Scoobypedia
Advertisement
Expansion This needs a stretch. (Feel free to remove when satisfied of completion.)

Ghost To Ghost TV is a story in Scooby-Doo! #75 by DC Comics.

Premise

The gang investigates a haunted TV studio as the clues start to add up to a former TV show host trying to chase out the current talk show and replace it with his own come back show.

Synopsis

Characters

Character
Scooby-Doo
Shaggy Rogers
Fred Jones
Daphne Blake
Velma Dinkley
Denise
Parson Weakly
Clark Barr
Engineer

Villains

  • Televison Studio Spector

Suspects

Suspect Motive/reason
Denise She was being exceptionally rude to Shaggy and Scooby-Doo.
Parson Weekly He was planning on getting out of being the host of "Totally Asked - For Live (or T.A.F.L.) as fast as possible, because he was in line for his own talk show.
Engineer He told the televison crew that the new television studio where "Totally Asked - For Live (or T.A.F.L.) was being filmed would never be ready by the time the pilot episode of the forementioned show premiered, but they never listened.
Clark Barr He thought the studio would make a great place to host his next "Rollin' In The New Year" extravaganza. The gang discovered that the ghost looked just like his younger self.

Culprits

Culprit Motive/reason
Clark Barr as the Television Studio Spector He was trying to scare Parson Weekly and the television crew for MTTV out of the new studio and have for his own personal gain. And that gain was...to shoot the next "Rollin' In The New Year" special at the end of the year.

Locations

  • New York City, New York
    • Television Studio
      • Totally Asked - For Live (or T.A.L.F.) set
      • Backstage area
    • Building where "Rollin' In The New Year" is filmed every New Year's eve.

Notes/trivia

Reception

In this issue of Scooby-Doo, the classic models morph into their current incarnations from What's New Scooby-Doo? the best animated treatment of the source Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?.

The mediocre grade does not reflect displeasure in the changes. True, I will miss the neckerchiefs--Fred and Daphne were two of three people who could do justice to such a fashion accessory. Earl Kress' story is simply a little too cutesy with the parody names of famous VJs, and the motive does not make any sense. [1]

Quotes

References

  1. Ray Tate in Firing Line Reviews
Advertisement