Knowing the very dubious notoriety of Wikipedia by be tangible to contrived facts, this is more apparent when its about the history of animated shorts in the Theatrical era. No mention that lots of attention scammers may use ChatGPT for such silly questions when just opening a reference book is all what we have to know.
But since, this is probably the only source available in the Internet if none other sources-- such as TV Guides, epguides.com or anything else gotten these informations. The 1987s Syndication package of The Woody Woodpecker Show (Not to confuse with the original show where Walter Lantz himself and Woody could met in the same desk, albeit not so in the same sequence) is the one where I own some nostalgia for have watching a fewer of them, back some Cable American Television showed it at fillers, and it was among my only exposure to the Walter Lantz's history of his studio at that time.
From what the Walter Lantz Wiki-Fandom would describe, it was showing at a conjunction between MCA/Universal and The Program Exchange (Much known to getting the Jay Ward's work back in airs for a new audience) by be airing on any syndicated local outlets between 1987 and 1998 by ran for 91 half-hours composed of two Woodys and another one, mostly Chilly Willy to split up. Each of these shows featuring a brand-new animated Intro/Outro and some music videos vignettes (along with very annoying and dated SFX!) with clips of old Woodys cartoons that called Musical Miniatures.
Ironically, it was Lantz's own idea, in 1947 originally to featuring cartoons that accompagny classical music composings in order to dwindling the workload of cash of what he had to paid for his Swing Symphonies years earlier. As you may know, Walter Lantz was strictly careful by following his own budget, if it's not the same rates of Disney, M-G-M or so, Warner.
The non-Woodys shorts featuring in this package are mostly the likes of Chilly Willy, Andy Panda, Inspector Willoughby, and more surprisingly, lesser known duos like Maw and Paw, Windy and Breezy and Maggie and Sam. But what about The Beary Family?
For unkown reason, The Beary Family gotten a package at its own in the same time. Considering that it's all made in the very final era of the studio, the Bearys has lasted too longer than it needed if every shorts share the same tiring formula (Charlie took the initiative to do the work ALL by himself-- by save money to any contractor/repairman/plumber/anything else -- but that went with lots of predictable blackout chaos.) by fully lacks the bulk of energy and creative forces of the earlier studio's days. Jerry Beck has right to NOT and NEVER pulled any of these shorts to DVD when he paired with Columbia House and then, Universal for exploited the Lantz's cartoon filmography to modern-day disc.
But generally, the vintage cartoons showing there are looked antiquated today, but pretty good for late-1980s Television. And some looked out MORE better visually than when a few of them were remastered to DVD with its horrific DVNR doing up again its heaviest lifting. Universal never gotten the luxury to keep its vaults in carefully condition like the way Warner Bros. has cleared these at its own.
Thought this is not a complete episode guide and that sources may vary from times, we can give them credits to at least, credited the sources that were shared in. I can confirm that most of these taps are right and accurate, by have experienced several of these half-hours over a good thirty years ago (Some memories never left when it's about stuffs like this). It would be only great if one day, we got the full show's episode list by be the one when its existence remains a mystery for decades. It's only a shame that there was none News Reels, the Around the World vignettes or Walter Lantz in person in this one.
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