Difference between revisions of "Hi-Tech Wreck"

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'''"Hi-Tech Wreck"''' is the nineteenth episode of ''[[The Jetsons (TV series)|The Jetsons]]'' season two, and the forty-second overall. It aired on [[October 17]], [[1985]] in syndicated markets that featured ''[[The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera]]'' programming blocks. It was written by [[Bill Allen]], and directed by [[Art Davis]], [[Oscar Dufau]], [[Carl Urbano]], [[Rudy Zamora]], [[Alan Zaslove]], and [[Gordon Hunt]].
'''"Hi-Tech Wreck"''' is the nineteenth episode of ''[[The Jetsons (TV series)|The Jetsons]]'' season two, and the forty-second overall. It aired on [[October 17]], [[1985]] in syndicated markets that featured ''[[The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera (syndication block)|The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera]]'' programming blocks. It was written by [[Bill Allen]], and directed by [[Art Davis]], [[Oscar Dufau]], [[Carl Urbano]], [[Rudy Zamora]], [[Alan Zaslove]], and [[Gordon Hunt]].


A successful investment opportunity between Spacely Space Sprockets and a major corporation rides on George keeping R.U.D.I. from overloading, which, of course, means the end of his job, if he fails.
A successful investment opportunity between Spacely Space Sprockets and a major corporation rides on George keeping R.U.D.I. from overloading, which, of course, means the end of his job, if he fails.

Revision as of 14:13, 27 December 2021

Hi-Tech Wreck
File:.png
Premiere date October 17, 1985
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Bill Allen
Director(s) Art Davis
Oscar Dufau
Carl Urbano
Rudy Zamora
Alan Zaslove
Gordon Hunt (voices)
Episode navigation
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Title card
TJ 219 title card.png

"Hi-Tech Wreck" is the nineteenth episode of The Jetsons season two, and the forty-second overall. It aired on October 17, 1985 in syndicated markets that featured The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera programming blocks. It was written by Bill Allen, and directed by Art Davis, Oscar Dufau, Carl Urbano, Rudy Zamora, Alan Zaslove, and Gordon Hunt.

A successful investment opportunity between Spacely Space Sprockets and a major corporation rides on George keeping R.U.D.I. from overloading, which, of course, means the end of his job, if he fails.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
George Jetson George O'Hanlon
Cosmo Spacely Mel Blanc
Jane Jetson Penny Singleton
Elroy Jetson Daws Butler
Tow truck guy Unavailable
Judy Jetson Janet Waldo
Astro Don Messick
Mr. Megabucks Unavailable
R.U.D.I. Don Messick
Starla Unavailable
Orbitty Frank Welker
Rosie N/A


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The score was composed and conducted by Hoyt Curtin.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: October 17, 1985 in syndication

Behind the scenes

  • Some of the animation is clearly the work of John K.
  • Rosie is treated nothing more than a household appliance in this episode.
  • U-Fly is a parody of U-Haul.

Errors

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References