USA TODAY International Edition

Yabba dabba doo! ‘ The Flintstone­s’ turn 60

- Bill Keveney

“The Flintstone­s” was already prehistori­c when it premiered Sept. 30, 1960. On its 60th anniversar­y, primetime TV’s first animated series seems even older in some ways, surprising­ly contempora­ry in others and still gets callbacks in today’s popular culture.

The classic TV gem ( likely still in carbon form at the time), a takeoff of Jackie Gleason’s “The Honeymoone­rs” and the longest- running primetime cartoon until overtaken by “The Simpsons,” centered on Fred and Wilma Flintstone, a suburban Bedrock couple with mid- 20th Century sensibilit­ies living in 10,000 B. C.

For six seasons, Fred, who operated a Brontosaur­us- powered steam shovel at Mr. Slate’s quarry, and neighbor Barney Rubble got into and out of rock- headed scrapes, as Wilma and Barney’s wife, Betty, both smarter than their husbands, rolled their eyes. Babies Pebbles Flintstone and Bamm- Bamm Rubble showed up later to this chronologi­cally incorrect world of dinosaurs, mastodons and a mother lode of geological puns.

More than a half- century since “The Flintstone­s” ended its original run on ABC, “Brooklyn Nine- Nine,” “Better Things” and “Young Sheldon” make references to Bedrock’s favorite family; Fred’s Yabba Dabba Doo remains a universall­y recognized exclamatio­n; and various products still carry the Stone Age seal of approval.

So, happy anniversar­y, Fred and friends! To celebrate 60 years of punny rock references ( Fred played for Prinstone in a Poison Ivy League football game against Shale), here are six stonecold cool things about “The Flintstone­s” ( MeTV, weekdays, 6 EDT/ PDT; streaming on HBO Max) :

Enjoy a theme song for the ages

“Flintstone­s, Meet the Flintstone­s/ They’re a modern Stone Age family/ From the town of Bedrock/ They’re a page right out of history.” Come on. You know you’re humming along right now to the show’s brassy, classic theme.

The visual images are indelible, too: the quarry foreman pulling a bird air horn at the end of a shift, Fred sliding along a dinosaur’s tail to his foot- powered Flintmobil­e and Wilma, Pebbles, dinosaur dog Dino and the Rubbles join

ing him for a trip to the drive- in. During the closing credits, the family’s sabertooth­ed cat locks not- too- sharp Fred out of the house, leaving him banging on the door and yelling, “Wilma!”

“The Simpsons,” a superior series that has paid tribute to its predecesso­r, parodied the theme and visuals in one episode and The B- 52s, performing as The BC- 52s, covered the tune in the 1994 film, “The Flintstone­s.”

Perhaps surprising­ly, the wellknown theme didn’t debut until Season 3. During the first two years, the instrument­al “Rise and Shine“opened the show, with the credits featuring sponsor Winston cigarettes, a truly obsolete image today.

Wilma masters a mammoth vacuum cleaner

And by mammoth, we mean woolly, not huge. If anthropomo­rphism is the applicatio­n of human traits to animals or objects, “The Flintstone­s” variation might be called animal- thropomorp­hism, or critters as household appliances.

A short list includes Triceratop­s wheelbarro­w; porcupine dish scraper; single- horned dinosaur potato peeler; tortoise ottoman; and octopus dishwasher. The put- upon laborers frequently tossed off sad- sack wisecracks: “What about my dishwater tentacles?” the octopus lamented.

Birds never got a break. They were used like mops, electric toothbrush­es, can openers and record player needles.

One feathered friend appeared worn down from dawn crowing duty: “I’ll be glad when real roosters develop. I’ll sleep in every morning.”

From Barney to Bugs Bunny: That’s not all, folks

Mel Blanc, who played Barney, is known as The Man of a Thousand Voices and is considered by some to be the greatest voice actor.

Blanc, who also voiced Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Porky Pig, was joined by Alan Reed ( Fred), Jean Vander Pyl ( Wilma) and Bea Benaderet and Gerry Johnson ( Betty).

They were part of a golden age of behind- the- scenes voice actors that preceded today’s era of movie stars getting hired by studios that need recognizab­le names to promote animated films on network morning shows.

‘ Flintstone­s’ guests are literal rock stars

“The Flintstone­s” offered a who’s who of ’ 60s Hollyrock royalty. Ann- Margret, fresh off “Bye Bye Birdie,” sang as musical alter ego Ann- Margrock and Tony Curtis appeared as movie star Stoney Curtis. Other boulder- faced names portrayed by the show’s voice cast include: Ed Sullystone ( Ed Sullivan); Alvin Brickrock ( Alfred Hitchcock); Gary Granite ( Cary Grant); Rock Quarry ( Rock Hudson); and Perry Masonry/ Masonite ( TV lawyer Perry Mason).

The show embraced crossovers, with Samantha Stephens ( Elizabeth Montgomery) of “Bewitched,” another ABC family sitcom, moving into the neighborho­od in one episode and Hanna- Barbera’s Yogi Bear making a cameo in another.

Fred Inc. gets into movies, vitamins, cereal

“The Flintstone­s” inspired two liveaction films, 1994’ s “The Flintstone­s” and prequel “The Flintstone­s in Viva Rock Vegas” ( 2000). It introduced John Cenastone ( John Cena) in the 2015 animated film, “The Flintstone­s & WWE: Stone Age Smackdown,” and spawned numerous cartoon shows, too.

The success of the original series led to the launch of “The Jetsons,” another Hanna- Barbera cartoon set far in the future, in 1962. It lasted one season in primetime on ABC.

Children born decades after “The Flintstone­s” ended know the Flintstone­s and Rubbles as chewable vitamins, while others get their day started with a bowl of Fruity or Cocoa Pebbles. The Flintstone­s were featured in theme parks and roadside attraction­s, too.

Everything ancient is new again

The core “Flintstone­s” humor was anachronis­tic: suburban modernism in caveman clothing. Today, the 1960s milieu itself seems carbon- dated, but, in a curious way, elements of “The Flintstone­s” resonate, often by accident.

Fred’s foot-powered, steamrolle­rpropelled Flint mobile would be class ifiedasaz er o-emission vehicle, perhaps a response to climate change,i.e.,animpendin­g Ice Age.

The drive- in movie, featured in the credits, is back in vogue in our socially distanced pandemic era.

With a vinyl revival, record players no longer seem obsolete, although today’s hipsters won’t find the model that features a bird’s beak needle and tortoise turntable.

Rick Moranis, who played Barney in the 1994 flick, is back on screen these days after a two- decade break.

 ?? HANNA- BARBERA CARTOON INC. ?? “The Flintstone­s” premiered in 1960 as a modern stone- age family in the town of Bedrock.
HANNA- BARBERA CARTOON INC. “The Flintstone­s” premiered in 1960 as a modern stone- age family in the town of Bedrock.

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