Season 1 · Episode 1
Billy challenges Kid to a duel when the latter insults his hero, Montana BIll, but it turns out neither really want to go through with it. Now, both need to come up with excuses to back out.
Kid and his friends try to find a birthday gift for Aunt Martha.
Aunt Martha gets a present for Kid, but the delivery gets delayed. Joannie offers to go to Red Valley to fetch it, but Kid accidentally insults her when he doubts she can make it across the desert. Now, Kid and his friends try to discreetly protect Joannie as she makes her journey.
When KId and his friends discover that classes are suspended if someone is willing to come in and talk about their profession, they try to get people to come to their school to discuss their careers.
Dopey walks under a ladder and gets concerned that this will cause him to experience a bout of bad luck.
A prestigious producer comes to Nothing Gulch. Joannie and Little Cactus both want to be offered a role in his performance of Swan Lake, causing tension which is only worsened when both ask Kid to help them train.
Aunt Martha invites Mrs Molson for tea on the same day Montana Bill tries to steal Jolly Jumper. Kid has to try to maintain appearances while keeping his horse from being stolen.
Kid and his friends try to convince the governor not to cease train services to Nothing Gulch.
KId and his friends attempt to solve a maths problem involving two trains. They conclude that it's easier to simply recreate the problem with real trains rather than calculating, but issues arise when midway through they realise the two trains will crash!
Kid and his friends go on a field trip, but things don't go quite to plan when they get lost in a mineshaft.
The sheriff makes Dopey his deputy in order to teach him discipine, but Dopey starts becoming a massive stickler for the rules. Now Kid has to figure a way to snap him out of it.
Kid and his friends try to drum up business for his Aunt Martha's salon after a competing tavern opens up.
After all of the adults get food poisoning from a bad stew, Kid and his friends revel in their supervisionless freedom. However when they get bundled with the chores the adults normally handled, they realise the new arrangement is less rosy than they expected. Now Kid and his friends race to try and nurse their parents and guardians back to health.
While Aunt Martha is away, Miss Pencil gets Kid and the kids to put on a play, the Phantom of the Saloon.
KId offers to keep watch on Rosie's stagecoach as a favour, but hazards keep trying to make him fail. Can Kid prevent the stagecoach from being dirtied, damaged, or destroyed?
When Kid and Aunt Martha face a bedbug infestation issue, they temporarily move in with Joannie and Mrs Molson, causing friction.
Miss Pencil pairs Kid with his rival Billy for a project to try and get them to get along.
Kid spends a day with Little Cactus to learn the culture of the Apache.
When a bear wanders into Nothing Gulch, the adults try to catch it with a bear trap. Kid objects on the grounds of cruelty; he and his friends now race to try and lure the bear away themselves.
A lottery is being held at Nothing Gulch. Everyone has a prize they want to win, but Montana BIll has a unique solution for this - steal it!
A rogue buffalo wanders into Nothing Gulch, and the citizens need someone to stand guard atop the saloon and ring the school bell. The issue is, this would require someone to be able to ding the bell from a distance - can Kid and his slingshot do it?
Mrs Molson believes that Ms Pencil is unfit to be a teacher. Can Kid and his friends prove otherwise?
When the triplets take over Kid's and his friends' train hideout, Kid has to come up with a way to get rid of them.
The adults try to get Kid and his gang to take shower, but none of them want to.
Kid and his friends go mad when they find gold.
Kid gets a personality change after getting a knock on the head.
A traveling salesman advertises a tonic that can predict the future. Things come to a head when he uses it to predict Chihuahua Hill will burn down.
Kid and his friends head to the woods to find Lisette's lost cow, Ginger.
Kid and his friends become investigative reporters.
Dopey adopts a vulture.
Billy Bad puts up a fake poster of himself with a ludicrous bounty, but runs into trouble when Montana BIll thinks it's real and is not happy someone is more wanted than him.
Kid and his friends try to convince Joannie not to move east.
Kid and his friends are excited for the annual saloon party, but Aunt Martha seems despondent. Can Kid and his friends figure out what's up?
Kid needs to rack his brains to think up a way to stop his pet horse Jolly from being sold.
KId and his friends suffer mishaps trying to get their photo taken.
Aunt Martha is adamant Kid practice piano, which is an issue as Kid as his friends have a horseshoe throwing competition with Billy scheduled.
Old Timer starts attending Miss Pencil's school to make up for not having had an education, but he clashes with KId and the rest of the children in an intergenerational rivalry.
Paquito goes overboard playing a bunch of practical jokes on everyone.
When Dopey concludes that it's better to be a bandit than a cowboy, Kid and Lisette try to convine him to rescind being bad.
Jimmy shows Kid and his friends the newly invented movie projector, but when Dopey accidentally destroys the film, it's up to them to recreate the scenes before it's due to be shown on the big screen.
Kid procures a cactus flower to give to Joannie, but things go awry when a misunderstanding causes Lisette to think it's for her.
A photographer comes to Nothing Gulch wanting to capture something unique.
Kid and his friends get caught up in chasing trends when a salesman comes to Nothing Gulch selling exotic goods from Texas.
After a rigged duel, Kid is forced to become Billy's servant.
