Sinister Simon was a Pieman who went to rob the Fair -- the Gotham City World's Fair! In so doing, he sets out to be the new king(rolling)pin of crime in Gotham City. Simon captures Robin on stakeout, and puts him under the grindstone of a windmill, as storm winds approach -- while Batman is stuck in a traffic jam! Later, Simon invites Batman to a mixer -- a giant electric mixer, that is. Simon also serves up chocolate-covered Batgirl, and hot buttered Robin!
Includes a Batgirl pie-in-the-face scene not shown on cable!
Some voices:
Batman: Olan Soulé
Robin: Casey Kasem
Batgirl: Jane Webb
Narrator & Simon: Ted Knight (2 years BEFORE "Mary Tyler Moore")
TVLand once stated that Olan Soulé voiced Batman on Radio in the 1940's, but this is in dispute. TVLand has been known to make mistakes. We do know that Filmation's voice of Superman in their 1966 cartoons, Bud Collyer, DID voice Superman on Radio in the 40's
Views :
9599
Rating :
4.83
Keywords, Tags :
Batman Cartoon Simon Pieman Robin Batgirl grindstone mixer chocolate buttered Kasem Knight Filmation
Video Length :
10 : 0
Comments :
lol Batman was stuck in traffic lol, would anyone notice that Alfred n batman are teamin up n figure out that batman is bruce wayne?
Dude Batman and RObin AND Batgirl kept getting outsmarted by a Pathetic Punning Pie-Maker (See the word play I used? haha).
lol!!! I SAW THIS EPISODE ON BOOM THE OTHER NIGHT. PIEMAN'S VOICES STEALS THE SHOW AND THE COOKING REFERENCE'S TAKE THE CAKE...LOL!!!! "Easy as Pie"
OMG, i've never noticed how many plot holes there are. Robin is in danger and batman is stuck in Traffice?! The Pie guy likes to dress in ladies cloths and the mayor knows batmans home phone #! the animators must have thought the kids of the 60's would be too stoned to find these gaping plot holes.
nice well done
Who did the voice for the blonde model with the accent?
It's probably the same woman who did Catwoman and Batgirl, Jane Webb.
I suspected but I wasn't sure. Thanks.
Simon ought to team up with Simon Bar Sinister from Underdog!
I wonder if Hanna-Barbera's animation quality took a downturn during the '70s because of them borrowing the "Filmation look" as seen here.