Jabberjaw is a great white shark who has the brain of a sardine and the courage of a guppy. He is also a drummer for The Neptunes, a rock group made up of four teenagers — Biff, Shelly, Bubbles and Clamhead — who live in an underwater civilization in the year 2076. Jabberjaw and The Neptunes travel to various underwater cities where they encounter and deal with diabolical villains who want to conquer the undersea world.
Per a great deal of Hanna-Barbera's output in the 1970s, the format and writing for Jabberjaw was similar to that for Scooby-Doo and Josie and the Pussycats. The show also drew inspiration (in the use of a shark as a character) from the then-recent film Jaws. It also shared The Flintstones' penchant for making use of puns as the names of locations, people, etc., in this case, ocean-themed puns (such as "Aqualaska" instead of Alaska).
Sixteen 30-minute episodes of Jabberjaw were produced, which aired on ABC Saturday Morning from September 11, 1976 to September 3, 1977 and rebroadcast for a second season of reruns on Sunday Morning from September 11, 1977 to September 3, 1978. In the 1980s, repeats of the kooky Carcharodon were shown on USA Cartoon Express and later resurfaced on Cartoon Network and Boomerang. For whatever reason, this is one of a number of shows made before the mid-1980s seen on the Cartoon Network and Boomerang to have been taken from PAL prints.
Jabberjaw (voiced by Frank Welker) is an air-breathing great white shark whose voice and mannerisms were similar to Curly Howard of the Three Stooges. Jabberjaw found it hard to get respect in a society where "shark ejectors" (robots that would guard various buildings or cities against sharks being allowed to enter) were commonplace, prompting him to frequently utter his catchphrase (borrowed from comedianRodney Dangerfield): "No respect!"
Shelly (voiced by Pat Parris) is a dark-haired young woman who played tambourine for The Neptunes. Shelly was intelligent, haughty and abrasive (similar to Josie and the Pussycats'Alexandra) and while she held a great deal of contempt for Jabberjaw (or "blubberhead" as she would call him), she did have some fondness for him deep down and occasionally showed it. Also, she's sometimes irritated by Bubbles' idiocy.
Bubbles (voiced by Julie McWhirter) is a blonde-haired young woman who played keyboard for The Neptunes. She was extremely ditzy and dimwitted, has a cute giggle, similar to Josie and the Pussycats'Melody. Shelly sometimes nicknames her "Ding-a-Ling" or "Bubblehead". Her voice and mannerisms were similar to Gracie Allen, wife of George Burns. Whenever she volunteers to help, she blows it.
Clamhead (voiced by Barry Gordon) is a young man who played bass guitar for The Neptunes. His catchphrases were crying out "Abba-abba-abba!" and "Wowee-wow-wow-wow!" whenever he got excited. Clamhead was Jabberjaw's best friend, and bore a strong resemblance to Scooby-Doo's Shaggy and to Josie and the Pussycats'Alexander.
Broadcast history
Original ABC broadcast:
Telecast: ABC Saturday Morning September 11, 1976 - September 3, 1977
Retelecast: ABC Sunday Morning September 11, 1977 - September 3, 1978
Broadcast Schedules (all EDT):
September 1976 - November 1976, ABC Saturday 9:00-9:30 am
December 1976 - September 1977, ABC Saturday 8:30-9:00 am
September 1977 - September 1978, ABC Sunday 10:30-11:00 am
Episodes
Jabberjaw and The Neptunes. Counterclockwise: Jabberjaw (drums), Bubbles (keyboard), Biff (guitar), Shelly (tambourine) and Clamhead (bass guitar).
JBJ-1. Dr. Lo Has Got To Go (prod. #84-1, September 11, 1976)
JBJ-2. There's No Place Like Outer Space (#84-2, September 18, 1976)
JBJ-3. Atlantis, Get Lost (#84-4, September 25, 1976)
JBJ-4. Run, Jabber, Run (#84-3, October 2, 1976)
JBJ-5. The Sourpuss Octopuss (#84-5, October 9, 1976)
JBJ-6. Hang Onto Your Hat, Jabber (#84-6, October 16, 1976)
JBJ-7. The Great Shark Switch (#84-7, October 23, 1976)
JBJ-8. Claim-Jumped Jabber (#84-8, October 30, 1976)
JBJ-9. Ali Jabber and the Secret Thieves (#84-9, November 6, 1976)
JBJ-10. Help, Help, It's the Phantom of the Kelp (#84-10, November 13, 1976)
JBJ-11. No Helpin' the Sculpin' (#84-11, November 20, 1976)
JBJ-12. The Bermuda Triangle Tangle (#84-12, November 25, 1976*)
JBJ-13. Malice in Aqualand (#84-13, November 27, 1976)
JBJ-14. The Fast-Paced Chase Race (#84-14, December 4, 1976)
JBJ-15. The Piranha Plot (#84-16, December 11, 1976)
JBJ-16. There's No Heel Like El Eel (#84-15, December 18, 1976)
*Telecast at Noon (EST), Thursday afternoon, November 25, 1976, as part of ABC's Thanksgiving Funshine Festival.
