Pat's Peeps Podcast

Special Episode: Pat's Peeps Watches Saturday Morning Cartoons, Cancel Culture Comes for Our Childhood Cartoons, Why Can't We Just Enjoy Old Cartoons Anymore?

Pat Walsh

Nostalgia hits hard when seemingly innocent childhood memories collide with modern sensibilities. This unexpected Saturday morning podcast was sparked when Pat Walsh discovered a YouTube critique calling The Hillbilly Bears cartoon an offensive mockery of rural poverty—a take that completely contradicts his fond childhood experiences with these beloved characters.

Throughout this delightful trip down memory lane, Pat pushes back against what he sees as misguided retroactive criticism of classic cartoons. From the unintelligible but lovable Paw Rugg to Slow Poke Rodriguez ("the slowest mouse in all Mexico") and the Go-Go Gophers, these weren't harmful stereotypes to children of the 60s and 70s—they were simply fun, memorable characters who made Saturday mornings magical.

Pat's remarkable recall of obscure cartoons—spontaneously singing theme songs and mimicking character voices from shows he hasn't seen in over 50 years—demonstrates just how deeply these programs embedded themselves in the psyches of their young viewers. Tennessee Tuxedo and his walrus friend Chumley visiting Mr. Whoopee's 3D BB (three-dimensional blackboard), the heroic antics of Underdog, the adventures of Roger Ramjet, and the bizarre Dodo the Kid from Outer Space all make appearances in this cartoon cavalcade.

The podcast ultimately challenges us to consider how we view entertainment from previous eras. Should we judge these cartoons by contemporary standards, or can we appreciate them for what they meant to children at the time—pure joy, adventure, and sometimes even valuable life lessons? As classic cartoons continue to disappear from our cultural landscape, Pat reminds us what we might be losing in our rush to apply modern critiques to the innocent pleasures of childhood.

What cartoon characters from your youth would never make it to air today? Which forgotten Saturday morning favorites do you still remember fondly despite—or perhaps because of—their quirks and imperfections?

SPEAKER_03:

The Butt Bunny Road Runner Show.

SPEAKER_10:

Good morning. Good Saturday morning to you. I just said I would do a rare Saturday morning Pat's Peeps podcast. I was inspired to do so. I was actually looking. Hold on. Finish, fellas. Saturday mornings. I could not I could not wait to wake up to that. How are you? It is Saturday morning. I wasn't going to do this. This is sort of a spur of the moment. Just got inspired by something I didn't expect. Patrick here, Pat Walsh. I am the host of the Pat Walsh show on KAPK. I still have my morning voice. My morning voice. Hope your day has gotten off to a great start. As I'm finishing my second cup of coffee. I was going to the TV. I was gonna uh I was gonna watch some Saturday morning cartoons because I can find all of the classics, but I can also find some of the forgotten cartoons that I grew up watching. And in doing so, this thing pops up on my TV. And it really, I don't know, it just pathetic, it made me laugh, it just made me I don't know, just I had to do this more than I gotta listen to these guys a little bit more, yeah. Yes, sir.

SPEAKER_20:

And also, starring, my fast-feathered friend, the roadrunner.

SPEAKER_10:

Wasn't a Bugs Bunny the greatest smart ass of all time? Didn't matter who he was dealing with, when Bugs was dealing with anyone, anyone. I think except for maybe one time in a cartoon. Oh, I think it was the the race with the tortoise where he actually lost the race and the tortoise outsmarted him. But for every other time, Bugs was smarter, uh, more of a smart ass. More clever than any other character. Although the Roadrunner was pretty uh Although he never spoke the Roadrunner. So I don't really want to focus on that though this morning. I don't want to focus on Looney Tones and Scooby-Doo and the Jetsons and all of these cartoons that we really, really remember. I want to focus on the ones that maybe we don't remember as much. And the reason I'm bringing it up on a Saturday morning is because I wanted to watch a particular cartoon. And so I'm on YouTube. Let me do what my grandmother used to do. And my great-grandma, the great Catherine Tracy, my Irish grandmother. And she would, you know, like the old days, you'd put out your index finger, if you're right-handed, you put out your index finger, and with your left hand you take your other, I mean your right hand with take your other index finger, you'd rub it across that. Like shame. Remember that? Shame on you, shame. No one does that anymore. Shame on YouTube. You know, in the midst of the Kimmel and all this crap, I didn't want to talk about that, but the cancel culture before that was the cancel culture. People come, oh Kimmel, he's being canceled. No, cancel culture's been going on for long time. Do you know? The cartoon I wanted to watch, I could not find on YouTube. I don't know. I I think YouTube banned it. Honestly. Couldn't find it anywhere. I had to go to I had to find it another way. But I did eventually find it. And the cartoon is The Hillbilly Bears. Remember the Hillbilly Bear? I loved me some hillbilly bears. This is 1965, friends. And they'd come on on a Saturday and they'd be Paul Rug. The cute little bear, the little girl, she'd be playing a guitar, a little teen girl, you know, she'd be playing that guitar. She was a rocker. You had the cool little kid bear, a little boy, Ma Bear. Ma Bear. She had that uh she'd always be smoking the corncob pipe. And she had the scarf wrapped around her head. Oh, you had the suspenders, the hat. You play that stand-up bass. Sometimes you play the guitar. You can never understand him. Remember that guy? So I want to watch this. But no, first I think I'm clicking on it. But then I see, wait a minute, what is this? And I go back and look. Unfortunately, I was watching something called Cartoons Mocked. Poverty with funny bears by the Maybe Files.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh my god.

