Marsupilami (partially found "Sebastian the Crab" segments from anthology series; 1992): Difference between revisions
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In 1992, Disney adapted Andre Franquin's popular Franco-Belgian comic book series '''''Marsupilami''''' to United States television as part of anthology series ''Raw Toonage'' on CBS, and was spun off into its own half-hour series on the same network the following year. The half-hour series featured three segments per episode: the first would be an all-new short starring Marsupilami, and the third and final was a repeat from ''Raw Toonage''. In the middle was two alternating segments: five episodes would feature Bill Kopp's ''Shnookums and Meat'' (which itself would be spun off into [[The Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show (partially found episodes of Disney animated series; 1995)|a full series for The Disney Afternoon in January 1995 that, ironically, itself has also only been partially found]]), while the remaining eight starred Sebastian, the Samuel E. Wright-voiced crab from Disney's animated feature ''The Little Mermaid''. | In 1992, Disney adapted Andre Franquin's popular Franco-Belgian comic book series '''''Marsupilami''''' to United States television as part of anthology series ''Raw Toonage'' on CBS, and was spun off into its own half-hour series on the same network the following year. The half-hour series featured three segments per episode: the first would be an all-new short starring Marsupilami, and the third and final was a repeat from ''Raw Toonage''. In the middle was two alternating segments: five episodes would feature Bill Kopp's ''Shnookums and Meat'' (which itself would be spun off into [[The Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show (partially found episodes of Disney animated series; 1995)|a full series for The Disney Afternoon in January 1995 that, ironically, itself has also only been partially found]]), while the remaining eight starred Sebastian, the Samuel E. Wright-voiced crab from Disney's animated feature ''The Little Mermaid''. | ||
While most of the ''Marsupilami'' segments have shown up online, as have several ''Shnookums and Meat'' shorts, both from Marsupilami and the spin-off, none of the ''Sebastian the Crab'' segments have surfaced, not even the ''Raw Toonage'' hosting segments which were edited into the short "Flambe, Bombe". All that has been seen of the shorts, at least in North America, since 2002, when Marsupilami last reran on Toon Disney, is a silent version of the intro pulled from a | While most of the ''Marsupilami'' segments have shown up online, as have several ''Shnookums and Meat'' shorts, both from Marsupilami and the spin-off, none of the ''Sebastian the Crab'' segments have surfaced, not even the ''Raw Toonage'' hosting segments which were edited into the short "Flambe, Bombe". All that has been seen of the shorts, at least in North America, since 2002, when Marsupilami last reran on Toon Disney, is a silent version of the intro pulled from a Portuguese-language upload on YouTube, and an Arabic-language song. | ||
==Videos== | ==Videos== |
Revision as of 17:09, 22 October 2017
In 1992, Disney adapted Andre Franquin's popular Franco-Belgian comic book series Marsupilami to United States television as part of anthology series Raw Toonage on CBS, and was spun off into its own half-hour series on the same network the following year. The half-hour series featured three segments per episode: the first would be an all-new short starring Marsupilami, and the third and final was a repeat from Raw Toonage. In the middle was two alternating segments: five episodes would feature Bill Kopp's Shnookums and Meat (which itself would be spun off into a full series for The Disney Afternoon in January 1995 that, ironically, itself has also only been partially found), while the remaining eight starred Sebastian, the Samuel E. Wright-voiced crab from Disney's animated feature The Little Mermaid.
While most of the Marsupilami segments have shown up online, as have several Shnookums and Meat shorts, both from Marsupilami and the spin-off, none of the Sebastian the Crab segments have surfaced, not even the Raw Toonage hosting segments which were edited into the short "Flambe, Bombe". All that has been seen of the shorts, at least in North America, since 2002, when Marsupilami last reran on Toon Disney, is a silent version of the intro pulled from a Portuguese-language upload on YouTube, and an Arabic-language song.
Videos