Scooby-Doo (animation): Difference between revisions

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'''Daphne:''' That's Velma. What's she calling "mayday" for? Today's June 5th! }}
** In ''What's New, Scooby Doo?,'' Velma became a bit more as snarky as she was smart, albeit her fear of clowns came suddenly to the surface. And in [[Scooby Doo Mystery Inc]], she tacks on cynicism, her obsessiveness to Shaggy and her contempt (as of episode 10) of Scooby.
* [[Follow the Leader]]: Quite a few shows ripped this off. Heck, Hanna-Barbera Studios itself [[Self -Plagiarism|Self-Plagiarized]] this formula many times.
* [[Food as Bribe]]: Shaggy and Scooby can be coaxed into doing anything for food, namely Scooby Snacks.
* [[Foreshadowing]]: ''Zombie Island'' has several signs linking to the end of the mystery, including one in {{spoiler|one of the chase sequences, where a Zombie gives Shaggy a vine to pull Scooby out, at first, it looks like just a gag involving the whole "Monster helps them to save themselves", but it foreshadows that the Zombies are ''not'' as evil as they're made out to be.}}
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* [[Wonderful Life]]
* [[Wraparound Background]]
* [[You Fail History Forever]] & [[You Fail Religious Studies Forever]]: ''Witch's Ghost'' treats witches and [[Useful Notes/Wicca|Wicca]] as two separate [[Witch Species]], meaning a) one character claims his ancestor was a Wiccan who was burned at the stake 300 years before the religion was founded ({{spoiler|granted, said character was lying and she really was a witch}}), and b) one of the Hex Girls is "one-sixteenth Wiccan".
** Not to mention that there were never any witches burnt at the stake in America. They were either hanged, crushed with stones, or sentenced to imprisonment.
* [[Younger Than They Look]]: They look like teenagers to you? Possibly lampshaded in the Valentine's Day special of ''What's New, Scooby Doo?'' where a flashback shows a much more teenage-looking Shaggy breaking up with his then-girlfriend. ([[Your Mileage May Vary|It's a little subjective]], but the beginning of ''Zombie Island'' heavily implies the characters are now college-age and subsequent animated versions of the franchise usually seem to tacitly follow suit even if the continuity is often vague...)