I grew up on and boy do I miss those cartoons.
Ooo, you just had to go and mention She-Ra in the exceptions, huh? Hey, the 80's were my decade as a child. She-Ra was awesome to me, as was He-Man. At least you didn't mention any of my other favorites from back then (if I'd seen Thundercats or Ninja Turtles or Muppet Babies here, I would be ranting for the next hour).
And I'm surprised Care Bears didn't make the list.
I remember this one. I didn't know (or didn't care,apparently) that Dawn Wells did Ginger's voice also.
Also, why is Ginger's hair white?
And as far as marketing goes, the 80's weren't the end of mass marketing to kids so they can go out to buy. How about the Disney channel and Nickelodeon marketing movies that then go to DVD in almost no time so the kids can go out and buy them? Not much dollar difference compared to the 80's and toys.
I LOVED Gummy Bears! Unfortunately, it was a Disney cartoon. Some of you young'uns may not remember this, but there was a time when Disney was a special paid channel like HBO or Showtime. They would do a free week (or two?) 3-4 times a year, to try & get you to buy. That was the only time we got to see Gummy Bears. My parents still have VHS tapes of movies from the free Disney weeks, that have the "To Subscribe, call 1-800-whatever" thing across the bottom:D
"AFTER THESE MESSAGES…WE'LL BE RiiiiiiiiiiiiGGHT BACK."
I liked the Gummi Bears.
dude, the mario bros. show was awesome! You are gravely mistaken if you think it was a flop!
I think what makes my childhood so magical is my inability to remember many of the specific details of the cartoons I loved as a kid. Everytime I've watched a clip of the old shows I loved as a kid, I'm disappointed that my memory doesn't match up with reality. But then, this hindsight effect isn't limited to children's cartoons; you'd be surprised how much childhood entertainment doesn't hold up to adult scrutiny.
Take, for example: Curious George. Everyone remembers and loves Curious George, and it's widely recognized as a children's classic. When I was a kid, I thought it was HILARIOUS! That crazy monkey and his wild antics!
As an adult working in a preschool classroom, I was delighted to read the books I loved as a child to the class. You know what really struck me about them? How mind-boggingly BORING they are! Seriously: nothing happens. George finds a bunny. George lets the bunny out of its cage. Bunny runs off. George is upset. Man with The Yellow Hat shows up like a Deus Ex Machina in khaki pants and sets everything back to rights. The end.
The kids still love it, though.
I was a kid during the 80s but my parents didn't let us have a TV. I felt deprived but after this list I'm thankful we didn't have a TV.
I have to say that for some cartoon seasons of the 80's I only tuned in to see School House Rock between the ghastly offerings on Saturday morning.
As I recall, this was the era where I learned to sleep-in on the weekend.
@Annunnakike (59) : Haha, yeah he did
Check this out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSU1Lvxy9Sk
I guess the maker of this list didn't know about it.
Here's more
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDTjMooYTBE&fe…
” rel=”nofollow”>=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0qewsAWS3U&hl=en&fs=1&]
I actually like the Gummi Bears and the Ewoks brought back memories! I actually enjoyed it but maybe coz I watched the Ewoks before actually watching Star Wars. when I did I was like – holy cow! What are the ewoks doing in Star Wars?
I can honestly say I have never heard of ANY of these.
Then again, in the 80s I wasn't born, and if I would've been born, I wouldn't have lived in the USA.
Still. None of them ring a bell.
Dude, are you familiar with the term rip-off? I think you mean tie-ins.
I like how you threw in the quotations on "sport" for wrestling. Because ALL sports are competitive.
catchick @73- Loved the cartoon !
Well, the Mario cartoons are at least good for YTPing…
73 catchick
YES OMG!!! Looney Tunes are the best. And I love that Marc Antony cartoon. "Marc Antony!" "Why, of COURSE you may keep that dear little kitty. But you'll have to wash him…and feed him…and clean up after him…"
Too cute!
I liked the Ewoks and the Ghostbusters cartoon. The rest are terrible. Also, now the Rubik the Amazing Cube song is stuck in my head. Thanks so much!
90 amoamare
No way; I still like my Curious George books. I think it was the pictures mostly. When I'm too sick to even want to watch TV, I take my books out and look at them. They're like old friends.
great, no, TOTALLY RADICAL list STLMo!
i, too, was a Galaxy Rangers fan…i hardly remember the series, but the one episode i remember forever & ever & always is one where a planet inhabited by intelligent wolves was being destroyed by humans & they wolves could communicate thru telepathy…just…wow.
you forgot such treasures as
"Punky Brewster"
(catchy theme song, WYF was Gomer? A talking groundhog with a goatee???)
"Rainbow Bright"
(may explain all my interracial relationships as a teen)
"My Little Pony"
(i'm still going to have a real pony before i turn 40)
&
"Care Bears"
(good life lessons, nice animation, cute movie, still love Cheer Bear…i also have a cat names Care Bear)
trust me,those cartoons where every bit about product placement as they where about teaching morals! i had Rainbow Bright & her horse, what was his name? Starlight? I remember he was very conceited and narcissistic, even thought at that age i had no idea what those words meant…
i was convinced i could breed My Little Ponies, and had a bed full of Care Bears and the Care Bear Cousins.
i still have some classic MLP around, but they didn't survive my teenage years unscathed…i have a 2 i, uhm…customized?
one is my Curt Curbain pony & i have a raver pony too…
rtr
case & point…
” rel=”nofollow”>=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lGnaIMCmU8&hl=en&fs=1&]
exactly what is Gomer? and isn't the theme song… a little Cyndu Lauperish?
rtr
here the MLP intro…i still remember all the lyrics!
” rel=”nofollow”>=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JTkYz9pxAc&hl=en&fs=1&]
i did love Robot Chicken's version…
” rel=”nofollow”>=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xm6G28eWLAY&hl=en&fs=1&]
rtr
Another vote for actually liking the Gummi Bears, and that it really isn't something based on commercialization, or at least not blatantly.
As a parent of a 2-year-old, I will NEVER complain
about Elmo, Barney, or Thomas & Friends ever again.
Annoying? Sure, they're soooo much better than the
insipid drivel on this list. Kinda glad I was deployed for most of the 80's.
As a kid, I love the Ewoks and Gummi Bears – I thought they were awesome. I really did.
back off the Star Wars: Ewoks were awesome! lol
The Rubik's Cube has a cartoon? What's next? The Attack of the Speed Stack?
Gummi Bears was, is and forever will be awesome, always wanted to get my hands on their juice as a kid……
P
What about Conan the Barbarian or was that the 90's? I liked the show but rip-offs a rip-off
doesn't anyone remember Hammerman? MC Hammer and his magic talking shoes helping inner city kids? KLAAASIC!!
The Gummi Bears???
There's something wrong here…
Don't you mean spin-off?
my name is rubix that is weird a rubix cube that saves the day
No mention of how Rambo beats up scum?
Get over yourself, Gary
haha the mario bros. video made me laugh so hard! they must have been desperate for cartoons in the 80's. haha
hahahaha
I use to watch gummy bears everyday before school