- Born: 1969
- Birthplace: Television
- Best known as:
Scaredy-cat 1970s cartoon dog
Blog posts mentioning Scooby-Doo
4 good links
- Hanna-Barbera Official Site
Home to Scooby, Fred Flintstone, and many others
- Scooby-Doo Facts
Archived version of an amusing 2002 E! Online feature
- Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Production notes and comments on the 2004 film
- Scooby-Doo: Icon of a Generation?
The links are long dead, but still a funny recap of the '90s Scooby renaissance
Scooby-Doo Biography
Scooby-Doo was the title star of a long-running Saturday-morning cartoon of the 1970s and '80s. A comically nervous Great Dane, Scooby spent each episode hunting ghosts with four human teenagers, including the always-hungry hippie boy Shaggy, the brainy Velma, the buff Fred and the beautiful Daphne. (The group drove around in a van called the Mystery Machine.) In the 1990s Scooby-Doo returned as a nostalgic pop icon for Generation X. A Scooby-Doo feature film was released in 2002, with a computer-generated Scooby cavorting with a live-action cast including Sarah Michelle Gellar as Daphne, Freddie Prinze Jr. as Fred and Matthew Lillard as Shaggy. The film was a hit, and a sequel, Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed, followed in 2004.
Extra credit:
The voice of Scooby's human pal Shaggy was provided by "American Top 40" radio personality Casey Kasem... Scrappy-Doo, a puppyish nephew of Scooby-Doo, appeared in some episodes of the cartoon; Scrappy is famously disliked by many devoted Scooby fans.
