Ghostbusters

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♪Let's go, Ghostbusters, let's go! Let's go, let's go!♪
CWC, [1]
Brings back fond childhood memories to... uh...

Ghostbusters (often Filmation's Ghostbusters to avoid confusion) was a syndicated television cartoon that ran sixty-five episodes in late 1986.

Background

If you were a child of the 80s, you probably wondered, "Why the hell is that awesome cartoon with Venkman, Egon, and Slimer called The Real Ghostbusters? And since there was no Wikipedia back then, your mom probably told you to stop asking stupid questions, or go outside and play.

Well, thanks to a forgotten show in their back catalog, Filmation struck gold in 1984 when Columbia Pictures had a hit with a movie of the same title. Filmation sued Columbia in 1985 over the use of the title Ghostbusters, and in the ensuing settlement Columbia agreed that it would not use that name for a cartoon based on their film. Filmation quickly cranked out a low-budget spinoff of its 1970s live-action show to capitalize on the free marketing. The results were immanently forgettable, and destined to join the vast catalog of cut-rate VHS cartoons that populated bargain bins at local grocers in the early 1990s.

The fun parallel here is that, in response to Funimation's legal trolling, Columbia responded in a truly ingenious fashion: they called their own cartoon series The Real Ghostbusters. That, friends, is the honest truth.

When asked what he considers the five best television shows that he's ever seen, Chris was frank:

Transformers (ALL Seasons and Sets), Sonic the Hedgehog (All Shows), Pok'emon (All Seasons), Mythbusters, Filmation's Ghostbusters (Little Care for "The Real Ghostbusters"; Jake, Eddie and Tracy WERE THE ORIGINAL REAL GHOSTBUSTERS).
CWC, [2]

Premise

The Ghostbusters on the show lived in a headquarters called Ghost Command, where they would receive missions from a television called Skelevision. When going into action they would enter the Skelevator which would send them through an absurd, Rube Goldberg-esque system that would change their casual dress to safari outfits and then deposit them into their transport, the Ghost Buggy. The running gag in this sequence is that the team's leader, Jake Kong, Jr., has no difficulty going through the system, while the show's overweight comedy relief, Eddie Spencer, Jr., bounces around awkwardly. This "transformation sequence" was a fixture of the show, and was accompanied by the show's main theme. You can see it yourself here.

The Sonichu Connection

Whoops!

While the average 20-something would have struggled to remember the names of the characters in The Real Ghostbusters, Christian casually worked references to its forgotten namesake into an all-ages comic book. In Sonichu #7, Chris was inspired to drop in a Family Guy-esque non-sequitur TV reference with Ghostbusters as the vehicle.

Hmm... I feel as silly as the time that I temporary gained weight, became stupid, and went to watch television at ghost command.
Chris[3]

Fat, stupid Cartoon CWC (played by an actor and Peter Griffin-analogue named Sammy) was hanging out at Ghost Command, until he mistook the Skelevator for a restroom and entered the transformation sequence with hilarious results. That is, he repeats the Jake Kong sequence almost exactly, including his final impact in the Ghost Buggy, which moans, "Ohhh...my achin' axels!"

References

External links

See also