SPEAKER_10:

Cartoons mocked poverty with funny bears. So I started to listen. And I'm thinking, you gotta be kidding me. I look at it so fondly. Let me preface this by giving you my opinion on it. It was a cartoon I remember fondly as a five-year-old kid. Six years old, seven years old, whatever. Oh well, five. Okay. So I loved it. It's memorable. You know why it's memorable? Because it was a fun cartoon. I liked waking up and watching it.

SPEAKER_09:

It's not memorable. I'm wondering about my gender strategies. And I'm wondering, is this mocking poor people and hillbillies?

SPEAKER_10:

And you know, on one hand, you can't have certain cartoons anymore. Like let's say a fat Albert or certain other cartoons. Because you couldn't have the Frito Bandito. Remember that? We had the Frito Bandito, which I love that too. Come on. You could not have Slowpoke Rodriguez. Because somehow that was racist, bull crap. We loved the Frito Bandito. We love slow poke Rodriguez. Not a kid my age thought, gee, hmm, I wonder what the implications are on Mexican children. Come on. But they had to be canceled. Right? They had to be canceled. Hillbilly Bears wasn't canceled because they were poking at white people or hillbillies. It was just a one just it was one season. That's just the way it is with some shows. And so I found this cartoon. Now listen to this woke, has to be a woke. Alright, maybe I won't use the word woke. May you know, maybe they think they're just doing this righteous thing. Listen to the demeaning attitude in her voice.

SPEAKER_01:

One season. Only 26 episodes.

SPEAKER_10:

Although I'm a big fan of sarcasm. One season, 26 episodes, she says.

SPEAKER_01:

And then it should have faded into obscurity. Why? But it didn't. It lingered. Repackaged, replayed.

SPEAKER_10:

Why should it have ling uh faded into obscurity? Why?

SPEAKER_01:

Please rerun for decades. So the question is no longer what was this show? The real question is, why do they keep showing it to us? Welcome to the Maybe Files. Oh. Where nostalgia gets p weird.

SPEAKER_10:

No, because you're weird. And you weren't around.

SPEAKER_01:

Paw, ma, floral and shag.

SPEAKER_10:

That's right, baby.

SPEAKER_01:

They live in a shack. That's right.

SPEAKER_10:

I would have this t-shirt of the Hillbilly Bears. They shoot things.

SPEAKER_01:

They don't understand.

SPEAKER_10:

They bicker and they shoot things. Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_01:

Paw, ma, floral, and shag. They live in a shack. They bicker. They shoot things. They don't understand much. And they don't really want to. Right.

SPEAKER_20:

Bolly me.

SPEAKER_01:

The humor is built around one idea. These bears are stupid and violent. And that's funny. The dad can't speak clearly.

SPEAKER_10:

God, I love that. No, they're not, they don't win. That's fantastic.

SPEAKER_01:

Just cartoon characters. They're avatars of poverty. Rural isolation.

SPEAKER_10:

Avatars of poverty. By the way, they're opening for my band. Coming up next weekend, the Avatars of Poverty. Listen to the exasperated voice. Someone decided that should be a children's cartoon.

SPEAKER_01:

The Hillbilly Bears wasn't created in a vacuum.

