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New 'Flintstone­s' sequel series in the works

Fred Flintstone is about to retire and Pebbles is an adult: "Bedrock" is set 20 years after the events of the classic series. A look back at what made the original so popular.

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A sequel to The Flintstone­s is officially being developed by Fox Entertainm­ent.

Titled Bedrock, the new animated series will revisit the Flintstone family two decades after the events of the original show. The Stone Age is about to be replaced by an enlightene­d new Bronze Age. Fred Flintstone faces retirement, while his daughter, Pebbles, is now a 20-year-old embarking on her own career.

Elizabeth Banks, star and director of Charlie's Angels( 2019), is an executive producer of the show and will star as Pebbles' voice.

"Long before the Simpsons and Springfiel­d, the Griffins and Quahog or even when the Belchers started serving burgers on Ocean Avenue, there were the Flintstone­s and Bedrock," said Michael Thorn, president of entertainm­ent for Fox Entertainm­ent, in a statement. "Their imprint on the animation universe is undeniable and the idea of adapting it for today's audience is a challenge."

"No pressure whatsoever, really," he quipped, in reference to the original series' iconic status.

Well aware of the pressure on her shoulders, Lindsay Kerns, the series screenwrit­er who also scripted Netflix's Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous series, reacted

on Twitter to Thorn's comment with a crying laughing emoji. It's "been a yabba dabba delight to write, and I can't wait to share it with the world," she added.

Modern Stone Age family

Set in a quirky cartoon-style Stone Age, the original 1960s animated TV series centered on the Flintstone family, with Fred, a typical blue-collar worker, his stylish wife Wilma, their baby daughter Pebbles and pet dinosaur Dino.

They drove cars made of logs, went to prehistori­c drive-in movies and picked up take-out dinners — huge brontosaur­us ribs — at their neighborho­od drive-in burger place.

Always joining in on the fun were their neighbors (and best friends) Barney and Betty Rubble, with their supernatur­ally strong son, Bamm-Bamm.

The sitcom- style series created by the Hanna-Barbera cartoon studios was originally broadcast on the ABC television network from September 30, 1960 to April 1, 1966, followed by

decades of reruns. It premiered on prime time TV, and the stories about the Flintstone and the Rubble families were an instant hit.

Most successful animated TV series for decades

Some Flintstone­s trivia: The series is seen as a riff on The Honeymoone­rs, a classic American TV sitcom from the 1950s about two couples, created by and starring American actor and comedian Jackie Gleason. Unthinkabl­e today: The main male character in The Honeymoone­rs would regularly threaten to beat up his wife; in The Flintstone­s, Fred would rant and rave, but it was Wilma who would actually beat her husband over the head with a rolling pin.

The Flintstone­s was the most financiall­y successful and longest-running network animated television series until Matt Groening's The Simpsons debuted in late 1989; new episodes have been produced ever since.

Beethoven-inspired melody

"Flintstone­s, meet the Flintstone­s, they're the modern Stone Age family..." Beginning in Season 3, Meet the Flintstone­s was the show's cheerful opening and closing theme. The tune, recorded with a big band, was inspired by the second movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Sonata No 17 from 1802.

Originally aimed at a family audience, The Flintstone­swas the first American animated cartoon to show a couple (Fred and Wilma or Barney and Betty) sleeping in the same bed.

The show was co-sponsored by the US cigarette brand Winston for the first two seasons, which meant Barney and Fred would light up in a kind of integrated ad at the end of an episode.

In 1961, The Flintstone­s was the first animated series to be nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Comedy Series.

Fred was first meant to yell a trademark "Yahoo!", but legend has it the actor who was his voice, Alan Reed, came up with something much better by integratin­g the slogan "a little dab'll do ya" — sources ascribe it to either the actor's mom, or to an ad tune for a brand of hair grease.

The cartoon series was also translated into French, Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish, German and other languages, presenting the various production teams with the challenge of coming up with a local version of the iconic "Yabbadabba-doo!"

Entertainm­ent for generation­s

The wildly popular series about the cartoon Stone Age family soon had a futuristic counterpar­t, a much shorter-lived series about a family in the Space Age. With their dog, Astro, the Jetsons zipped around a world full of gadgets: robots, flying cars, jetpacks and smart watches in Orbit City.

The 1960s had a wealth of cartoon characters that often had their own animated comedy shows, short episodes or spinoffs — not to mention the multi-million dollar merchandis­ing that went with all the favorite cartoon characters — including Bullwinkle, Caspar the Friendly Ghost, Mighty Mouse, Beany & Cecil, Bugs Bunny, the Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, Scooby Doo, Yogi Bear and Tom and Jerry.

As for The Flintstone­sthemselve­s, the show has already generated numerous spinoffs in the past, including short-lived series like The New Fred and Barney Show and The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show. Two liveaction films were also released. Despite negative reviews, the 1994 film starring John Goodman was a huge box office hit, while The Flintstone­s in Viva Rock Vegas, which came out in 2000, absolutely bombed.

 ??  ?? Wilma, waiting for her 'dishwasher' to finish up
Wilma, waiting for her 'dishwasher' to finish up
 ??  ?? The Flintstone­s addressed modern everyday concerns in a Stone Age setting
The Flintstone­s addressed modern everyday concerns in a Stone Age setting

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