This 4-Blu-ray set goes for $59.99 on AMAZAON. It includes all 41-episodes, a Scooby-Doo Encyclopedia, and a Scooby-Doo keychain. NEW BONUS FEATURES:
• My Life with Scooby, Frank Welker’s Animated Journey
• A Scooby-Doo for Everyone • 50 Years of Scooby Snacks
• Scooby-Doo and the Lost City of Gold Trailer (Live Stage Production)
Kids will love this! And, if you’re a kid at heart, you’ll love this set, too! GRADE: A
DISC 1 – SEASON 1 (1969-1970)
What a Night for a Knight
A Clue for Scooby-Doo
Hassle in the Castle
Mine Your Own Business
Decoy for a Dognapper
What the Hex Going On?
Never Ape an Ape Man
Foul Play in Funland
The Backstage Rage
Bedlam in the Big Top
A Gaggle of Galloping Ghosts
DISC 2 – SEASON 1 (1969-1970)
Scooby-Doo and a Mummy, Too
Which Witch is Which?
Go Away Ghost Ship
Spooky Space Kook
A Night of Fright is No Delight
That’s Snow Ghost
DISC 2 – SEASON 2 (1970)
Nowhere to Hyde
Mystery Mask Mix-Up
Scooby’s Night with a Frozen Fright
Jeepers, It’s the Creeper
DISC 3 – SEASON 2 (1970)
Haunted House Hang-Up
A Tiki Scare is No Fair
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Werewolf?
Don’t Fool with a Phantom
DISC 3 – SEASON 3 (1978)
Watch Out! The Willawaw!
To Switch a Witch
A Creepy Tangle in the Bermuda Triangle
The Creepy Case of Old Iron Face
A Highland Fling with a Monstrous Thing
A Scary Night with a Snow Beast Fright
DISC 4 – SEASON 3 (1978)
The Tar Monster
Jeepers, It’s the Jaguaro!
Make a Beeline Away from That Feline
The Creepy Creature of Vulture’s Claw
The Diabolical Disc Demon
Scooby’s Chinese Fortune Kooky Caper
A Menace in Venice
Don’t Go Near the Fortress of Fear
The Beast is Awake at Bottomless Lake
The Warlock of Wimbledon
I’m sorry George but I find Scooby Doo totally unwatchable. Poor writing and cheap animation. Nothing clever or witty about the stories or dialogue. I’m worried about you. What next? Josie and the Pussycats or My Little bPony?
Steve, it might have something to do with Velma and Daphne. Actually, when I watch these cartoons–in small doses–it takes me right back to my youth.
They didn’t start until 1969. So I was 21. A bit too old to be watching these.
Steve, I watched a lot of animated TV in the late Sixties and early Seventies. Remember SUPER FRIENDS?
My little pony was “in” a few years ago in Hungary – our granddaughter was really crazy about watching it on her father’s computer.
But then I started to “sing – my little pony with variations in the text and she stopped it.
Scoobydoo I’ve never even seen from afar …
Wolf, MY LITTLE PONY had a run of popularity for years. Now, it’s AMERICAN GIRL.
Although I can hum the song, I have never watched the show. Another one of my deficits, and I truly see them as that, is I have never been able to escape into the animated world. Have never watched THE SIMPSONS either. Nor THE FLINTSTONES. What’s wrong with me?
Patti, it’s all a matter of taste. Of course, many of my animation tastes were formed in childhood.
I developed a fondness for Looney Tunes as a child which I still have. Watched a lot of Hanna-Barbera cartoons on tv as a kid but as an adult I realized they were pretty bad. Both in writing and animation.
I do have a fondness for Rocky and Bullwinkle.
Steve, I love Rocky & Bullwinkle! I have a set of DVDs with all their episodes.
Barbara doesn’t like animation either, Patti. I used to watch the Simpsons once in a while, but no longer since we married.
Rick, THE SIMPSONS have been on TV for 30 years. Clearly, there’s an audience for their brand of humor.
Further proof to Jackie’s theorem that George will buy literally anything!
Jeff, tell Jackie I passed on mood rings, Barbie dolls, and jet packs.
But not that Pet Rock, eh, George?
Rick, I was tempted by Pet Rocks, but feel prey to Beanie Babies.
Not for me. I may have seen parts of a couple of these, but changed the channel pretty quickly.
Rut-roh
Jerry, you need to take a ride in my Mystery Machine!