SPEAKER_10:

Now listen to this.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes, sir. Built on the idea that poor rural Americans are lovable, laughable, and always just a little behind the times.

SPEAKER_10:

Yeah. That's your take, and maybe that's what they were doing. Sure.

SPEAKER_01:

So when Hannah Barbera introduced the Hillbilly Bears, they weren't breaking new ground.

SPEAKER_10:

By the way, let me say this. All of those shows she just mentioned, Andy Griffith included, all of those shows, those rural shows, when I think it was CBS, I think they were on CBS. Tell me if I'm wrong. But anyhow, those shows were all number one in the ratings. Numero uno. Number one. These shows were canceled at their very peak. Because at that point, that is when the network decided, yeah, let's get a go ahead and get away from this rural comedy, just like what she's talking about. We need to get away from this. Well, these were all number one shows.

SPEAKER_01:

They were cashing in on a proven, profitable stereotype. This time in cartoon form. And by putting it in a children's show, they made sure that stereotype had a very long shelf life.

SPEAKER_10:

Let me tell you something again now about the stereotype. The way she delivers it, it's the stereotype of these there's these just downtrodden people that we look. It's a freaking cartoon, man. I don't look at Green Acres or Beverly Hillbillies and sit there and think that gee. And by the way, Beverly Hillbillies had millions of dollars, right? The clampets? So they weren't impoverished, as I recall. They were at one point until they, you know, had millions. Mr. Drysdale wanted to keep that money in the bank. I love his voice.

SPEAKER_01:

Paw Rugg doesn't solve problems. He doesn't reflect. He doesn't grow. What he does in nearly every episode is shoot his rifle into the ceiling. Good. At the sky. At nothing. And it's always funny. The message is clear. It sure was. Violence is comedy.

SPEAKER_10:

Yeah, the message is clear. You're an idiot. Especially when it's- Yeah, after we watch this, you know what we do? We go get our guns, we go shoot stuff randomly and laugh. All those hillbilly bears, look what they made us do. Uh huh.

SPEAKER_01:

It's an old man in a rotting house firing randomly while grunting. This isn't a cowboy shootout. It's not a hero's journey. It's an old man in a rotting house firing randomly while grunting.

SPEAKER_10:

Now you just said that. By the way, banjo rules. They use it in a mocking form.

SPEAKER_01:

Why is this the thing they chose to preserve and rerun for children over three decades?

SPEAKER_10:

Because it was funny and we enjoyed it. Get it? Maybe files, please. Just quit whimpering and whining about stuff that you don't know anything about. Now I want to watch the Hillbilly Bears without you talking. Just for a minute.

SPEAKER_20:

Didn't I listen to my mother and become a milkman?

SPEAKER_12:

Howdy.

SPEAKER_10:

They used to always have those jokes in every show. I should have listened to my brother-in-law, but an insurance salesman. They always had those kind of jokes back then. So on this Saturday morning, I thought, you know what, why not? And by the way, today's September 27th, 2025. It's a beautiful day. It's gonna be, uh, I think in just in the upper 80s today. I have band practice today. But I thought, here's some other clips that they may not enjoy, but I do. From obscure. The obscure cartoons from the past. I mean, heck, if you didn't like the Hillbilly Bears, how would they possibly like this incredibly great cartoon that I always loved? A beloved cartoon that now would never get any airtime because it's somehow racist and mean. When in actuality it was just a fun cartoon growing up. Go, go, go first.

SPEAKER_19:

Go, go first, watch them, go, go, go.

SPEAKER_26:

Two little Indians, no others near.

SPEAKER_18:

Colonel he vows, these two soon disappear. Fighting the army blue soldiers galore.

SPEAKER_02:

What can two Indians do?

SPEAKER_19:

Go, go, go, first, watch them, go, go, go. Go, go, go, first, watch them, go, go, go.

SPEAKER_10:

By the way, we loved, loved the Indians in this show. I mean, we liked the uh, it was kind of like F-Troop in a way, like the TV show with Larry Storch in a way, almost like a John Wayne, Larry Storch kind of cartoon where they had the fort, and they were cool too. But we loved the Indians too. Come on, give me a break.

SPEAKER_19:

Go, go, gophers, watch him, go, go, go.

SPEAKER_10:

Look at the flying teepee.

SPEAKER_19:

Go, go, gophers, watch him, go, go, go.

