Hi, Yowp here. You know my story. I appeared in three Yogi Bear cartoons. Then Joe Barbera told me, “We’re going in a different direction. Yogi, Ranger Smith, Boo Boo and Jellystone Park. No room for you.”
Ah, there was a time stardom seemed in my grasp. Hanna-Barbera included me in their marketing. Here are a couple of examples I’ve spotted.
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Dynamic Toy, 109 Ainslie Street, Brooklyn 11, N.Y., made a number of these vegetable ink tattoo kits in 1961. There was one with the Flintstones and another with Disney characters. And there was this one with various characters from the Huck and Yogi shows.
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Here they are. And look! Second row to the far left, there I am. All the other characters are identified except me. “Yowp, you don’t need an introduction,” said Joe. Smooth talker, that Barbera.
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Now, here’s an odd mixture of characters—the TV version of Felix the Cat, the 1950s Famous Studios version of Popeye with people in the Popeye newspaper strip, and the cast of “The Yogi Bear Show.” And yours truly is there, too. Same design as in the Cockamamies. Who made these rubber stamps? I have no idea.
But my days were already numbered. The studio introduced the Flintstones in 1960 and Top Cat in 1961. Touché Turtle, Lippy and Hardy, and Wally Gator were around the corner. The studio now had plenty of starring characters to sell. And it did. Secondary characters like me became a memory. But we won’t quite fade away altogether, so long as you can see the fun old cartoons we were in.
And since we mentioned the Flintstones Cockamamies, here they are, including Baby Puss.
Ah, there was a time stardom seemed in my grasp. Hanna-Barbera included me in their marketing. Here are a couple of examples I’ve spotted.
![](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-WrvJY23dtmY/VTKyANSeWsI/AAAAAAAA2cM/RJpj6ioCUEo/s380/HB%2BCOCKAMAMIES%2B1.png)
![](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-TTPxp-z-9SQ/VTKx_j0QF1I/AAAAAAAA2cE/rH4tkW6klPU/s380/HB%2BCOCKAMAMIES%2B3.png)
Dynamic Toy, 109 Ainslie Street, Brooklyn 11, N.Y., made a number of these vegetable ink tattoo kits in 1961. There was one with the Flintstones and another with Disney characters. And there was this one with various characters from the Huck and Yogi shows.
![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-J1Sc5s1dgvA/VTLNMs02qtI/AAAAAAAA2c8/Re2qh1TGY-Q/s640/HB%2BCOCKAMAMIES%2B2%2BWITH%2BYOWP.png)
Here they are. And look! Second row to the far left, there I am. All the other characters are identified except me. “Yowp, you don’t need an introduction,” said Joe. Smooth talker, that Barbera.
![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-VvEhD6YreIM/VTK0uEG7paI/AAAAAAAA2cc/OKjYnzM-TVM/s640/HB%2BPOPEYE%2BSTAMPS%2B1.png)
![](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Zrng0BUnSWI/VTK0uTQUMoI/AAAAAAAA2cg/zKoDFuRgJNs/s640/HB%2BPOPEYE%2BSTAMPS%2B2.png)
Now, here’s an odd mixture of characters—the TV version of Felix the Cat, the 1950s Famous Studios version of Popeye with people in the Popeye newspaper strip, and the cast of “The Yogi Bear Show.” And yours truly is there, too. Same design as in the Cockamamies. Who made these rubber stamps? I have no idea.
But my days were already numbered. The studio introduced the Flintstones in 1960 and Top Cat in 1961. Touché Turtle, Lippy and Hardy, and Wally Gator were around the corner. The studio now had plenty of starring characters to sell. And it did. Secondary characters like me became a memory. But we won’t quite fade away altogether, so long as you can see the fun old cartoons we were in.
And since we mentioned the Flintstones Cockamamies, here they are, including Baby Puss.
![](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/--11zYltecH4/VTLMjkVoODI/AAAAAAAA2c0/V8IJ7QA9V1U/s640/FLINTSTONES%2BCOCAMAMIES%2B1961.png)