A Pup Named Scooby-Doo: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Delicious Distraction]]
* [[Delicious Distraction]]
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Daphne
* [[Deadpan Snarker]]: Daphne
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything]]: Daphne's parents "count money" on Tuesday nights, which lasts until the next day. Also, Scooby's reaction to eating a Scooby Snack. He moans with pleasure, then shoots into the sky as fireworks go off, and finally drifts back to earth with a happy smile on his face. Oh, and Shaggy usually holds him afterwards. This seems to be a [[Shout Out]] to Snuffles the Tracking Dog from [[Quick Draw McGraw]], who would often react that same way to getting a biscuit. [[Dastardly and Muttley|Muttley]] has also done this.
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]]: Daphne's parents "count money" on Tuesday nights, which lasts until the next day. Also, Scooby's reaction to eating a Scooby Snack. He moans with pleasure, then shoots into the sky as fireworks go off, and finally drifts back to earth with a happy smile on his face. Oh, and Shaggy usually holds him afterwards. This seems to be a [[Shout Out]] to Snuffles the Tracking Dog from [[Quick Draw McGraw]], who would often react that same way to getting a biscuit. [[Dastardly and Muttley|Muttley]] has also done this.
* [[Drugs Are Bad]]:
* [[Drugs Are Bad]]:
{{quote| "DRUGS?! Drugs can mess you up!"}}
{{quote| "DRUGS?! Drugs can mess you up!"}}
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* [[Fair Play Who Dunnit]]
* [[Fair Play Who Dunnit]]
* [[Feud Episode]]: Shaggy and Scooby refusing to speak to each other throughout one episode, which hinders the gang's attempts at solving a mystery involving a [[Giant Food|giant]] [[Anthropomorphic Food|monster hamburger.]]
* [[Feud Episode]]: Shaggy and Scooby refusing to speak to each other throughout one episode, which hinders the gang's attempts at solving a mystery involving a [[Giant Food|giant]] [[Anthropomorphic Food|monster hamburger.]]
* [[Five Man Band]]
* [[Five-Man Band]]
* [[Free Range Children]]: The kids run about Coolsville with little concern from moms or dads.
* [[Free-Range Children]]: The kids run about Coolsville with little concern from moms or dads.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: Pretty much a given, considering who created this version of Scooby-Doo. See also [[Does This Remind You of Anything]] for one of the more blatant examples.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: Pretty much a given, considering who created this version of Scooby-Doo. See also [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]] for one of the more blatant examples.
* [[Hanna Barbera]]
* [[Hanna-Barbera]]
* [[Headless Horseman]]: Actually, the headless skateboarder. No joke.
* [[Headless Horseman]]: Actually, the headless skateboarder. No joke.
{{quote| "DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!! OH, DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!!}}
{{quote| "DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!! OH, DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!!}}
* [[Hey Its That Voice]]: Becca from ''Life Goes On'' was Daphne.
* [[Hey It's That Voice]]: Becca from ''Life Goes On'' was Daphne.
** [[Scott Menville|Ma-Ti]] -- and the later (temporary) voice of Shaggy -- is Red Herring.
** [[Scott Menville|Ma-Ti]] -- and the later (temporary) voice of Shaggy -- is Red Herring.
* [[I Broke a Nail]] / [[Super OCD]]: Daphne
* [[I Broke a Nail]] / [[Super OCD]]: Daphne
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* [[Shrinking Violet]]: Velma. In early episodes her only lines in the entire show were "Jinkies" and the name of the real crook. (When this happened, the other characters would usually exclaim: "Velma talked!" in complete astonishment.) Later episodes gave her more lines, with Jinkies instead becoming her [[Verbal Tic]] that she'd found a clue.
* [[Shrinking Violet]]: Velma. In early episodes her only lines in the entire show were "Jinkies" and the name of the real crook. (When this happened, the other characters would usually exclaim: "Velma talked!" in complete astonishment.) Later episodes gave her more lines, with Jinkies instead becoming her [[Verbal Tic]] that she'd found a clue.
* [[Snub By Omission]]: After the villains are revealed, they will say the traditional, "And I would've gotten away with it too if it wasn't for you meddling kids." Many times, Scooby would have to remind them to finish by saying, "Oh, and that puppy."
* [[Snub By Omission]]: After the villains are revealed, they will say the traditional, "And I would've gotten away with it too if it wasn't for you meddling kids." Many times, Scooby would have to remind them to finish by saying, "Oh, and that puppy."
* [[Speech Impaired Animal]]
* [[Speech-Impaired Animal]]
* [[Spinoff Babies|Spin-Off Kids]]
* [[Spinoff Babies|Spin-Off Kids]]
* [[Spoiled Sweet]]: Daphne
* [[Spoiled Sweet]]: Daphne

Revision as of 22:43, 8 January 2014

 There's a mystery in town, so call the coolest pup around, oh

Scoo-oby, a pup named Scooby-Doo (Scooby-dooby doo, scooby-doo!)

