Difference between revisions of "A Jetson Christmas Carol"

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** [[November 11]], [[2011]]: [[Warner Archive Collection]] releases ''[[The Jetsons: Season 2, Volume 2]]'' on DVD.
** [[November 11]], [[2011]]: [[Warner Archive Collection]] releases ''[[The Jetsons: Season 2, Volume 2]]'' on DVD.
** [[October 13]], [[2020]]: Warner Home Video releases ''[[The Jetsons: The Complete Series]]'' (Hanna-Barbera Diamond Collection edition) on DVD.
** [[October 13]], [[2020]]: Warner Home Video releases ''[[The Jetsons: The Complete Series]]'' (Hanna-Barbera Diamond Collection edition) on DVD.
** [[June 21]], [[2022]]: Warner Home Video releases ''The Jetsons: The Complete Series'' on DVD.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 21:19, 30 June 2022

A Jetson Christmas Carol
File:.png
Premiere date December 13, 1985
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Marc Paykus
Barbara Levy
Director(s) Art Davis
Oscar Dufau
Carl Urbano
Rudy Zamora
Alan Zaslove
Gordon Hunt (voices)
Episode navigation
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Title card
TJ 241 title card.png

'"A Jetson Christmas Carol" is the forty-first and final episode of The Jetsons season two, and the sixty-third overall. It aired on December 13, 1985 in syndicated markets that featured The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera programming blocks. It was written by Marc Paykuss and Barbara Levy, and directed by Art Davis, Oscar Dufau, Carl Urbano, Rudy Zamora, Alan Zaslove, and Gordon Hunt.

As a result of showing his dislike of all things Christmas, three ghostly robotic apparitions visit the greedy Spacely to show him the error of his ways, from his past mistakes to what his current mistakes are and how it will affect his future.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Judy Jetson Janet Waldo
Elroy Jetson Daws Butler
Jane Jetson Penny Singleton
George Jetson George O'Hanlon
Astro Don Messick
Uniblab N/A
R.U.D.I. Don Messick
Cosmo Spacely Mel Blanc
Frank Welker (kid and teen Spacely)
Rosie Jean Vander Pyl
Orbitty Frank Welker
Marsley Allan Melvin
Ghost of Christmas Past Don Messick
Fred Flintstone N/A
Wilma Flintstone N/A
Mrs. Spacely Unavailable
Ghost of Christmas Present Allan Melvin
Ghost of Christmas Yet to Be N/A
Vet Unavailable


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

  • Flying cars

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The score was composed and conducted by Hoyt Curtin.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: December 13, 1985 in syndication

Behind the scenes

  • As the episode title suggests Spacely's story is a parody of Charles Dickens's novel A Christmas Carol.
  • In this episode, technology is so advanced and the kids have become so lazy, that they are being fed and wiped without using their own hands.
  • Mooningdale's is a parody of Bloomingdale's.
  • Young George is drawn the same way he looked when the Rejuvenex de-aged him in "Boy George."
  • Fred and Wilma, from The Flintstones, cameo as fictional characters at the drive-in movie theater, even though two years later they met the Jetsons in the crossover movie, The Jetsons Meet the Flintstones.

Errors

  • Spacely is clearly at least a decade older than George, yet in the flashback, they are about the same age.
  • The only excusable reasoning for spirit robots is that it's a dream.
  • Mrs. Spacely has gone back and forth between being called Stella and Petunia, but in this episode, she's out of the blue called Starla.
  • Even as a flashback, Mrs. Spacely looks awfully differently, from somewhat changed facial features, to brown hair and a tan.

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References