SPEAKER_10:

And they would dispense with these guys. Like, they would always beat the uh the soldiers in a little fight. I love the gibberish, the way they would talk. The go-go gophers.

SPEAKER_26:

What you do? I love a random picture. Colonel You play him joke on Colonel. Oh, him think him treasure map, then him get fooled.

SPEAKER_10:

Well, you can just hear that that guy's voice, and what is in so many of these cartoons of the day. There were little gophers. You know what? We watched Cowboys and Indian movies on TV. Cowboy and Indian movies. Didn't we? I mean, that's you'd watch that in the 60s, Cowboys. There was nothing. These were beloved characters. To somehow, wow, we can't show that. The race. We loved these Indian characters. Here's another one. Can't have this anymore. Even though we absolutely loved, I mentioned it before, Slow Polk Rodriguez. I would wear a slow Polk Rodriguez t-shirt. I love this guy so much.

SPEAKER_14:

Which is you. Maybe Slow Polk is pretty slow downstairs in the feet. But he's pretty fast upstairs in the cabeza.

SPEAKER_10:

How can you not love that character? Like he's running around, he's got the stick with the back hanging from it, like he's running away from home. I always loved in these cartoons from Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry and all this. The little mice would always have that little door at the bottom of the wall, you know. Casa de Gonzalez.

SPEAKER_13:

Maybe Jose. Instead we tried to catch the Speed Gonzalez. We should have cut Slopoc Rodriguez. The slowest mass in all Mexico.

SPEAKER_10:

I love that cartoon. You know, we look at it so different. Now this was a stereotype and a race. You know what it was for kids? And I'm speaking on behalf of kids who you claim were influenced by this. We absolutely loved them. Go, go gophers, slow proke Rodriguez. We loved them. What are you talking about? Then there were other cartoons, the ones that never get talked about. One, two, three, two, three. Tennessee touched Tennessee, Tuck Towns. And Chumley, right? Mr. Whoopee. Come on, boys. Let me get my 3D BB. Uh, G Tennessee. I loved this.

SPEAKER_06:

Tennessee Tuxedo.

SPEAKER_10:

Isn't this the one where they had Commander Brag Commander McBrag? Was it Tennessee Tuxedo? Did they have Commander McBrag? Did I ever tell you the story of the day that I Yes, you yes, and the butler would go, Yes, you've told me that it naws him. Well, let me tell you once again. But this is a great cartoon. Yeah, they always go to Mr. Whoopi's office. He'd have the Come on, boys, let me get my 3D BB, and he'd open it up and explain.

SPEAKER_03:

Animals cleverly adapted by nature to live in sub-freezing temperatures, like the penguin. And the uh walrus. That's funny. I thought walrus is.

SPEAKER_10:

By the way, Don Adams is Tennessee Tuxedo. Yeah. Yeah. Still one of my favorite cartoon impersonations. G Tennessee. Well, I was headed south, but I must have overshot. And they'd always get into that sticky situation. They're trying to figure out, well, what can we do? Well, again, you go see Mr. Whoopi.

SPEAKER_23:

I know. It's time to see Mr. Whoopee. Let's go.

SPEAKER_10:

Yeah. Always fun to go see Mr. Whoopee.

SPEAKER_06:

Oh, boy, is my three. Do you have a riddle chum read? Why isn't my nose 12 inches long? Because that would make it a foot.

SPEAKER_10:

It's 3D BB. Anyhow, Mr. Whoopee.

SPEAKER_23:

See, Mr. Whoopi, we've gotta learn how to build a motor for this car, or Mr. Malinoff is going to play us a tune on his fiddle. Well, boys.

SPEAKER_03:

He's going to shoot it with a gun.

SPEAKER_06:

Mmm. Well, I guess we'd better uh step on the gas, eh? Now, where did I put my three-dimensional blackboard? Yep. Perhaps in the closet. It's 3D BB. It'd be all cluttered. Here it is, my fantastic 3D BB.

SPEAKER_10:

See, I haven't seen that in years. That's how beloved these cartoons are to me. And who can forget, of course, Saturday mornings would not be the same without this incredible cartoon. Fat Alberts. I also love the banana splits. Remember that? Hey, hey, hey! Bill Cosby, Fat Albert. Oh my god, it's Bill Cosby. How could he be influencing kids? Because he was a smart comedy genius. And this show is fantastic. Every year I still watch the Halloween episode. During Halloween, the Cosby kids. And they would always have shows about, you know, why you don't want to cheat in class and and you know why you would want to study. Or if you were dealing with the loss of a friend, they dealt with issues.

