>Outside of Don Knotts, The Harlem Globetrotters
Both are very good choices.
I liked the Dick Van Dyke episode quite a bit, too.
Which ones never seemed to air for you? There were episodes that I knew existed, and had seen before, but they almost NEVER aired them... at least not while I was watching.
For me, it was the Josey and The Pussycats, I Dream of Jeannie, Phyllis Diller, Sandy Duncan, and Jerry Reed episodes.
The Cass Elliot, Addams Family, Don Adams, and Speed Buggy episodes were also rather rare, followed by Davy Jones, Sonny & Cher, and Laurel and Hardy.
They seemed to love airing the Stooges, Globetrotters, Don Knotts, Tim Conway, Batman, and even Jonathan Winters episodes pretty frequently.
Johnny Bravo. Though I'm not sure he really counts. From The New Scooby-Doo Movies, besides Batman and Robin, probably The Addams Family one. Felt like they really fit the feel well. Makes me wish they managed to get a crossover with The Munsters as well just to complete it.
I really liked the idea of a crossover with Supernatural. The actual episode felt phoned in though. I think most of my personal problems with the episode were from the, getting sucked into the TV plot point. Having mystery inc panic over Shaggy breaking a bone and all of the meta commentary coming from Sam and Dean kinda ruins it for me. I think it would have been better if Sam and Dean just drove into a town and then the episode is just animated (Like the Frankenstein or Cops episodes of X-Files), and having Sam and Dean show up to deal with a ghost or a monster and running into Mystery Inc isn't that unlikely. Was still a fun watch though.
Honestly that crossover was fricking perfect.
Also I think Happy Haunted Sunshine House is my favorite chase song.
And his goofy facial expressions and nasally voice sealed the deal. Not to mention people still call incompetent cops "Barney Fife"s to this day. He's kind of the Peter Lorre of his time.
He was such an impatient dope that Andy only ever let him carry a single bullet for his gun.
And his goofy facial expressions and nasally voice sealed the deal. Not to mention people still call incompetent cops "Barney Fife"s to this day. He's kind of the Peter Lorre of his time.
Fun fact: Andy Griffith originally wrote himself as a bumbling comic sheriff when the show was in development. He got a visit from Don Knotts, who pitched the idea of Andy being the straight man to a bumbling comic deputy played by Don. Andy bought off on it, and the rest is history.
I had no idea. Hard to imagine Andy as the bumbling joke character, now that he's so well known as one of the morally just ideal father archetypes of the era.
that's from scooby doo? it looks like a character from the critic
Was he actually a deputy in the episode, or just an actor who plays one on Totally Not The Andy Griffith Show?
Yes, he was the deputy.
Kiss is a top contender.
Jodie Foster
For me, it's Kiss
Reminder that pic rel is an actual thing
DON KNOTS
Outside of Don Knotts, The Harlem Globetrotters have some of the greatest episode.
These homies were all over cartoons from that era. I don't give a shit about sports in general but I love these dudes for that alone.
>for me it's Don Knotts
>Outside of Don Knotts, The Harlem Globetrotters
Both are very good choices.
I liked the Dick Van Dyke episode quite a bit, too.
Which ones never seemed to air for you? There were episodes that I knew existed, and had seen before, but they almost NEVER aired them... at least not while I was watching.
For me, it was the Josey and The Pussycats, I Dream of Jeannie, Phyllis Diller, Sandy Duncan, and Jerry Reed episodes.
The Cass Elliot, Addams Family, Don Adams, and Speed Buggy episodes were also rather rare, followed by Davy Jones, Sonny & Cher, and Laurel and Hardy.
They seemed to love airing the Stooges, Globetrotters, Don Knotts, Tim Conway, Batman, and even Jonathan Winters episodes pretty frequently.
Batman and Robin.
Johnny Bravo. Though I'm not sure he really counts. From The New Scooby-Doo Movies, besides Batman and Robin, probably The Addams Family one. Felt like they really fit the feel well. Makes me wish they managed to get a crossover with The Munsters as well just to complete it.
To answer the question probably the 3 Stooge's.
I really liked the idea of a crossover with Supernatural. The actual episode felt phoned in though. I think most of my personal problems with the episode were from the, getting sucked into the TV plot point. Having mystery inc panic over Shaggy breaking a bone and all of the meta commentary coming from Sam and Dean kinda ruins it for me. I think it would have been better if Sam and Dean just drove into a town and then the episode is just animated (Like the Frankenstein or Cops episodes of X-Files), and having Sam and Dean show up to deal with a ghost or a monster and running into Mystery Inc isn't that unlikely. Was still a fun watch though.
Honestly that crossover was fricking perfect.
Also I think Happy Haunted Sunshine House is my favorite chase song.
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I swear, Don Knots entire legacy is being a punchline in Hanna-Barbera and Looney Tunes cartoons
He was often the punchline in the show he's best known for, to be fair.
He was such an impatient dope that Andy only ever let him carry a single bullet for his gun.
And his goofy facial expressions and nasally voice sealed the deal. Not to mention people still call incompetent cops "Barney Fife"s to this day. He's kind of the Peter Lorre of his time.
Fun fact: Andy Griffith originally wrote himself as a bumbling comic sheriff when the show was in development. He got a visit from Don Knotts, who pitched the idea of Andy being the straight man to a bumbling comic deputy played by Don. Andy bought off on it, and the rest is history.
I had no idea. Hard to imagine Andy as the bumbling joke character, now that he's so well known as one of the morally just ideal father archetypes of the era.