Hanna-Barbera's answer to Saved by the Bell and Muppet Babies, a Saturday-Morning Cartoon that ran on NBC from 1991-92. It features Yogi Bear, Boo Boo Bear, Snagglepuss, Huckleberry Hound, and Cindy Bear as teenagers solving mysteries in "Jellystone Mall" under the watchful eye of Officer Smith (a younger Ranger Smith), while "Dickie" (a teenage Dick Dastardly) would try to foil them.
The show is drenched in the most early 90's aesthetics possible (it was essentially Yogi Bear for the MTV Generation), and it featured pop culture references of that era like Magilla Gorilla being turned into Magilla Ice. It was not commercially successful, and it killed off any chance of Yogi getting another series (at least until the 2010 film reboot, and then Jellystone! after that in 2021, a full 30 years since this show debuted) and is seen as the reason NBC stopped airing Saturday morning cartoons (the huge success of Peter Engel's live-action teen shows Saved By the Bell and California Dreams and failure of animated stablemate ProStars didn't help).
This show provides examples of:
- Accidental Hero: Yogi keeps horning in on Cindy's time with Magilla, unknowingly mucking up Dickie and Roxy's first two attempts to kidnap Magilla in the process.
- Adaptational Heroism: Unlike his adult self, teen Yogi acquires food legitimately instead of stealing it from picnickers, at worst merely taking advantage of free samples at the food court. The one time he's accused of theft in the show is a frame-up.
- Adults Are Useless: The adults in the show aren't active or busy in the show, leaving it up to the teenage cast to solve mysteries.
- Age Lift: In the original cartoons, Yogi and his friends were pretty much adults. Here, they are teenagers/kids.
- Ambiguously Gay: Snagglepuss, naturally...
- Anthropomorphic Shift: Everyone wears at least one article of clothing, not including Ring Around the Collar. Characters that were Civilized Animals as adults, like Yogi himself, Boo Boo and Snagglepuss, are accordingly bumped up to Funny Animal.
- Art Shift: Half the episodes are painted digitally, and the other half traditionally.
- Ascended Extra: Most Yogi spinoffs has Cindy make only guest appearances. She's part of the main cast in this show, as Yogi's girlfriend.
- Attention Whore: Roxy Bear is demeaning and rude to the main characters, acting like a standard teenage Alpha Bitch.
- Barefoot Cartoon Animal: Boo Boo, Huck and Snagglepuss.
- Benevolent Boss: Doggie Daddy is pretty quick to congratulate the kids on a job well-done.
- Bitch Alert: Again, Roxy.
- Bratty Teenage Daughter: Again Roxy, and Cindy Depending on the Writer.
- British Brevity: It got cancelled pretty quickly, though oddly for a US show, even its one season was only 13 episodes long.
- Brought Down to Normal: Atom Ant in "Super Duper Snag" after losing his Atomic Helmet for most of the episode.
- Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Yogi's not the most conventional detective, but noticing details relating to food help him solve a few cases.
- Catchphrase: At one point, Snagglepuss' catch phrase was changed to "Heavens to Rambo."
- Company Cross-References: Dickie's bicycle's design resembles the Mean Machine and his clothes resemble his uniform from Dastardly & Muttley in Their Flying Machines.
- Cool Board: Boo Boo has a skateboard, as part of the early 90s theme of the show.
- Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: All five of the kids to some extent, but Huck (as usual) fits both points to a tee.
- Distressed Dude: Super Snooper, thanks to his press agent during one episode. Later, Dickie Dastardly in that same episode.
- Enemy Mine: Huck and Dickie Dastardly team up to capture Wee Willie in "Mellow Fellow", naturally with Dickie intent on double crossing Huck for the reward afterwards.
- Expy: Lou and Murray, two elderly jailbirds who break out to try and retrieve stolen money they buried years ago, are essentially Bogel and Weerd if they were still alive.
- Extreme Doormat: Huckleberry, even more so than his adult form.
- Flanderization: Pretty much the whole cast, but mostly Cindy.
- Follow in My Footsteps: Augie is expected to follow in his father's footsteps and run the mall one day. He does demonstrate a good deal of business acumen.
