What's New, Scooby-Doo? - Season 2 Backdrop Blur
What's New, Scooby-Doo? - Season 2 Poster
8.3 3 Seasons • 42 Episodes

What's New, Scooby-Doo? - Season 2

There's no business like ghost business and when you join Mystery Inc. you get to travel! Start packing because you're going on an endless spooktacular summer vacation, visiting countries from around the ghostly globe – including Egypt, Greece, Tokyo and Transylvania… even the snowy glaciers of the South Pole! Thank goodness you're not afraid of ghosts...or vampires, mummies, an invisible madman and fire-breathing toy dragons!

Seasons

Top Cast

  • Frank Welker

    Frank Welker

    Fred Jones / Scooby-Doo (voice)

  • Casey Kasem

    Casey Kasem

    Shaggy Rogers (voice)

  • Mindy Cohn

    Mindy Cohn

    Velma Dinkley (voice)

  • Grey DeLisle

    Grey DeLisle

    Daphne Blake (voice)

Overview

There's no business like ghost business and when you join Mystery Inc. you get to travel! Start packing because you're going on an endless spooktacular summer vacation, visiting countries from around the ghostly globe – including Egypt, Greece, Tokyo and Transylvania… even the snowy glaciers of the South Pole! Thank goodness you're not afraid of ghosts...or vampires, mummies, an invisible madman and fire-breathing toy dragons!

Recommendations

The New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo Show

The New Scooby and Scrappy Doo Show is the sixth incarnation of the Hanna-Barbera Saturday morning cartoon Scooby-Doo. It premiered on September 10, 1983, and ran for one season on ABC as a half-hour program made up of two eleven-minute short cartoons. The show is a return to the mystery solving format and reintroduces Daphne after a four-year absence. The plots of each episode feature her, Shaggy, Scooby-Doo, and Scrappy-Doo solving supernatural mysteries under the cover of being reporters for a teen magazine.

The New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo Show

8.0 1983
The New Scooby-Doo Movies

Aside from doubling the length of each episode, The New Scooby-Doo Movies differed from its predecessor in the addition of a rotating special guest star slot; each episode featured real-life celebrities or well known fictional characters joining the Mystery, Inc. gang in solving the mystery of the week. Some episodes, in particular the episodes guest-starring the characters from The Addams Family, Batman, and Jeannie, deviated from the established Scooby-Doo format of presenting criminals masquerading as supernatural beings by introducing real ghosts, witches, monsters, and other such characters into the plots.

The New Scooby-Doo Movies

7.7 1972