It's been a VERY long time since I bought a comic with the name of Huckleberry Hound on the cover!
I'd like to tell you that it was this one... The very last Gold Key Issue (1970)...
But, it was actually one of (Ugh!) these (1971)...
Where Huck looked like THIS (Ugh, again!)...
Instead of THIS (Ooooh!)...
It's also been a while, though a MUCH SHORTER WHILE, since I bought an issue of GREEN LANTERN...
...When they looked like THIS...
...Or THIS...
...But, not something unrecognizable like THIS!
Nevertheless, lapsed involuntarily as with Huck, or voluntarily as with GL, I was ripe 'n' ready - as opposed to RUFF AND REDDY...
...For a comic like this!
After all, Green Lantern was one of my most favorite "superhero franchises" before the changes of the early 2000s morphed it into (...all together now) something unrecognizable - and Huckleberry Hound is one of my all-time favorite animated characters and, in my view, perhaps the very best made-for-TV cartoon in terms of its enjoyment factor and groundbreaking historical status!
And, despite some of what I'm about to say, I really did enjoy the issue very much. But, for reasons that will soon become clear, I'd thought I would have enjoyed it quite a bit more!
Later in its original run, GREEN LANTERN was one of the first comics to get "socially relevant"! See two of the most famous such images above!
It was also unique for introducing ALTERNATE "human Green Lanterns", such as Guy Gardner...
...And John Stewart!
And the story found in GREEN LANTERN / HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SPECIAL happens to be a very good "John Stewart story" - set smack-dab in the center of one of the most turbulent periods in modern US history: 1968-1972!
Stewart's story is a powerful one, both as a civilian (above), and a member of the planet-protecting Green Lantern Corps (below)!
The problem, especially for someone like me, is that Huckleberry Hound is not in any way a significant part of what is otherwise a very good story!
He's just some guy in a bar, with whom John Stewart trades "hard life stories"!
What's Huck been up to? Walll, now... It seems that he dabbled in some li'l ole types o' "political humor" during the Vietnam War in 1968 - and, as The Smothers Brothers would eventually be - was taken off TV! Shuckins!
From the "On Purpose, or Happy Accident?" Department I: The original run of THE HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SHOW came to an end during 1968! I distinctly recall it still being on at the start of the 1967-1968 television season - but not by the end.
As unusual as Huck's story might be - especially for those of us who are accustomed to seeing him like this...
...There are at least two downsides to it.
ONE: The "Has-Been TV Cartoon Celebrity Bit" was already explored in DC's RUFF AND REDDY SHOW mini-series earlier this year!
TWO: Huck's tail ...er, tale does not contribute anything to the plot, beyond "period-based atmosphere"! Such as watching Walter Cronkite report on Watergate!
From the "On Purpose, or Happy Accident?" Department II: In many markets (including mine) the original run of THE HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SHOW was on opposite THE CBS EVENING NEWS WITH WALTER CRONKITE!
...And we all knew that "The Most Trusted Man in America" outlasted "That Oh So Merry Chuckleberry" by a number of years!
Huck DOES get to be present at the climax, but his presence in the story is ultimately inconsequential. This could just as easily have been a John Stewart Green Lantern story, without the hound!
But, take heart, Huck fans... there's one small good thing... and one great big wonderful thing to be found in GREEN LANTERN / HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SPECIAL!
SMALL BUT GOOD: The HUCKLEBERRY HOUND logo used on the cover is the original "Title Card Logo" for the Huckleberry Hound cartoons!
THE ONE GREAT BIG WONDERFUL THING: Oh, and did I mention awesome and amazing?
Among the things Huck is forced to do, to eke-out a living during his has-been days, was to "do signings" at comic book conventions!
AND JUST LOOK AT THE BOOKS HE'S SIGNING!!!
DELL FOUR COLOR # 990 (1959) - The first HUCKLEBERRY HOUND comic book!
And Gold Key's HUCKLEBERRY HOUND # 41 (1970)!
Yes, really! How wonderful, awesome, and amazing is THAT?! Especially for a Dell and Gold Key Kid like me, who had both of those comics as they were originally released! ...Though my Grandma Millie had to buy me the Dell issue, as I couldn't quite "count my change" for the 10-cent cover price back then!
Check out the little GOLD KEY LOGO on the HUCKLEBERRY HOUND # 41!
BONUS HISTORICAL CONTEXT ADDITION: Here's a AD for HUCKLEBERRY HOUND # 41, with the cover illustration, that appeared in Gold Key Comics released in December, 1969!
The trailing ad for VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA is there to show just how all-encompassing a publisher Gold Key was - and because I like it! :-)
It's a pity that this series of DC / Hanna-Barbera crossover titles did not feature a humorous "cartoony-styled" backup, as did the DC / Looney Tunes series - as THIS ONE DID!
Instead, they opted for four chapters of Secret Squirrel, as seen in the SCOOBY APOCALYPSE title!
I feel the issue could have been completely redeemed of its Huck-centric shortcomings if there HAD been a cartoon-like Huckleberry Hound backup!
Can't you see Huck as a Green Lantern Trainee? Why not? He's been just about everything else!
I'd call it "Blue Dog - Green Intern"! Do a bunch of "training gags" as in the cartoon "Knight School", where Huck reluctantly trains to be a knight, and have Killowog as his trainer!
Then have him go up against Lobo as his first assignment - a la Powerful Pierre or Dinky Dalton!
"Ya know whut? That there Lobo-feller's got a right KEEN sense o' humor!"
I've even got the ending worked out, where "Green Intern Huck" drives-off Lobo with the help of an unexpected "guest star"! But, since no one's paying me to write it, it'll just have to stay in my head!
That said, I really did enjoy GREEN LANTERN / HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SPECIAL (DC Comics: Cover Date: December, 2018)! Again, it was "very good"!
However, for one that is ACTUALLY GREAT, we must turn to the unlikely pairing of DEATHSTROKE and YOGI BEAR!
Yes, really!
You'd THINK it would be far easier to integrate an all-purpose character like Huckleberry Hound into the world of the Green Lantern Corps and its intrepid members - but, quite brilliantly, the corresponding DEATHSTROKE / YOGI BEAR SPECIAL brings the "more ruthless then the average mercenary" together with the "smarter than the average bear" far more effortlessly than in GREEN LANTERN / HUCKLEBERRY HOUND SPECIAL!
I hope to review DEATHSTROKE / YOGI BEAR SPECIAL soon!
Meanwhile, get 'em both! Ya won't find very much else like 'em out there! ...For Hound, or Bear! Hey-hey-hey!