- Fully-Dressed Cartoon Animal: Cindy Bear, the main female character of the show, wears a mini-dress and boots.
- Half Dressed Funny Animal: Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, and Roxy. Yogi wears a jacket and hi-tops with his signature outfit.
- Heterosexual Life-Partners: Boo Boo and Yogi (as always), as well as Huckleberry Hound and Snagglepuss.
- Honest Corporate Executive: Doggie Daddy is intent on financial success, but he's honest, hardworking, and kind to employees. Not surprising since he's the same adoring father he always is.
- Kid Detective: The premise of the show is Yogi and his friends as kids/early teenagers who solve mysteries in the mall.
- Loophole Abuse: Officially, the kids work at the mall's lost and found, but they use it as a front for their detective agency. They get involved in cases beyond the scope of a lost and found, but their reasoning is that a victim technically lost a given belonging. Officer Smith begrudgingly allows this so long as they stay out of trouble as often as possible.
- Massive Multiplayer Crossover: Moderate case: the series pits together Yogi, Boo Boo and Cindy Bear alongside Snagglepuss and Huckleberry Hound (as the heroic characters) and Dick Dastardly and his pet dog/sidekick Muttley (as the antagonists)
- Mellow Fellow: Huck as usual. For an extra bonus, one of his limelight episodes is even called the trope name.
- Mythology Gag: In one episode Huck is tasked with retrieving an ape named "Wee Willie", the same character Huck tussled with (as an adult) in his very first cartoon.
- Not Me This Time: When Snagglepuss lost a bust of William Shakespeare, he decided to make it seem it was stolen and accidentally got his friends to accuse Dick Dastardly.
- Obviously Evil: The majority of the villains in the show, including Dick Dastardly.
- Once per Episode: Yogi spun his hat as a signal for the viewer to put on special glasses for the 3-D scene.
- Phrase Catcher: Whenever Yogi finishes kicking ass or his friends come to the rescue, his friends exclaim, "Yo Yogi!"
- Produce Pelting: With Magilla missing before a performance and the crowd about to riot, Snagglepuss attempts to fill in. He immediately gets pelted with eggs and a watermelon. Succeeding attempts lead to him getting pelted with shoes and fish instead.
- Self-Deprecation: Practically the show's redeeming aspect. The Totally Radical gimmick is so unbefitting of classic Hanna-Barbera characters that a lot of the jokes are deliberately styled more like "your dad trying and failing to be hip."
- The Smurfette Principle: Downplayed with Cindy. She's the only female main character, but Roxy is a recurring character and there are always assorted female extras seen at the mall.
- So Proud of You: As ever, Doggie Daddy towards Augie on multiple occasions.
- Spin-Off Babies: Averted with Augie Doggie, who appears in the show with adult Doggie Daddy.
- Tagalong Kid: Secret Squirrel spends "Polly Want a Safe Cracker" following Yogi to learn about being a great detective. Yogi indulges a lot, though he expresses annoyance with the reliance on occasionally malfunctioning gadgets. The episode ends with Secret Squirrel starting to follow Boo Boo around instead.
- Three-Dimensional Episode: Was very fond of having some scenes suddenly in 3D. A VHS release of the show actually came packaged with 3D glasses.
- Three Shorts: At 13 episodes, the show actually avoided this for the most part. Only 5 used a two shorts format, while the others were half-hour stories.
- Took a Level in Jerkass: Downplayed example. Cindy is still the one girl, but far more temperamental and snarky than in most other interpretations.
- Vague Age: Boo Boo's age in the original series was pretty debatable, but this series only raises further questions. While he's under eighteen, it's not confirmed if he's a teenager or child like his friends.
- Valley Girl: Both Cindy and Roxy talk like this, to tie into the premise of the show.
- Well, Excuse Me, Princess!: Cindy at times, likely to modernize her from her dainty lovesick persona from the original cartoons.
- Wise Beyond Their Years: Augie Doggie typically offers a level-headed outlook, more so than his father during a crisis. He even got the old man a good deal on an insurance policy.
- Younger and Hipper: The show ages down the main cast to kids/early teenagers, gives them outfits fitting of the period it came out (1991), and has them stop crime in Jellystone Mall.
