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Dalton Sandifer

Writing

Known For

The Jetsons
7.3

Meet George Jetson and his quirky family: wife Jane, son Elroy and daughter Judy. Living in the automated, push-button world of the future hasn't made life any easier for the harried husband and father, who gets into one comical misadventure after another!

The Jetsons

1962
Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines
7.0

Dick Dastardly and his snickering canine co-pilot Muttley plot to stop Yankee Doodle Pigeon aboard their World War I flying machines.

Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines

1969
Young Samson & Goliath
6.3

Samson & Goliath is an animated television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for NBC, where it debuted on September 9, 1967. Primarily sponsored by General Mills, who controlled the distribution rights through its agency Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, Samson & Goliath was retitled Young Samson in April 1968 to avoid confusion with the stop-motion Christian television series Davey and Goliath. Twenty-six 12-minute episodes of the series were produced; Samson & Goliath cartoons were paired with other General Mills-sponsored shows such as Tennessee Tuxedo and Go Go Gophers to form a full half-hour for their original network broadcasts.Young Samson was later shown in syndication with The Space Kidettes as The Space Kidettes and Young Samson, distributed by The Program Exchange.

Young Samson & Goliath

1967
Breezly and Sneezly
5.8

Breezly and Sneezly is a Hanna-Barbera cartoon series first broadcast on September 16, 1964, as part of The Peter Potamus Show. From 1964 to 1966, 23 episodes were produced, 14 of which were aired on Peter Potamus with the remaining nine aired on The Magilla Gorilla Show.

Breezly and Sneezly

1964
Harlem Globetrotters
6.5

Harlem Globetrotters is a Saturday morning cartoon produced by Hanna-Barbera and CBS Productions, featuring animated versions of players from the famous basketball team, Harlem Globetrotters. Broadcast from September 12, 1970, to September 2, 1972 on CBS, and later re-run on NBC as The Go-Go Globetrotters, the show featured cartoon versions of George "Meadowlark" Lemon, Freddie "Curly" Neal, Hubert "Geese" Ausbie, J.C. "Gip" Gipson, Bobby Joe Mason, and Pablo Robertson, alongside their fictional bus driver and manager, Granny, and their dog mascot, Dribbles. The series worked to a formula where the team travels somewhere and typically get involved in a local conflict that leads to one of the Globetrotters proposing a basketball game to settle the issue. To ensure the Globetrotters' defeat, the villains rig the contest; however, before the second half of the contest, the team always finds a way to even the odds, become all but invincible, and win the game.

Harlem Globetrotters

1970
Bear Up!
7.0

Loopy attempts to save Junior from dangerous situations, but John Bear sees it the other way around.

Bear Up!

1963
Bunnies Abundant
5.5

Loopy tries to discourage another wolf from hunting rabbits.

Bunnies Abundant

1962
Crow's Fete
8.0

To help his good friend, Farmer Brown, Loopy attempts to get rid of a corny crow who keeps eating up corn from the farm.

Crow's Fete

1965
Pork Chop Phooey
7.0

Loopy tries his best to keep Bon-Bon from terrorizing the Three Little Pigs.

Pork Chop Phooey

1965
Chicken Fracas-See
5.5

An egg is foisted upon Loopy, and the grumpy watchdog wants it back.

Chicken Fracas-See

1962
Woodpecker in the Moon
7.8

The local rocket society is looking for a new volunteer to blast to the moon, the only other person having been sent there being Professor Dingledong who has not returned thus far. They decide to send mailman Woody Woodpecker who, upon landing on the moon's surface, encounters the aforementioned Dingledong.

Woodpecker in the Moon

1959
Busman's Holiday
6.8

As the scene opens, window washer Woody washes the window of Pierre's bakery. His first mishap is to cause Pierre to mess up a cake that he's decorating, and Pierre tells him off. Since this job is finished, Woody gets on a bus with his automatic extension ladder, which keeps hitting the bus driver in the head every time that the bus stops. The driver finally throws Woody off, but Woody manages to get back on. The comedy with the ladder continues, finally involving a traffic cop, a motorcycle policeman and Pierre, as well as Woody and the driver. The story ends with all the participants, on the motorcycle, crashing into a brick wall.

Busman's Holiday

1961
Rancid Ransom
8.0

In order to get rid of a hunter, Loopy must use the fake money stash he found, only later do they both find out the truth about the money.

Rancid Ransom

1962
No image
7.0

Wally Walrus is the keeper of a fish hatchery in which trout are incubated and raised.

Tricky Trout

1961
Round Trip to Mars
7.2

Woody's vacation in the desert [is] interrupted by a German-accented scientist who thinks he has landed on Mars and wants to take Woody back as a specimen.

Round Trip to Mars

1957
Crook Who Cried Wolf
10.0

Crooks hide out in a cave where Loopy is launched into, at first, they believe it's Big Louie, but once they find out it's an actual wolf, they use him as bate for the cops.

Crook Who Cried Wolf

1963
Pistol Packin' Woodpecker
6.7

Woody Woodpecker, hot, hungry and thirsty, is walking across a dry, bleak Western desert.

Pistol Packin' Woodpecker

1960
Panhandle Scandal
7.3

Bandit Denver Dooley travels to a lawless western town where he notices a sign, "No Bandits Allowed. Signed, Marshall Woody Woodpecker".

Panhandle Scandal

1959
No image
7.0

The Mighty Heroes are called into action in order to prevent "The Super Cooler" from freezing the town of Goodhaven.

The Big Freeze

1971
Watcha Watchin'?
10.0

To help a good friend in need, Loopy tries to make the sheepdog look like he's doing his job in front of Farmer Gordon.

Watcha Watchin'?

1963