A Pup Named Scooby-Doo - "The Story Stick", "Lights.
The Flintstones - "Swedish Visitors" (1963).
Top Cat - "King for a Day" (1962) (cameo).
The Quick Draw McGraw Show - Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy segment "Pop's Nature Pup" (1960).
MetLife - "Everyone", a 2012 commercial featuring various well-known animated characters.
Cartoon Network promos and advertisements (1990s).
Public Service Announcement for the American Melanoma Foundation (1992).
Public Service Announcement on leading a healthy lifestyle (1981).
Public Service Announcement on smoking (1968).
Yogi Bear, a live-action/CGI animated film released 17 December 2010 in 3-D.
Boo Boo and the Man - A 2000 short created by John Kricfalusi.
#Balu bear tv
Boo Boo Runs Wild, A Day in the Life of Ranger Smith, back-to-back 1999 TV specials for Cartoon Network created by John Kricfalusi and his company Spumco.
Scooby-Doo! in Arabian Nights, a 1994 TV special for TBS (Aladdin segment).
Yogi the Easter Bear, a 1994 TV special for first-run syndication.
Bear Yogi, a 1989 educational short made for Elementary schools
Hanna-Barbera's 50th: A Yabba Dabba Doo Celebration, a 1989 television special paying tribute to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera.
Yogi and the Invasion of the Space Bears (1988).
The Good, the Bad, and Huckleberry Hound (1988).
Yogi Bear and the Magical Flight of the Spruce Goose (1987).
#Balu bear movie
Yogi's Great Escape, a 1987 made-for-TV movie for syndication.
Yogi Bear Earthquake Preparedness, a short educational cartoon made in 1984 to teach young children preparations for earthquakes.
Yogi Bear's All-Star Comedy Christmas Caper, a 1982 television special starring Yogi and friends.
Yogi's First Christmas, a 1980 made-for-TV movie for syndication.
Casper's First Christmas, a 1979 TV special which had Casper the Friendly Ghost and Hairy Scary meeting Yogi and his gang.
Hanna-Barbera's All-Star Comedy Ice Revue, 1978 live-action television special.
Yogi's Ark Lark, a 1972 telefilm for The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie.
Hey There, It's Yogi Bear!, a 1963 animated feature released by Columbia Pictures.
Wake, Rattle & Roll (1990–1991) ( Fender Bender 500 segment).
#Balu bear series
The New Yogi Bear Show (1988-1989), a thirty-minute weekday animated series which aired in first-run syndication.
Laff-A-Lympics, where he captained the Yogi Yahooeys team from 1977 to 1979.
Yogi Bear & Friends, a syndicated animated series that aired between 19.
In 1960, The Ivy Three recorded a novelty song called "Yogi." It featured an imitation of Yogi's voice by Daws Butler, saying, "Hey, Boo-Boo," and "Yogi." It peaked at #8 on Billboard's Hot 100, and #22 on the Black Singles Chart.
The studio's bowling team in the early 1960s was known as "the Yogi Bears," even to the extent of Yogi's facial visage figuring prominently on team jackets.
Yogi Bear's Quakey-Shakey Van tours Southern California schools to simulate a full-scale earthquake as part of earthquake-readiness drills such is based on Japanese earthquake-simulator vans.
Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park Camp Resorts are a nationally-franchised campground chain.
In the early 1960s, there was a franchised chain of Yogi Bear's Honey-Fried Chicken restaurants.
The 16 August 1964 episode of the Yogi Bear comic strip distributed by the McNaught Syndicate plays on the Yogi Bear/Yogi Berra interconnexion as part of a tie-in storyline to the feature-length film Hey There, It's Yogi Bear! Brand Extension "It ain't over till it's over."-Yogi Berra In the series, he serves as a doctor.ĭuring character development, several names such as Bumpkin Bear, Yucca Bear and Huckleberry Bear were considered, but didn't quite click with either Hanna or Barbera-until the name of New York Yankees star Lawrence "Yogi" Berra came up in time, such would be adopted. In 2021, Yogi Bear appeared in Jellystone!. (which now owns the rights to all H-B properties) announced that a live-action/CGI animated Yogi Bear film was in the works and the teaser trailer of Where the Wild Things Are DVD. The rest of the week's Yogi Bear block featured reruns of Yogi's earlier cartoons. In 1988, a new series of Yogi cartoons premiered in syndication using the original format of short stories set in Jellystone Park. Over the years, Yogi starred in many different programs in increasingly strange locales, from heading an athletic team (in Laff-a-Lympics) to shooting for the stars (in Yogi's Space Race). Yogi Bear's original title card back when he was part of The Huckleberry Hound Show Yogi Bear cartoons were first shown as a segment of The Huckleberry Hound Show in October 1958, but Yogi became so popular, he was given his own show in 1960.