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  1. May 15, 2024 · Hanna-Barbera was an animation studio and production company founded in 1957 by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, [1] with financial backing by film director George Sidney.

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  3. Wacky Races ran Saturday mornings on CBS from September 14, 1968, to January 4, 1969, and in syndication from 1976 to 1982. Seventeen 20-minute episodes were produced, with each of them featuring two 10-minute segments. The series spawned numerous spin-offs featuring Dick Dastardly through the years, the most similar in theme being "Fender ...

  4. The dictates of his job as a construction superintendent for the Santa Fe Railroad caused the elder Hanna to move his family to Logan, Utah, in 1915, and then to California in 1917. One of seven children, young Hanna was the only boy and an enthusiastic member of the Boy Scouts of America.

  5. Nov 20, 2017 · Barbera and wife Sheila, parents of three, are just breaking in a new home in Studio City, a Los Angeles suburb — their longtime Sherman Oaks house having been irreversably damaged by the January earthquake.

  6. Mar 4, 2021 · A list of Hanna-Barbera's first superhero cartoons isn't complete without a mention of the classic Super Friends. It was the studio's first incursion into the genre in the 1970s: yet, unlike its predecessors, this series didn't go for the fisticuffs.

    • Rich Keller
  7. He ran his alternate phrase by Joe Barbera and “Yabba-Dabba-Doo” was born! In 1960, Hanna-Barbera was offered the chance to create a series for prime-time television. What they came up with was "The Flintstones," one of the most iconic cartoons to ever air on TV. Here's the history behind the show.

  8. The first mother vine selections were made in 1937 and a number assigned to each. In 1937, Bioletti began progeny tests at U.C. Davis on Barbera vines from Italian Swiss Colony vineyards in Asti, Sonoma County.