Did You Watch Super Chicken?

Super Chicken was one of those cartoons that felt like it was made for kids, but the jokes were flying right over our little heads and landing with the grown-ups. It was part of George of the Jungle, which aired on ABC starting in 1967, along with the other segments Tom Slick and Super Chicken. It came from Jay Ward Productions, the same folks behind Rocky and Bullwinkle, so you knew it was going to be loaded with silly names, smart-aleck humor, and jokes that moved faster than most of us realized at the time.

Super Chicken’s real name was Henry Cabot Henhouse III, because of course it was. He was a wealthy chicken superhero who would head off to fight crime with his lion sidekick Fred. And poor Fred always seemed to take the worst of it, which led to that famous line: “You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred!” That was the kind of cartoon writing I appreciate more now than I probably did back then.

The whole thing only had 17 original episodes as part of George of the Jungle, but like so many Saturday morning cartoons, it lived a lot longer in reruns and in our memories. Between the theme song, the goofy superhero setup, and that classic Jay Ward humor, Super Chicken was one of those quick little cartoons that didn’t need much time to leave a mark.

Who remembers Super Chicken? And did you watch it for him, George of the Jungle, or Tom Slick?

“George, George, George…” — Why This Theme Still Lives in Our Heads….

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How many of you can still sing “George, George, George of the Jungle… watch out for that tree!” without missing a beat? It’s funny how certain TV themes stay locked in our brains word for word, even decades later. There’s a reason for that. Songs like this were simple, repetitive, and told a story. They weren’t just background music, they explained the show, used humor, and stuck to a rhythm that was easy to remember. Once it got in your head, it never really left.

That’s exactly what made George of the Jungle so memorable. Produced by Jay Ward Productions, the cartoon was a playful parody of jungle adventure heroes, but it was the execution that made it timeless. The show leaned into slapstick comedy, with George swinging confidently through the jungle… usually straight into a tree.

The theme song, written and performed by Sheldon Allman, is a perfect example of why these tunes stick. It narrates the premise, delivers the punchlines, and sets the tone all in under a minute. You didn’t just hear it, you learned it.

And that was the magic of 60s television. Before binge-watching and skipping intros, the theme song was part of the experience. Shows like George of the Jungle made sure you knew exactly what you were about to watch, and made it catchy enough that you’d remember it for the rest of your life.

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