A Pup Named Scooby-Doo is a cartoon show featuring younger versions of the Scooby Doo cast (but is NOT set in the same continuity). It featured the "Scooby-Doo Detective Agency" as pre-teens who, like their older counterparts, solved supernatural themed mysteries in which the Monster of the Week turned out to be some crook in a mask. The show lasted from September, 1988 to August, 1991, a total of 30 episodes.

The show was a lot wackier and zanier than the original show. It hung plenty of lampshades on tropes used by the previous incarnations of the series. The show also made significant changes in the primary cast from the original source, justified in that they were younger and less mature versions of the original characters.

If that description sounds familiar, by the way, there's a reason for that: The team at H-B that created APNSD is also responsible for Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs. They left for Warner Bros after the first season was finished.

More recently, the concept of revisiting the cast in their earlier years appeared in the movie Scooby Doo: The Mystery Begins (meant to be a prequel to the original Scooby-Doo live action movie series) and the video game Scooby Doo: First Frights. The movie set them as meeting in high school while the video game had them meet in elementary school.

Notable as the last series Don Messick played Scooby Doo in.

The show uses several of the same tropes as the original series as well as many of its own.


A Pup Named Scooby-Doo provides examples of:

  • Adorkable: Velma
  • Agent Scully: At the end of "Ghost Who's Coming to Dinner" Daphne still doesn't believe in ghosts even after spending nearly the whole episode interacting with one.
  • Amusing Injuries
  • Animation Bump: Common when Glen Kennedy was animating; the characters suddenly moved in a more fluid, bouncy manner, and were more prone to bizarre movements and bouncy wild takes.
  • Bag of Holding: Sugie's diaper bag.
  • Big Eater: Both Scooby and Shaggy.
  • Bigger On the Inside: Scooby's dog house. It looks like an ordinary doghouse from the outside, but inside it's a luxurious mansion, enough to make even Daphne a little jealous.
  • Catch Phrase: Many of the same from the original series and many others.
    • "Jinkies."
      • "Velma said, 'Jinkies.' It must be a clue."
    • After Shaggy makes an Incredibly Lame Pun:

 Shaggy: "Get it, Scoob?"

Scooby: (after much laughing) "I don't get it."[1]

    • "Zoinks!"
    • "I would've gotten away with it too, if it wasn't for you pesky kids. Oh, and that puppy."
      • That one is more of an example of a group Phrase Catcher than a Catch Phrase
      • One time the gang said it for the culprit, she said "how did you know I was gonna say that?".
    • "Would you do it for a Scooby Snack?"
      • Averted in "The Computer Walks Among Us." Scooby enters a dark closet when Velma kisses him.
    • "That will do, Jenkins."
      • "Yes, Miss Blake."
    • "It could only be...Red Herring!"[2]
    • "Let's split up, gang!" (always said when splitting up is completely inappropriate)
    • "There's no such things as ghosts!" Ironically, Daphne doesn't even believe the slightest possibility of monsters existing (even when they met an actual ghost), while in most series she believes (along with Scooby and Shaggy) the monster might be real.
  • Character Exaggeration: Done to Fred, Daphne, and Velma. Shag and Scoob are about the same as ever. That may be because it's close to impossible to exaggerate Shag and Scoob. They've always had bottomless stomachs, they've always been complete cowards, and they've always done anything for a Scooby Snack or twenty. Sometimes a whole box.
    • Scooby simply adores Velma in this show. She gets as many "wet puppy kisses" from Scooby as Shaggy does.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Freddy
  • Conflict Ball: In "Night of the Living Burger" Shaggy and Scooby have fallen out and spend the whole episode bickering, and we never find out what they were arguing about in the first place.
  • Crazy Prepared: Velma. She has a Bag of Holding.
  • Delicious Distraction
  • Deadpan Snarker: Daphne
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: Daphne's parents "count money" on Tuesday nights, which lasts until the next day. Also, Scooby's reaction to eating a Scooby Snack. He moans with pleasure, then shoots into the sky as fireworks go off, and finally drifts back to earth with a happy smile on his face. Oh, and Shaggy usually holds him afterwards. This seems to be a Shout Out to Snuffles the Tracking Dog from Quick Draw McGraw, who would often react that same way to getting a biscuit. Muttley has also done this.
  • Drugs Are Bad:

 "DRUGS?! Drugs can mess you up!"

  "DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!! OH, DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!!!!

  1. This had actually been done before in at least one version of the main franchise.
  2. "I didn't do it! Hmph, what a weenie!"
  3. Although the "real" Velma was referred to as working for NASA in a few episodes of The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries.