Space Station Scooby

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Space Station Scooby
Velma and science heroes float foward.png
To infinity and beyond!
Premiere date July 2, 2020
Starring Frank Welker
Matthew Lillard
Grey Griffin
Kate Micucci
Bill Nye
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Dee Bradley Baker
Music composed by Steven Morrell
Writer(s) Annalisa LaBianco
Jeffery Spencee
Director(s) Sean Bishop
Collette Sunderman (voices)
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Title card
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"Space Station Scooby" is the twenty-sixth and final episode of Scooby-Doo and Guess Who? season one. It aired on July 2, 2020 on Boomerang's SVOD service. It was written by Annalisa LaBianco and Jeffery Spencer, produced by series creator, Chris Bailey, directed by Sean Bishop, and voice directed by Collette Sunderman.

Science and science fiction collide when Mystery Inc. joins Bill Nye aboard a space station, where they just happen to meet Neil deGrasse Tyson and the tardigrade monster who's chasing him.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Fred: I can't believe it! It's...
Mystery Inc.: Bill Nye and Neil deGrasse Tyson!

Pierre Jacques: And we would have gotten away with it, too, if it weren't for you meddling kids, and science-know-it-alls, Neil deGrasse Tyson and Bill Nye!

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Jacques Pierre and Pierre Jacques Dee Bradley Baker
Olga Grey Griffin
Neil deGrasse Tyson Himself
Aiko Grey Griffin
Tardigrade monster Dee Bradley Baker
Bill Nye Himself
Velma Dinkley Kate Micucci
Daphne Blake Grey Griffin
Fred Jones Frank Welker
Scooby-Doo Frank Welker
Shaggy Rogers Matthew Lillard
Steve Urkel


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

Production

Development

Filming

It was copyrighted in 2018.

Music

The theme song, entitled "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?," was written by Chris Bailey, and performed by David Poe. It was produced by Vivek Maddala. The episode's main music was composed by Steven Morrell.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

Behind the scenes

  • With every episode's title card, one of the gang announces the guest star, which is Velma this time.
  • Oddly, when Fred reacts to seeing Neil, he doesn't start off by saying his catchphrase "Hold the phone."
  • Star Trek references:
    • The NX-NYE is an allusion to the NX-01 Enterprise in the TV series Star Trek: Enterprise.
    • The tardigrade monster resembles the tardigrade monster from the TV series Star Trek: Discovery.
  • Star Wars references:
    • Fred paraphrases the lines "I've got a bad feeling about this" and "We're going to have company."
    • Nye says to Velma, "Nice work, I owe you one," which is similar to what Han Solo says to Luke.
    • The drone looks similar in appearance to the training remote Luke uses in A New Hope.
  • Shaggy says "Zoinks" thrice.
  • Daphne says "Jeepers" once.
  • Neil directly talks to the audience, or more specifically the middle schoolers who will hopefully be watching this episode, when he says that they will be the ones heading to Mars by 2033.
  • Alien references:
    • Scooby thinks there's an alien crawling around his chest, similar to a Chestburster.
    • When Scooby and Shaggy first run into the tardigrade monster, it snarls up close to their faces, just as the alien did to Ellen Ripley.
    • Neil's line, "In space, not only can no one hear you scream, but they can't hear you explode, either" is a paraphrase of the tagline to the film: In space, no one can hear you scream.
    • The tardigrade monster is knocked out of the airlock just like the alien is knocked out of the airlock.
  • When Shaggy and Scooby crawl backward away from the tardigrade monster, video game music is played.
  • Fred received the Mystery Machine's remote control from Urkel in "When Urkel-Bots Go Bad!"
  • Bill & Neil have had unfortunate encounters with Urkel themselves.
  • The NX-NYE using the Mystery Machine as a landing gear is similar to when the Firebird uses elevator cars as landing gears in the Thunderbirds (1965) episode "Trapped in the Sky."

Errors

  • The title card of this episode, along with the one for "A Mystery Solving Gang Divided," leave out an exclamation mark, but considering the other 50 episodes do, this could be considered a typo.
  • Shaggy & Scooby are afraid to go into space as if they had never already done that in the direct-to-video film Scooby-Doo! Moon Monster Madness.

Everlasting influence

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References