Production credits
EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: JOSEPH BARBERA AND WILLIAM HANNA
CREATED BY: Joe Ruby AND Ken Spears
DIRECTOR: Charles A. Nichols
CREATIVE PRODUCER: Iwao Takamoto
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Alex Lovy
STORYBOARD DIRECTION: Don Jurwich, Michael O'Connor, Paul Sommer, Kay Wright
RECORDING DIRECTOR: Alex Lovy
STORY EDITOR: Ray Parker
STORY: George Atkins, Haskell Barkin, John Bates, Larz Bourne, Tom Dagenais, Robert Fisher
VOICES: Tommy Cook, Regis Cordic, Ron Feinberg, Barry Gordon, Gay Hartwig, Hettie Lynn Hurtes, Casey Kasem, Keye Luke, Julie McWhirter, Don Messick, Pat Parris, Vic Perrin, Barney Phillips, Hal Smith, John Stephenson, Janet Waldo, Lennie Weinrib, Frank Welker
PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR: Victor O. Schipek
GRAPHICS: Iraj Paran
CREATIVE DESIGN SUPERVISOR: Bob Singer
CHARACTER DESIGN: Donna Zeller
UNIT DIRECTOR: Volus Jones
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Hoyt Curtin
MUSICAL SUPERVISOR: Paul DeKorte
LAYOUT: Mike Arens, Dale Barnhart, Hak Ficq, C.L. Hartman, Alex Ignatiev, Ray Jacobs, Homer Jonas, Bill Lignante, Jim Mueller, Tony Rivera, Linda Rowley, Tony Sgrol, Al Wilson
ANIMATION: Frank Andrina, Tom Barnes, Bill Carney, Rudy Cataldi, Lillian Evans, Otto Feuer, Hugh Fraser, Fernando Gonzalez, Jack Hadley, Bob Hathcock, Dan Mills, Ken Muse, Constantin Mustatea, Floyd Norman, Eduardo Olivares, Don Patterson, Tom Ray, Morey Reden, Lenn Redman, Ken Southworth, Leo Sullivan, Dick Thompson, Carlo Vinci, Russ Von Neida
BACKGROUNDS: Fernando Arce, Fernando Montealegre, Phil Phillipson, Robert Schaefer, Marilyn Shimokochi, Dennis Venizelos
TECHNICAL SUPERVISOR: Frank Paiker
CHECKING AND SCENE PLANNING: Evelyn Sherwood
INK AND PAINT SUPERVISOR: Billie Kerns
XEROGRAPHY: Star Wirth
SOUND DIRECTION: Bill Getty, Richard Olson
SUPERVISING FILM EDITOR: Larry Cowan
MUSIC EDITORS: Pat Foley, Chip Yaras
EFFECT EDITORS: Richard Allen, Terry Moore
NEGATIVE CONSULTANT: William E. DeBoer
POST PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR: Joed Eaton
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Jayne Barbera
CAMERA: George Epperson, Charles Flekal, Curt Hall, Ron Jackson, Jerry Smith, Norman Stainback, Roy Wade
In 1978, Jabberjaw was featured in a new NBC Saturday morning program called Yogi's Space Race, in which he participated in intergalactic racing competitions with Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound and several new characters. Jabber's racing partner was a lazy bloodhound named Buford (from The Buford Files of Buford and the Galloping Ghost).
Jabberjaw made a guest appearance in the Adult Swim animated television series Sealab 2021 in the episode, "Return of Marco" (2004), where he was one of the many sharks impaled with spears by the underwater cave tribe called the Snarkells.
Jabberjaw appeared later still in sporadic appearances on Cartoon Network's Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law (2002) where the Neptunes were accused of stealing Shouyu Weanie's song. It is also referenced that in the late 1990s, Jabberjaw was briefly engaged to budding filmmaker Madeline Austin-Kulat. In this show, Frank Welker reprises his role of Jabberjaw and also voices Biff. Clamhead made another appearance in the episode "Identity Theft" where he was voiced by Steven Blum.
Jabberjaw also appeared on Cartoon Network (and later Boomerang) in a music video set to Pain's "Jabberjaw (Running Underwater)" with Jabberjaw and The Neptunes portrayed as a ska band, with the group dressed in modern clothing, and with Jabberjaw sporting a goatee and nose ring. Also in this Version Biff is the lead guitar and singer, Shelly is rythm guitar, Bubbles is keyboard, Clamhead plays the trumpet Jabberjaw still plays the drums.
Merchandising
Jabberjaw merchandise from 1977-79 included a lunch box and thermos, coloring books, iron-on transfers, a story book, a read & color book, puzzles, a Presto Magix Dry transfer game, bubble maker set and a school tablet.
A comic book series was originally scheduled by Charlton Comics (in association with Hanna-Barbera) in 1977, but was later cancelled; however, in France, Jabberjaw was featured in comic books under his French language name Mantalo in 1978-80.
In July 1988, an 85-minute videocassette containing four episodes of Jabberjaw was released by Worldvision Home Video; this cassette has long been out of print and Jabberjaw has not been released on DVD.