SPEAKER_00:

Coming at you with music and fun. But if you're not careful, you may learn something before it's done.

SPEAKER_10:

I love the characters. Yeah, and they would always try to help each other. They'd try to help each other s you know with moral dilemmas and things. And they were very nice kids. They were just trying to have fun, but they were really nice kids. Here's an obscure one. Anyone remember? Adam Adam Adam up and Adam Adam.

SPEAKER_12:

Up and Adam, it's Adamant. It's right. It's fight. It's made. It's fight. It's Adam and Fighting Ad is a comic power. That's what it tastes. And always makes the fellow power. It's rough. It's tough.

SPEAKER_10:

I love Saturday morning cartoons of the best. Adamant. Talk about obscure. Going back to 65, weathering the storm. Remember, Underdog. This was a great cartoon.

SPEAKER_05:

There's no need to fear. Underdog is here. Great song for the underdog show, starring that champion of champions, underdog.

SPEAKER_10:

I love the theme songs. You know, and what I liked about Tennessee Tuxedo and like the Alvin show, Alvin and the Chipmunks, and Underdog, and some of these. Also, of course, who could forget one of my all-time favorites, Rocky and Bullwinkle? They would always have different segments within the cartoon. Commander McBrag or Fractured Fairy Tales or what have you. Always different little little episodes of different things. Simon Barr Sinister. Sweet Polly Purebred was always in trouble. Oh my goodness. But this is one of my favorites, I gotta say.

SPEAKER_04:

Last time you remember, the citizens of Frostbite Falls had the shock of their lives when every TV antenna in town mysteriously disappeared. Their reaction was instantaneous. Our lives are ruined. Some people refuse to admit that the terrible thing had happened.

SPEAKER_10:

These are the greatest voices and cartoons of all time, in my opinion.

SPEAKER_04:

And set doggedly before their sets anyway.

SPEAKER_10:

Yeah, and I'm talking about these voices in Loon Aaron uh uh um uh Rocky and Bullwinkle, but of course Mel Blank, like I said. Some of these others just the birds.

SPEAKER_04:

Both resorted to ingenious methods of substitution. So remember, friends, get Johnson's voice pointers in the red and blue box.

SPEAKER_24:

Oh, that's great, Henry. The one about the dog food.

SPEAKER_04:

Still others didn't notice any change at all. Love these sea stories. But the most mysterious thing of all was the way the antennas had sitting in a laundromat watching the watching disappeared.

SPEAKER_02:

You may not believe this, boys, but every one of them was bitten off. Bitten off? You mean there's some metal munching monster loose in this home? Now let's not jump to conclusions, boys. There's probably some logical explanation. Sure make a better story my way. I'll need some help on this case. That's me. Somebody who's brave and trustworthy, that's me, and smart as a whip.

SPEAKER_10:

That's him.

SPEAKER_02:

That's him.

SPEAKER_10:

Tell me I don't have these memorized. I actually use that as a little goofy liner on my radio show, the Pat Wall Show. Please support local business, patspeeps.com. So I would say Rocky and Bullwinkle is one of my all-time favorites. Here's another one we watched for a period of time. I think this one may have only been on one season. I don't know. If it was on more than one season, I'd be amazed. Oh, I just thought of another one. Because I'll go from the best to one of the worst, but memorable. How about Roger Ramjet? Remember this one? Roger Ramjet and his Eagles fighting for our freedom. Fly through in and outer space, not to join him, but to be the I can't believe I still know the words.

SPEAKER_24:

He's the man, hero of our nation. For his adventures, just be sure and stay tuned to the station. Join us all you kids for lots of fun and laughter. As Roger Ranchett and his men get all the proof they're after. Roger and Jet eat the.

SPEAKER_10:

I think it's something like this. And stay tuned to the station. Oh my god, this reminds me.

SPEAKER_05:

G.I. Brassbottom.

SPEAKER_08:

Oh Ramjet, come to Washington immediately. Come in. Roger Ramjet.

SPEAKER_27:

There's his voice. That's right. Roger Ramjet here.

SPEAKER_10:

And so gives me the sudden urge to gamble.

SPEAKER_08:

Reporting, sir.

unknown:

Ramjet.

