The animated adventures of Doc and Marty ran for two Seasons on CBS, from 1991-1992. The complete series is available to own on DVD from Universal Studios Home Entertainment. Order the series today! www.uphe.com/t...
@@drawingsuperstar252 Sadly not likely, America has largely forfeited the advantage it held in the world of animation, while much of the bulk-work of TV shows of the late 80s through the 90s was done by overseas studios in western-aligned Asian countries like South Korea or Japan, they still relied on American animation leads based in the states doing keyframes and storyboard work. Because most major companies have completely dismantled their departments that used to do this animation, there is very little incentive for american animation students to learn the old way of doing things.
Yeah. XD. I found it odd though. Christopher Loyd WAS in this show! He played Emmett Lathrop Brown in the live action sequences with his assistant, Bill Nye. And yet, his character in the animated sequences was a different actor.
@@MrRandomRU-vidr1996 Well, it WAS the birth date of "hover boards", and we did have Wi-Fi, instant meals, 80's nostalgia, electronic money transfers, instant forecasts. But, I'd say the biggest connection was how the movie predicted the Cubs would finally win the World Series, which they did...only a year later😱😱
Ah yes. At the end of the show they always had a clip with what i remember as Christopher Lloyd playing as Doc Brown explaining whatever scientific principle they used in the episode to get out whatever jam they were in. Bill Nye actually demonstrated whatever said principle was, I think way before he had his own PBS show.
The show lasted two seasons, each featuring 13 episodes, and ran on CBS from September 14, 1991 to December 26, 1992, the date of the last original episode. Reruns remained on the CBS Saturday morning schedule until the end of August 14, 1993 on CBS, after which it was replaced by CyberCOPS. The network chose not to renew the show for a third season (citing low ratings). It was later rerun on The Sci-Fi Channel (now SyFy) from 1994 to June 1996, and on Fox, as a part of the FoxBox block, from March 22 to August 30, 2003.
@@beauwalker9820 Same for me. I was 16 years in 9th grade at Colleton County High School in Walterboro, South Carolina in Spring 2003 when I watched the show as reruns every Saturday at 8:30a.m.-9:00a.m. half-hour timeslot on the FoxBox.
I remembered an episode, where the blond kid (Verne) was annoyed at his weird name, so he travelled back in time to his birth. He accidentally saves the day, so his parents back then name their kid after him, showing him, his name was actually in honor to himself. The writers apparently forgot he and his brother were named after Jules Verne, and he just had the bad luck of being born later.
The opening song had played in my head countless times and I couldn't remember where it was from, thank you for answer this question I've had for years
From around 1987 to 1993 we had SO many fun cartoons. I was only 8-14 during those years, and probably in the perfect sweet spot as a viewer. Such a fun time to be a kid and I feel so lucky. Some series only lasted one year, and we may look back at them and chuckle today. Like the MC Hammer or NKOTB cartoons for instance. But you know, at the time they were just fun, and played into our fandom. Kids today have access to unlimited options at pretty much any time. But I feel sorry for them. The quality today just isn’t as good animation and story-wise, and you don’t have that anticipation and excitement of watching something Saturday mornings or some other specific time. It’s all just a big blur of semi-mediocre media, and you have to pay for about 12 different services for it. As a huge BTTF fan, I was never that into this series growing up. But I watched it occasionally, and absolutely remember it.
Hold up. There are some good shows still right now such as the owl house amphibia big city greens moon girl and dinosaur Craig of the creek victor and valieato etc. I think you're just too old to watch and appreciate them because you're in your 40s.
@helpfulplaylists3933 😆 😂 😆 😂 😆 😂 WE KNOW WHAT IS GOOD AND BAD BECAUSE WE GREW UP IN THE MIDDLE OF TV HISTORY BETWEEN THE BEGINNING OF TV 📺 AND NOW... AND WHATS OUT NOW IS 💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩 CREATED TO KEEP THE YOUNGINS 🤡🤡🤡 IT AINT ME ,THATS JUST A FACT OF LIFE! THE STUFF OUT TODAY IS LO KEY INDOCTRINATION BY WAY OF DUMBING DOWN THE CONTENT! It started in the 2000's and progressed ... the content is not produced in a way to protect, educate, include moral values, integrity, intelligence. Not saying all cartoons did . But by the 1980's child TV laws were in place protecting children's programing where as today Children's programing promotes a regression of intelligence.
The ending notes on the cover version of Back In Time on this intro for the Back to the Future animated series should have been on the live performance of the original song from Huey Lewis and the News from the first movie.
It came not long after the 3rd movie and even though they did promos (Mcdonald toys as well). It didn't last as long. (but it was also the first time people got to see Bill Nye before he ended up with his own show.)
The 80s and 90s had some awesome cartoons and it was great and I miss those days when they had Teen Wolf and GI Joe Transformers and She Ra He Man, and Super Mario Brothers Super Show and Adventures Of Zelda . Good shows good times to be a kid.
This show, Where's Waldo?, Muppet Babies, Mother Goose & Grimm/Grimmy, Garfield & Friends, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Inspector Gadget reruns, Fievel's American Tails, The Little Mermaid, Raw Toonage and Cyber C.O.P.S. were my favorite CBS cartoons back in the day.
I remember this show. Specially the episode when they disintegrated the meteor what was supposed to hit ancient earth, then they had to restore it, meaning that they had to let the friendly pteranodon die after it had saved them from a T-Rex. It was moving, I cried for hours after.
My favorite detail is that Doc named his sons "Jules" and "Verne" (after the famous writer who is considered one of the founders of the science fiction genre, having written such works as Around the World in Eighty Days, Journey to the Center of the Earth, The Mysterious Island, and Twenty Thousand Miles Under the Sea,...)
Why is unironically a bop? As for the show itself, it was fine, basically the original more kid friendly Rick and Morty with more of an educational curve. It also cracks me up how they got Homer Simpson to play the doctor.
Oh WoW,en serio existió una serie animada de Back to the Future? Cada dia descubro algo nuevo. Así que...esta serie animada será lo más cercano que habrá a una Back to the Future 4?
CBS "Kid TV - CBS Saturday Morning" lineup Fall 1991: 8:00am - Riders in the Sky 8:30am - Mother Goose and Grimm 9:00am - Garfield and Friends (1 Hour) 10:00am - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1 Hour) 11:00am - Back to the Future 11:30am - Where's Waldo? 12:00pm - Jim Henson's Muppet Babies 12:30pm - CBS Storybreak CBS "Kid TV - CBS Saturday Morning" lineup Fall 1991 (October 5-November 2): 8:00am - Jim Henson's Muppet Babies 8:30am - Mother Goose and Grimm 9:00am - Garfield and Friends (1 Hour) 10:00am - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1 Hour) 11:00am - Back to the Future 11:30am - Where's Waldo? 12:00pm - Riders in the Sky 12:30pm - CBS Storybreak CBS "Kid TV - CBS Saturday Morning" lineup early November 1991-1992: 8:00am - Jim Henson's Muppet Babies 8:30am - Mother Goose and Grimm 9:00am - Garfield and Friends (1 Hour) 10:00am - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1 Hour) 11:00am - Back to the Future 11:30am - Where's Waldo? 12:00pm - Inspector Gadget 12:30pm - Riders in the Sky CBS "Kid TV - CBS Saturday Morning" lineup fall 1992-spring 1993: 8:00am - Fievel's American Tails 8:30am - Disney's The Little Mermaid 9:00am - Garfield and Friends (1 Hour) 10:00am - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1 Hour) 11:00am - Back to the Future 11:30am - Disney's Raw Toonage 12:00pm - The Amazing Live Sea Monkeys 12:30pm - Grimmy CBS "Kid TV - CBS Saturday Morning" lineup spring-summer 1993 (March 20-August 14): 8:00am - Fievel's American Tails 8:30am - Disney's The Little Mermaid 9:00am - Garfield and Friends (1 Hour) 10:00am - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1 Hour) 11:00am - Cyber C.O.P.S. 11:30am - Disney's Raw Toonage 12:00pm - The Amazing Live Sea Monkeys 12:30pm - Back to the Future
In which decade Doc and his family live in this series? 2080s? Flying cars were thing in BTTF movies' 2015 but didn't Doc and Clara end in farther in the future in BttF 3 to mix the steam engine with anti-gravity technology? 2085 would be cool detail, as it's 200yrs after the movies' earliest time leap date
@@monkeyking6087 a scientist (Rick/Doc) and a teen (morty/marty) embarking on adventures, the back to the future movies are what inspired rick and morty
@@ciarangleeson2880 It is strange that he had the time to film live segments but not voice recordings. Though I've always thought I'd rather have Lloyd on screen over just his voice if given the choice. The showrunners made the right choice.
From what i seen. He was busy with other things and bearly had time to do his own live segments. (which is why Bill Nye was there to show off some "experiments")