Mrs Molson brings in a new invention that she calls the 'horse of the future': a two-wheeled bicycle.
Kid and his friends help the sheriff find his lost badge on the same day an inspector comes into town.
Aunt Martha's sister Gilda comes to visit Nothing Gulch, but when they start bickering over conflicting accounts of their childhood, Kid and his friends have to come up with a method to get them to make up.
Having run out of coffee Mr Zao is stressed out. Kid and his friends pitch in to help him run the laundromat and get him fresh beans.
Kid celebrates his tenth birthday.
Kid babytsites Lisette's baby brother Jimbo.
Joannie gets headlice, and when Billy steals the Lice-Be-Gone tonic, Kid has to chase him down to get it back before Joannie's parents implement their backup plan to cut off all of Joannie's hair.
Aunt Martha gets Sam to bring Kid to the wilds to experience what it's like to be a real cowboy, hoping the harsh experience will make him realise the life isn't all that it's cracked up to be.
The Huckleberry Hound Show is a 1958 syndicated animated series and the second from Hanna-Barbera following The Ruff & Reddy Show, sponsored by Kellogg's. Three segments were included in the program: one featuring Huckleberry Hound; another starring Yogi Bear and his sidekick Boo Boo; and a third with Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks, two mice who in each short found a new way to outwit the cat Mr. Jinks.
1958
Fievel's American Tails is an American/Canadian animated television series, produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblimation animation studio, Nelvana, and Universal Cartoon Studios. It aired for one season in 1992, and continued Fievel's adventures from the film An American Tail: Fievel Goes West. In 1993 and 1994, MCA/Universal Home Video released twelve episodes on six VHS video-cassettes, two Laserdisc volumes. These have been the only home video releases of the cartoon, at least in the United States. In the United Kingdom, 12 episodes were released on six video-cassettes in 1995, but were in a different episode order to the United States and Vol.4 features the only episode that hasn't been released in the United States. Episodes have been released on DVD in France, Germany, and Italy. Universal currently has no plans to release the show on DVD in the United States, as of November 19, 2009.
1992
The cowboy who draws a gun faster than his shadow is back! Lucky Luke, the famous wandering cowboy fights crime and injustice, most often in the form of the bumbling Dalton brothers. He rides Jolly Jumper, "the smartest horse in the world" and is often accompanied by Rantanplan, "the stupidest dog in the universe".
2001
He still lives at home with his Momma, his best friend is a doll, and he's the Sheriff of Old Town.
2019
No description available.
1977
Punkin' Puss & Mushmouse is a cartoon produced by Hanna-Barbera and originally aired as a segment on the 1964-1966 cartoon The Magilla Gorilla Show.
1964
Taking place in a Wild West setting, Ricochet Rabbit works as a sheriff in the town of Hoop 'n' Holler. Ricochet bounces off stationary objects yelling "Bing-bing-bing!" His deputy and foil Droop-a-Long Coyote is not as fast and is very clumsy.
Lucky Luke, with his horse Double Six, travels the Old West to right wrongs and bring evildoers (usually his traditional enemies the Dalton Brothers) to justice. "The man who shoots faster than his shadow."
1984
On the planet New Texas, people live in futuristic conditions reminiscent of the Wild West. Here, Marshall Bravestarr fights for justice and righteousness with his supernatural abilities.
1987
The Quick Draw McGraw Show is the third cartoon television production created by Hanna-Barbera, starring an anthropomorphic cartoon horse named Quick Draw McGraw. The series featured 3 cartoons per episode, one each by Quick Draw McGraw & Baba Looey, father and son dog duo Augie Doggie & Doggie Daddy, and cat and mouse detectives Snooper & Blabber.
1959
Slow drawls, quick draws, heroes and outlaws all have one thing in common -- "The Legend of Calamity Jane." Fast with the whip, and even faster with a smile, Jane rides the trails and backwoods in search of truth and justice, showing what real heroes are made of in this animated western adventure series.
1997
Temple Houston is a 1963–64 NBC television series which has been called "the first attempt . . . to produce an hour-long Western series with the main character being an attorney in the formal sense." It was the only show Jack Webb sold to a network during his ten months as the head of production at Warner Bros. Television. It was also the lone series in which actor Jeffrey Hunter played a regular part.
1963
The High-Sierra adventures of Ben Cartwright and his sons as they run and defend their ranch while helping the surrounding community.
Trackdown is an American Western television series starring Robert Culp that aired on CBS between 1957 and 1959. More than seventy episodes of this series were produced by Dick Powell's Four Star Television and filmed at the Desilu-Culver Studio. The series was itself a spin-off of Powell's anthology series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater.
1957
F Troop is a satirical American television sitcom that originally aired for two seasons on ABC-TV. It debuted in the United States on September 14, 1965 and concluded its run on April 6, 1967 with a total of 65 episodes. The first season of 34 episodes was filmed in black-and-white, but the show switched to color for its second season.
1965
A game warden and his family navigate the changing political and socio-economic climate in a small rural town in Wyoming on the verge of economic collapse. Surrounded by rich history and vast wildlife, the township hides decades of schemes and secrets that are yet to be uncovered.
2021