SPEAKER_10:

Roger Ramjet. That's right. Oh, here's another. So obscure. So obscure. Does anyone remember Dodo, the kid from outer space? I mean, I literally just thought of that, and I haven't seen this for 50 years. And I can still remember it's like, um, with what is it? Um, with with propellers on his heels, uh, antennas on his ears and propellers on his heels. He's a science fiction fiction pixie from a strange atomic race. Dodo, the kid from outer space. Dodo! I haven't seen that in 50 years. Let me see how close I am to getting that correct. The kid from outer space, yeah. Dodo! Don't go any place with papers on his heels, and it's on his ears. He's a science fiction pixie with my strange atomic race. Dodo! The kid from out of space. Dodo! Oh my god. Ooh, Lord. Man, thank goodness my memory is still pretty sharp. I remember this one from the early 60s, high atop Mount Olympus. Herc!

unknown:

Herk!

SPEAKER_10:

Remember the mighty Hercules cartoons? Hercules? And he's and it's sung by Johnny Nash, the same guy that sang, I can see Clillina, the rain is gone. This was a pretty disturbing cartoon in a way, too. Hercules!

SPEAKER_22:

He's hero of song and story. Hercules! Winner of ancient glory. Johnny Nash! Fighting for the right, fighting with his might, with the strength of ten ordinary men, Hercules, people are safe, Hercules. Only the evil fear him. Softness in his eyes, iron in his eyes, virtue in his heart, fire in every part of the mighty.

SPEAKER_10:

And he put the He'd have to put the ring on and stand atop Mount Olympus and put his fist in the air. And that's how, and then he would go fight like everyday crimes. From ancient Greece.

SPEAKER_20:

Boiled and boiled to a blinding broom.

unknown:

Shh.

SPEAKER_24:

Here they come.

SPEAKER_10:

Here comes Herc. Better hurry, Newton, if you want to read that. And remember Newton the creepy centaur or whatever. Herc, Herc! Yeah.

SPEAKER_09:

Better hurry. Better hurry.

SPEAKER_10:

I'm gonna talk like this and repeat everything. Repeat everything. Is it a centaur or did I get that wrong? This is such a weird cartoon. Still kind of creeps me out in a way. How about Clyde Crashkop and Leonardo? Remember them? Leonardo was a I don't know which one was which. It was the the tall guy with the mustache. And he'd always invent something on the blackboard. There'd always be the tall guy with the big nose and the mustache. And they had the white lab coats on, and he would invent something to put it on the chalkboard, and the little bald dude with the ring of hair around his head with the white lab coat, he'd go, he'd tap it and he'd go, and he'd whisper something in his ear, and then he would redraw, and then he'd look at it and go, Oh, you're right. Leonardo, I think maybe he was anyway, we'll get it straight. I remember one that stands out in my mind is he drew a woman, and a woman was in curlers, just really like maybe the rolling pin in her hand. I don't know, whatever it was, just very angry and thumpy and mean, and the little guy and he right he redraws it. It's like this super hot woman in a bikini goes, I think you're right, dude. Clyde Crashkop. Here we go. Leonardo.

SPEAKER_07:

I was building something. Ooh, I'll be right with you in just a moment, folks. Right now, I'm very busy. Now, ladies and gentlemen, perhaps you are wondering what I am building. This, when it is completed, will be my latest invention, the reverse time machines. This invention will reverse all time. It will reverse the evolution of man.

SPEAKER_10:

So then the little now the little guy's looking at him.

SPEAKER_07:

So let's get busy even the sound effects were the best.

SPEAKER_10:

Okay, so that's Leonardo. The little dude with the bald head's Leonardo. And the tall guy's Clyde Crash. Anyhow. God, these bring back good memories. Happy Saturday, everyone. Thank you for listening to my little special Pats Peeps, my little cartoon, Saturday morning cartoon special. How about some Who is this superhero? Sarge? Sublime. Rosemary, the telephone operator? Hong Kong Fooie. Henry, the mild mannered canator. Have a great weekend, everyone. See you on the radio.

SPEAKER_25:

Hong Kong Phooey. Number one super guy. Home fooie. Click it in the human eye. Oh, you got style, a group and smile. I bought it, just won't stop. When the boy gets rough, he's super top with a hung on to each other. Oh, come for it. Number one super guy. Oh, don't boo it. Oh, it's quicker than the human eye. Tick it down, tick it down, dill-ly-top, dill-ly-tow-down, dill-ly-top, bow-like.