Look! Up in the Sky!
It's a plane! It's a bird! It's a frog!
Not plane, nor bird nor even frog, it's just little o'le me:

 

 

 


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Other Cartoons

Underdog was shown intermixed with a number of other cartoons of various quality. Most pale in comparison to Underdog. As Underdog compares poorly with Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons, the filler cartoons are also of lesser quality than Fractured Fairy Tales, Improbable History with Mr. Peabody, and the rest. Apologies to anyone who actually enjoys these supporting cartoons, but they really are poor, but at least they weren't just long commercials for action figures and card games like so many modern cartoons.

Tennessee Tuxedo and his Tales
Mildly educational, adequately written but rarely amusing. Tennessee Tuxedo (Don Adams) is always accompanied by Chumly, a walrus. All questions are answered by Mr. Phineas J. Whoopee with visual aides on his 3-dimensional blackboard and a closet with everything. Megapolis Zoo keeper Stanley Livingston and his assistant, Flunky, is constantly frustrated by Tennessee and Chumly's schemes. All Tennessee Tuxedo cartoons are completed in single episodes. Occasional characters include Yakety Yak/Baldy Eagle (Kenny Delmar).
The World of Commander McBragg
Outrageous lies in the style of Barron Von Munchaussen. Com. McBragg's adventures are told to a series of hapless, disbelieving and nameless English gentleman. McBragg's adventures typically deal with safaris or other wilderness explorations. Impossible situations are solved through impossible athletic feats. At least they are short, single episode stories. Commander McBragg's voice supplied by Kenny Delmar.
Go Go Gophers
Gophers as Indians, Ruffled Feathers (Sandy Becker) and Running Board (George S. Irving) defeat the plots against them by the Teddy Roosevelt like Colonel Kit Coyote (Kenny Delmar) and Sergeant Okey Homa (Sandy Becker, again) with improbable technology such as a helicopter teepee. Mildly amusing, once.
Klondike Kat
An terrible cat and mouse cartoon that seems to want to be Tom and Jerry and Duddly Doo Right but without the quality of either. The Mouse, Savoir Fare ("is everywhere") is a French Canadian bandit and Klondike Kat is a mountie (Klondike Kops) sent in each episode by Major Minor from Fort Frazzle to capture the outlaw. Malamute Mutt is Savoir Fare's mute hench-dog. "Klondike Kat always gets his mouse" is the catch phrase that was clichéd before it was first uttered. No educational, artistic or entertainment value. 
The King and Odie
A dreadful short that pre-dates Underdog. King Leonardo (Jackson Beck) and his advisor Odie (Alan Swift) run around demonstrating their stupidity. No redeeming value.

Renamed The King and Odie in syndication, King Leonardo and his Short Subjects began on NBC-TV October 15, 1960. It was the second color cartoon series on the network's Saturday morning schedule, replacing the first run of Ruff and Reddy. In addition to The King and Odie, the show featured The Hunter, Tooter Turtle and Twinkles.

The adventures of good King Leonardo, the ruler of the mythical kingdom of Bongo-Congo and his ever faithful companion Odie Cologne, a skunk who was the real brains behind the throne. Together they fought off Leonardo's dim-witted sibling, Itchy Brother, and his goading accomplice Biggy Rat in their attempts to take over the throne. Other adversaries included Odie's flirtatious sister, Carlotta, and the diabolical Professor Messer.

 

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