Books about Flintstones from Amazon.com



The Flintstones: Insight Mini Classic
Yabba Dabba Do! Celebrate more than 45 years of your favorite Neolithic American family and own a piece of cartoon prehistoria with The Flintstones Insight Mini-Classic. The Flintstones are just your average "Modern Stone-Age Family" with a woolly mammoth water heater and a housebroken Snorkasauras named Dino. "The Flintstones" proved that cartoons were more than a children's medium, introducing wry wit to an animated series that appealed to parents and kids alike. Join Fred, Barney, Betty, Wilma, and the kids for a night out in bedrock--bowling or just kicking your feet up with the Loyal Order of Water Buffalos..
Price: $5.21 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Flintstones: Freds Big Splash (Cartoon Classics)
Fred and Barney find themselves in hot water when Fred decides to build a communal swimming pool, an idea that quickly gets out of hand and ends in Barney swimming to the rescue..
Price: $11.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Dinosaurs
The history of the discovery of Dinosaur bones and fossils And the facts and theories about how dinosaurs of the Jurassic era lived

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Price: $0.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]



Drawn to Television: Prime-Time Animation from The Flintstones to Family Guy (The Praeger Television Collection)
Since late evening cartoons first aired in 1960, prime-time animated series have had a profound effect on American television and American culture at large. The characters and motifs from such shows as The Flintstones and The Simpsons are among the best known images in world popular culture; and tellingly, even series that have not done well in prime time--series like The Jetsons, for instance--have yielded similarly iconic images. The advent of cable and several new channels devoted exclusively to animated programming have brought old series back to life in syndication, while also providing new markets for additional, often more experimental animated series. Even on the conventional networks, programs such as The Flintstones and The Simpsons, not to mention Family Guy and King of the Hill, have consistently shown a smartness and a satirical punch that goes well beyond the norm in network programming. Drawn to Television traces the history of prime-time animation from The Flintstones' initial extension of Saturday mornings to Family Guy and South Park's late-night appeal in the 21st century. In the process, it sheds a surprising light on just how much the kid inside us all still has to say. Drawn to Television describes the content and style of all the major prime-time animated series, while also placing these series within their political and cultural contexts. It also tackles a number of important questions about animated programming, such as: how animated series differ from conventional series; why animated programming tends to be so effective as a vehicle for social and political satire; what makes animated characters so readily convertible into icons; and what the likely effects of new technologies (such as digital animation) will be on this genre in the future..
Price: $34.92 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Flintstones: A Modern Stone Age Phenomenon (Flintstones)
A compendium of trivia containing everything readers always wanted to know about the funniest prehistoric family ever includes rare cell art, concept drawings, memorabilia, and profiles of the creative minds behind the popular cartoon characters..
Price: $9.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Flintstones Playset-With Punch-Out Characters
Four Stone Age scenes with stand-up punch-outs of the whole gang offer hours of fun to young readers as they play out their favorite episodes in the Flintstones' living room, their front yard, the Bedrock Park, and the Bedrock Drive-In..
Price: $2.92 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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