I don't think this has been posted about here. (I haven't checked Cartoon Research, Animation Scoop, Cartoon Brew, Yowp or Tralfaz.) Both of them died in 2020, within months of each other. Joe Ruby died on August 26, 2020 at age 87. Ken Spears died onNovember 6, 2020 at age 82
Of course Joe Ruby and Ken Spears will always be known as the creators of a certain cowardly, junk food-loving Great Dane and his mystery-solving friends. They started out at Hanna-Barbera writing the bumpers that aired between cartoons on
The Huckleberry Hound Show. Both of them were editors on
The Flinstones. By the time they created
Scooby Doo, Where Are You?, both of them were showrunners. They left Hanna-Barbera sometime in the mid-1970's. (Maybe they were tired of Hanna-Barbera trying to make lightning strike twice with countless Scooby Doo rehashes like
Goober and the Ghost Chasers,
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kids,
Clue Club, and even
Jabberjaw, which substituted a cowardly Great white shark for a cowardly dog. Even their adaptation of an existing property, Josie and the Pussycats, pretty much turned it into a Scooby Doo clone, complete with Casey Kasem doing the voice of Alexander Cabot, who in the Josie comic books looked like a more muscular version of Reggie Mantle.) They did a brief stint with Sid and Marty Krofft, where they created segments for
The Krofft Supershow:
http://www.archive.org/d...he-krofft-supershow-ep-1 http://www.archive.org//details/krofft7 Then they formed their own studio. Some of the shows made by the Ruby-Spear studio:
FangfaceThe Plastic Man Comedy Adventure Show (Segments: "Plastic Man", "Mighty Man and Yukk", "Fangface and Fangpuss" and the cringeworthy "Rickety Rocket")
Thundarr the BarbarianThe Heathcliff and Dingbat ShowThe Heathcliff and Marmaduke ShowThe "Rubik the Amazing Cube" segments of
The Pac Man/Rubik the Amazing Cube Hour (Yes, there was a cartoon based on Rubik's Cube.)
The Mr. T Saturday morning cartoon
Saturday SupercadeTurbo TeenThe Punky Brewster Saturday morning cartoon
The 1980's revival of Alvin and the Chipmunks (Though this was later taken over by another studio.)
The "Miss Switch" ABC Weekend Specials
After the mid-1980's I lost track. I don't even know when the Ruby-Spears studio closed. Maybe sometime in the 1990's?
To this day the end credits of the modern Scooby Doo TV series and direct-to-video movies include "Special thanks to Joe Ruby and Ken Spears".
Edited by user
2023-03-17T21:13:51Z
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Reason: Not specified