Details, Explanation and Meaning About The Flintstones

The Flintstones Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Flintstones, a Hanna-Barbera animated series, is one of the most successful television cartoons of all time, running in American prime time for six seasons, from 1960 to 1966, on ABC. An earlier proposed title was The Flagstones.

The show was set in a town called Bedrock, in the stone age era, but with a society and technology almost identical to that of the United States in the mid 20th century. The setting is in a fantasy world where dinosaurs, sabre-tooth tigers and other extinct animals (most of which were long gone by the time humans actually evolved, according to fossil records) coexist with suburban humans, who use animals and pseudo stone-age technology to replicate actual modern technology. The characters ride around in automobiles made out of stone and animal skins. One source of the show's humor was the ways animals were used for technology; for example, the characters would take photographs with a camera; then the inside of the camera box would be shown to contain a bird carving the picture on a stone tablet with its bill. In a running gag, the animals powering such technology would look at the audience, shrug, and say "It's a living."

The series directly drew from The Honeymooners for its main quartet of characters: the blustering Fred Flintstone and his wife Wilma Flintstone (née; Slaghoople, though Pebble was also given on occasion) modeled after the Kramdens, and their friendly neighbors Barney Rubble and wife Betty Rubble (née; Betty Jean McBricker). Later additions to the cast include the Flintstones' daughter Pebbles Flintstone and the Rubbles' abnormally strong adopted son Bamm Bamm Rubble. The Flintstones had a pet dinosaur named Dino, and the Rubbles had a kangaroo-like animal named Hoppy. Fred Flintstone worked at a quarry and worked for several different bosses, the best known of which was bald Mr. Slate. The call-letters of the Bedrock radio station were BDRX.

Betty's attractiveness led to the valley girl slang (popularized in the movie Clueless) of referring to good-looking girls as "betties."

It has been noted that Fred Flintstone physically resembled voice actor Alan Reed. The voice of Barney was provided by legendary voice actor Mel Blanc, though a number of episodes used different voices for the character during a period that Blanc was recovering from an automobile accident.

In the show's closing credits, Fred tries to "put the cat out for the night" but winds up getting locked out and yelling for his wife to come open the door: "Wilma! Come on, Wilma, open this door! Willllll-ma!" Although the cat, Baby Puss, was seen in the closing credits, it was rarely seen in any of the episodes.

The series has been spawned several popular breakfast cereals, Fruity Pebbles and Cocoa Pebbles, and a line of children's multivitamins.

Aside from the animation and fantasy setting, the show's scripts and format are typical of a 1950s American situation comedy, with the usual family issues resolved with a laugh at the end of each episode. The rather sexist characterizations are faithful in spirit to The Honeymooners and similar to other shows of the 1950s and early 1960s.

The series was initially aimed at adult audiences as the first season was sponsored by the cigarette company Winston and the characters appeared in several commercials for Winstons. The famous theme song "Meet the Flintstones" was not actually introduced until the second season; the first season theme, an instrumental called "Rise and Shine", was removed from all first season episodes in syndication from the 1960s through the early 1990s, and a closing credits sequence taken from a later episode substituted at the end. As a result, the closing credits for all first-season episodes in syndication were incorrect. New syndicated versions of the episodes in the 1990s restored the original first season credits and theme.

The show was revived in the 1970s with Pebbles and Bamm Bamm having grown to teenagers, and several different series and made-for-TV movies—including a series depicting Fred and Barney as police officers, another depicting the characters as children, and yet others featuring Fred and Barney encountering Marvel Comics superhero The Thing and comic strip character The Schmoo—have appeared over the years. The original show was also adapted into two feature non-animated films, in 1994 and 2000. The first season of the series, with the original opening credits restored but not the cigarette ads, was released on DVD in late 2003; season 2 is scheduled for release at the end of 2004.

Only the advent of The Simpsons decades later brought cartoons back to American prime-time network television with the kind of success the Flintstones enjoyed.

Table of contents
1 Cast
2 See also
3 External links

Cast

See also

External links


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