I debated whether to count individual cartoons originally intended for movie audiences along with specifically made-for-TV animation, then decided that if it's animated, and we saw it on TV, it counts. So....
Some of my least favorite animation of all time. These always had me headed for the fridge or some other part of the house:
Doug. Brutal animation. Stupidly named characters (Patty Mayonnaise, for example). Dumb storylines. Horrible musical score. Nothing nice for me to say here.
George Pal Puppetoons. This will predate most. Long explanation short, George Pal was a gifted animator/special effects/director/producer who escaped Nazi Germany, and made a name for himself in both film and animation in Hollywood. His best-known film works include The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, The War of the Worlds, & When Worlds Collide. He made a series of animated shorts called "Puppetoons", which today would be little more than claymation. They were shown on local cartoon shows nationwide, and some are considered classics. Not by my reckoning. The atmosphere on Puppetoons was always somber, if not outright depressing, and humor, a critical ingredient of animation, was sadly lacking. My favorite part of Puppetoons was when the TV host would move on to the next cartoon. Not George Pal's proudest achievements.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hm5Mdif5Gl0
Buddy. A bad, but instrumental development in the history of Warner Bros. animation. Produced by Leon Schlessinger himself, Buddy featured a regular-guy type title character, his girlfriend Cookie, and often a dog or a baby. In some cartoons, Buddy is a little kid, but in most, he's a young adult. I guess they couldn't make up their minds. The artwork left something to be desired, and the characters' eyes were over-emphasized. This cartoon is important in animated history because the overall failure of this series caused Warner Bros. to create animal characters instead. You know how that worked out.
Paddy Pelican. At last year's Comic Con in San Diego, this was voted overwhelmingly as the Worst Animation of All Time. A semi-regular feature on Captain Kangaroo, the "tunes" themselves are nothing more than the test pencil sketches of virtually any other cartoon. Totally brutal, and virtually unwatchable.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfvhnUU5lKA
If you can sit through that, or any of the others, you deserve a medal.
Some of my least favorite animation of all time. These always had me headed for the fridge or some other part of the house:
Doug. Brutal animation. Stupidly named characters (Patty Mayonnaise, for example). Dumb storylines. Horrible musical score. Nothing nice for me to say here.
George Pal Puppetoons. This will predate most. Long explanation short, George Pal was a gifted animator/special effects/director/producer who escaped Nazi Germany, and made a name for himself in both film and animation in Hollywood. His best-known film works include The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, The War of the Worlds, & When Worlds Collide. He made a series of animated shorts called "Puppetoons", which today would be little more than claymation. They were shown on local cartoon shows nationwide, and some are considered classics. Not by my reckoning. The atmosphere on Puppetoons was always somber, if not outright depressing, and humor, a critical ingredient of animation, was sadly lacking. My favorite part of Puppetoons was when the TV host would move on to the next cartoon. Not George Pal's proudest achievements.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hm5Mdif5Gl0
Buddy. A bad, but instrumental development in the history of Warner Bros. animation. Produced by Leon Schlessinger himself, Buddy featured a regular-guy type title character, his girlfriend Cookie, and often a dog or a baby. In some cartoons, Buddy is a little kid, but in most, he's a young adult. I guess they couldn't make up their minds. The artwork left something to be desired, and the characters' eyes were over-emphasized. This cartoon is important in animated history because the overall failure of this series caused Warner Bros. to create animal characters instead. You know how that worked out.
Paddy Pelican. At last year's Comic Con in San Diego, this was voted overwhelmingly as the Worst Animation of All Time. A semi-regular feature on Captain Kangaroo, the "tunes" themselves are nothing more than the test pencil sketches of virtually any other cartoon. Totally brutal, and virtually unwatchable.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LfvhnUU5lKA
If you can sit through that, or any of the others, you deserve a medal.