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BoJack Horseman

Birdman didn’t have time for a civilian identity: his superhero exploits were limited to two, 7-minute segments that played before and after a Galaxy Trio segment in the half-hour, Saturday morning show Birdman and the Galaxy Trio. With a cry of “Birrrrdman!” and powers derived from the sun, none of the criminals, super-villains or evil aliens he faced were a match for him.

Partnered with his eagle sidekick Avenger, Birdman maintained a secret headquarters inside an inactive volcano, where he received instructions in the form of video transmissions from an eye patch wearing agent called Falcon 7. In a few episodes he teamed up with Birdboy, a youth he rescued and inadvertently gave powers similar to his own while attempting to keep him alive.

Birdman’s super powers depended on exposure to the sun; without which those powers faded or were quickly depleted when in use. At full charge his ability to fly, fire solar rays from his fists and form a solar powered shield were more than a match for any foe. For emergency situations, Birdman kept a few solar energy storage batteries at the lair.

Long after his initial series ended, Birdman was revived for the 2001 superhero spoof, Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law. There he was reunited with Birdboy, as well as many of the villains who had appeared in the Birdman series.

Fat Albert and The Cosby Kids was a longstanding Saturday morning cartoon that featured a group of urban adolescents growing up in a Philadelphia neighborhood. The series had various show-within-a-show elements over the course of its production run — Brown Hornet being one of them. The segment first appeared in 1979 when the series itself was re-titled The New Fat Albert Show.

Within the show, Brown Hornet was a favorite TV program of Fat Albert and the gang, which had the kids raceing to the television in their junkyard clubhouse whenever the latest installment aired. Brown Hornet featured a confident and daring, space-age, African-American superhero who patrolled intergalactic space with his trusty assistant Stinger and robotic sidekick Tweeterbell. Together, the trio searched out and fought evildoers. Episodes were presented in the same manner as old movie serials, which ended with Brown Hornet facing some perilous cliffhanger he was forced to overcome at the beginning of the next episode. Apart from being entertaining, the Brown Hornet’s exploits served as a moral underpinning to whatever dilemma the Cosby kids were confronting during that week’s episode.

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Copyright © 2026, The Cartoon Databank. All rights reserved. Character names and images are the sole property of their respective copyright holders. The Cartoon Databank is in no way affiliated or endorsed by any of the copyright owners. The material presented here is intended for entertainment and historical purposes only.