Penelope Pitstop


Book Description

Offers advice to help you navigate life's speed bumps. This book leaves you weeping with laughter and feeling proud to be a woman.




Scooby-Doo! Encyclopedia


Book Description

"200+ characters and guest stars!"--Cover.




Tailipoe


Book Description

Young Hamilton feels the weight of responsibility when he must manage the family empire, even while coping with his personal monster from folklore, the creature called Tailipoe.




The Hanna-Barbera Treasury


Book Description

Describes how Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera became a team and explores how they created their most beloved characters and shows, including "Tom and Jerry," "Huckleberry Hound," "The Jetsons," and "Jonny Quest."







Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? (2010-) #113


Book Description

Shaggy and Scooby are guests on their favorite web series, helping hosts “Builder Billy” and his sister Betty construct an elaborate box fort! But a wood spirit wrecks the set and threatens to ruin everything. Can Mystery Inc. smash the subscribe button and solve the mystery before Billy loses more than some likes?




Wacky Raceland


Book Description

"Originally published in single magazine form in WACKY RACELAND 1-6"







How to Create Animation


Book Description




Television Introductions


Book Description

Since the beginning of network television, many shows have been preceded by an announcement or theme song that served various purposes. In the 1950s and ’60s, it was common for announcers to declare that a program had been “brought to you by” a sponsor who paid for the privilege of introducing a show. Other programs, such as The Twilight Zone, Star Trek, and The Odd Couple,provided a brief encapsulation of the show’s subject matter, a practice that has continued for recent shows like Alias, Battlestar Galactica, Person of Interest, and the various editions of Law & Order. In Television Introductions: Narrated TV Program Openings since 1949, Vincent Terrace has assembled openings for more than nine hundred television shows from the past seven decades. The only documented history of narrated television program introductions, this volume is arranged by type of programming, such as comedy, drama, Western, game show, soap opera, and children’s show. In addition to quoting the opening material, entries provide information about each show’s network history and years of broadcast. Many entries include descriptions of the show, the names of announcers, and a list of main cast members, as well as a sponsor pitch exactly as spoken. Openings for programs with multiple introductions like The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and Charlie’s Angels are also included. For programs that featured new guest stars every episode—such as game shows and variety programs—Terrace has selected a representative introduction. In addition to the theme song credits found in the main text, there are also appendixes of theme songs and their composers and/or singers, as well as a listing of commercial releases (on DVD, VHS, CD, and LP) of shows and their soundtracks. A comprehensive resource for researchers and pop culture aficionados alike, Television Introductions provides a fascinating look at this neglected part of TV history.