The Super Globetrotters: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Animated Tattoo]]: This was the power of Tattoo Man.
* [[Animated Tattoo]]: This was the power of Tattoo Man.
* [[Archived Army]]: In one episode the Time Lord assemebled "the greatest criminals in history" into a gang.
* [[Archived Army]]: In one episode the Time Lord assemebled "the greatest criminals in history" into a gang.
* [[Brought to You By The Letter S]]: F is for Fluid Man
* [[Brought to You By The Letter "S"]]: F is for Fluid Man
* [[Celebrity Toons]]
* [[Celebrity Toons]]
* [[Egomaniac Hunter]]: Bwana Bob
* [[Egomaniac Hunter]]: Bwana Bob
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* [[Me's a Crowd]]: Multi Man
* [[Me's a Crowd]]: Multi Man
* [[Transformation Sequence]]
* [[Transformation Sequence]]
* [[What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart Anyway]]: One of the Villains of the Week was "Bull Moose" who evidently had all the powers of [[Theodore Roosevelt|Teddy Roosevelt]]. Except for the whole [[Memetic Badass]] thing.
* [[What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?]]: One of the Villains of the Week was "Bull Moose" who evidently had all the powers of [[Theodore Roosevelt|Teddy Roosevelt]]. Except for the whole [[Memetic Badass]] thing.


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Revision as of 20:15, 26 January 2014

The Super Globetrotters is a 1979 spinoff of The Harlem Globetrotters, produced by Hanna-Barbera for NBC. It ran for 13 episodes. It's five semi-real-life basketball entertainers who gain super powers. Ludicrous super powers. Nate Branch turns into water, Curly Neal retracts his limbs into his body and becomes a basketball, Twiggy Sanders can use his body as a rope, Sweet Lou Dunbar stores gadgets in his immense afro, and Geese Ausbie can duplicate himself. They fight villains, mostly by challenging them to basketball games.

Some of the powers and costumes were taken directly from Hanna-Barbera's The Impossibles.

The whole show is parodied in a Futurama movie.


Tropes used by the series: