William Hanna-related stories
Posted Apr 13th 2008 2:05PM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Programming, Video, Animation, Children, Retro Squad, Reality-Free, Saturday Morning
When you look at the history of television you can usually connect names to certain eras of programming. For instance, producer Aaron Spelling can be connected with many of the dramas and primetime soap operas of the 70s and 80s; Garry Marshall can be matched to many of the great ABC comedies of the 70s; Mark Goodson and Bill Toddman can be hooked up with the daytime game shows that pocked the television landscape for three decades.
When the names William Hanna and Joseph Barbera are mentioned two words come to mind: Saturday mornings. Without the creations that the Hanna-Barbera studios put out year after year Saturday mornings would have looked much different. Oh, other studios like Rankin-Bass and Filmation would have probably picked up the slack, but then we wouldn't have known about Space Ghost, Scooby-Doo, Mutley, Jabberjaw, or the Wonder Twins.
From the late 50s until the early 90's Hanna-Barbera was a major presence on television. Their shows produced countless imitations (some coming from Hanna-Barbera itself), thousands of characters, and memories that will last our lifetime.
And, it all started with a cat and a mouse.
Continue reading Saturday Morning: Hanna-Barbera - VIDEOS
Posted Dec 18th 2006 7:16PM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Animation, Obituaries

Sad news in the world of animation tonight: Joseph Barbera, half of the mega-successful animation team of Hanna-Barbera,
died today of natural causes. He was 95.
As most people know, Barbera and his partner William Hanna were responsible for creating the most endearing cartoon characters of all time. From their first major creation, Tom and Jerry, they went on to create memorable characters like Yogi Bear, The Flinstones, The Jetsons, Huckleberry Hound, Scooby-Doo, and Jabberjaw (well, the last one was only memorable to me, I think). Hanna died in 2001, so this is the end of an era.
The AP obituary for Barbera mentioned that his strengths, according to Leonard Maltin, were comic gags and the ability to capture emotion with subtle drawing techniques (never thought HB cartoons were subtle, huh?), while Hanna was good at timing and conveying warmth. Say what you will about how they cheapened animation with their TV cartoons, especially the ones from the seventies; they've inspired many an animator in the last fifty-plus years.
Posted Jan 13th 2006 12:43PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Cable, TV Royalty, Animation
On Friday, January 27 at 9 p.m., Cartoon Network will debut a brand new Tom and
Jerry short, titled "The Karateguard." The short, directed by Joseph "I Thought He Was Dead"
Barbera, will pit Jerry the Mouse against the tenacious Tom... well, it's a Tom and Jerry cartoon for crying out loud,
they pretty much all follow the same basic plot. Tom and Jerry, like most cartoons from that era, were created as
theatrical shorts to be shown before MGM films (much like Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies were shown before Warner
Brothers films). Barbera created the cat and mouse duo sixty-five years ago with the late William Hanna.
[via Cartoon Brew]