Hong Kong Phooey (character)
From Hanna-Barbera Wiki
- This article is about the main title character. For the TV series, see Hong Kong Phooey (TV series). For other uses, see Hong Kong Phooey.
Hong Kong Phooey | |
---|---|
Hong Kong Phooey in "Car Thieves". | |
Species | Dog |
Gender | Male |
Affiliation | Spot Sergeant Flint Rosemary Scooby Doobies Black Lightning |
Father | Not mentioned |
Mother | Not mentioned |
Marital status | Single |
First appearance | HKP: "Car Thieves" (1974) |
Played by | Scatman Crothers (1974-1977) Phil LaMarr (2018) |
Hong Kong as Penry Pooch | |
Hong Kong Phooey | |
Wacky Races | |
Wacky Races | |
Black Lightning/Hong Kong Phooey Special |
Hong Kong Phooey is a masked anthropomorphic superhero dog and the main title character of the Hong Kong Phooey animated TV series. His voice was originated by Scatman Crothers.
Character description
Biography
Hong Kong Phooey! Number One Super Guy!
Crossover Era
Laff-A-Lympics
Celebrating another 50 years! 50 years of fun!
Hong Kong Gets the CGI (Test) Treatment
Wacky Races (2017) cameo
SCOOB!
Hong Kong in the Funny Books
Scooby teams up with Hong Kong Phooey
Development
Gallery
- Main article: Hong Kong Phooey (character)/Gallery
Toys and merchandise
- Main article: Hong Kong Phooey (character)/Toys
In popular culture
- In the Family Guy episode "I Never Met the Dead Man," Peter can't resist the urge to jump into a children's ball pit at Cheesie Charlie's, shouting out "Hong Kong Phooey!" as he does.
- In the Robot Chicken episode "Ban on the Fun," during the Laff-A-Munich sketch. Hong Kong Phooey helps out the Scooby Doobies in killing the Really Rottens after the murders of the Yogi Yahooeys. After seeing Dread Baron and Mumbly blown up by Captain Caveman, he dies; presumably he killed himself.
- In The Goldbergs episode "Kara-te," Murray called Barry's karate performance for the talent show a "Hong Kong Phooey act."
Comic Book Men
- "To the Bat Cave:" Walt says his favorite talking dog is Hong Kong Phooey.
- "Dukes of Jersey:" Kevin Smith used Hong Kong Phooey as an example of being a fan of something, but wouldn't be so drastic as to get a tattoo of a show he may later have no interest in.
- "KITT and Caboodle:" Walt mentions how Hong Kong Phooey was created during the kung fu craze of the 1970s.