List of Goof Troop episodes
The following is an episode list for the Walt Disney Television Animation produced series Goof Troop. The series, which featured the antics and mis-adventures of Goofy, his son Max and his neighbor Pete, along with Pete's family (wife Peg, son P.J. and daughter Pistol), ran for a total of 78 episodes and 1 Christmas special.
Goof Troop was originally previewed on The Disney Channel in the spring of 1992 beginning on April 5.[1] An hour-long premiere special "Forever Goof" aired in syndication on September 5. The next week, the series became part of The Disney Afternoon, where 65 episodes (including the premiere, rerun in two parts) were broadcast during September–December 1992. At the same time, another set of 13 episodes aired on ABC's Saturday morning lineup, simply titled ABC Saturday Morning, concurrent with the weekday syndicated episodes. During the holiday season of 1992, a primetime Christmas special was aired in syndication, separate from The Disney Afternoon.
The Disney Afternoon and ABC episodes constituted a single production season, but they are listed separately here.
Airdates given here reflect the Disney Afternoon and ABC airings - the Disney Channel preview airdates are not available.
Series overview
Episodes
Year 1: The Disney Afternoon (1992)
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Everything's Coming Up Goofy" | Robert Alvarez | Thomas Hart | Barry Caldwell, David Silverman and Bob Camp | September 5, 1992 ("Forever Goof" airing) October 21, 1992 (The Disney Afternoon rerun) | AU8 |
Goofy moves to Spoonerville with Max and next door to old pal Pete. (Note: This two-parter aired as a special on September 5, 1992, serving as the series premiere.) | ||||||
2 | "Good Neighbor Goof" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen | Jim Schumann, Kenny Pittenger and Octavio Rodriguez | September 5, 1992 ("Forever Goof" airing) October 22, 1992 (The Disney Afternoon rerun) | AU10 |
P.J. and Max are prohibited by their dads from hanging out with each other. The boys try to find a way to get them to make up so everyone can be happy, but Pete does not seem to agree with Goofy's presence, so the boys resort to an all-out show up contest, forcing Pete and Goofy to reconcile. | ||||||
3 | "Axed by Addition" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Barry Caldwell, David Silverman and Kurt Anderson | September 7, 1992 | FR29 |
P.J. is afraid of being grounded by his dad for a bad report card, so he has fun like it's his last day on Earth. Note: Goofy has a cameo role for this episode. Absent: Pistol. | ||||||
4 | "Unreal Estate" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen | Kenny Pittenger and Gabe Del Valle | September 8, 1992 | AU7 |
Pete spends the money Peg gave him to pay the handyman on a state-of-the-art fish finder so he hires Goofy as a handyman to paint a real estate property. Absent: Max and P.J. | ||||||
5 | "You Camp Take It with You" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti | Carin-Anne Anderson, Lenord Robinson, Heather Martinez and Victor Cook | September 9, 1992 | AU2 |
Peg believes that Pete and Goofy should spend more time with the boys and not let them waste their summer vacation. So Pete and Goofy decide to take the boys on a camping trip. | ||||||
6 | "Midnight Movie Madness" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Armando Carrillo, Adrian Gonzales and Karl Toerge | September 10, 1992 | AU1 |
After seeing a scary movie, Max and P.J. fear that they are being followed by a killer. Pete finds out and starts to make their fears come true by pretending that he is the killer. | ||||||
7 | "Counterfeit Goof" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Bob Camp, Barry Caldwell and David Silverman | September 11, 1992 | KC11 |
Pete hires Goofy and Max to wallpaper his house, but when Goofy runs out of wallpapering supplies he is out to get some more but ends up unknowingly buying the supplies with counterfeit money. Now he has to deal with counterfeiters who are out to get him. Absent: P.J., Pistol and Peg. | ||||||
8 | "O, R-V, I N-V U" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen | Jim Schumann, Gabe Del Valle, Kenny Pittenger and Octavio Rodriguez | September 14, 1992 | AU16 |
When Max wants Pete to start liking him so that he can hang around with P.J. more, he helps Pete design an RV, but in the process, he becomes friends with Pete leaving P.J. out. | ||||||
9 | "Meanwhile, Back at the Ramp" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti | Victor Cook, Carin-Anne Anderson and Lenord Robinson | September 15, 1992 | FANZ12 |
Max is upset that Goofy has never won any awards and has no career with his upcoming class reunion. Meanwhile, Pete, in an attempt to achieve more customers at his used car lot, sets up the biggest half-pipe in the world, and hires a skateboarding legend to ride down it. The skateboard legend is too terrified of the ramp's height, so he quits. Pete needs somebody to ride down it, so he offers an award for the individual who does it. Goofy snatches up this offer, and plans to ride down it. Max is excited, but realizes that Goofy can't skateboard, so he and P.J. dress up like him and go in his place. | ||||||
10 | "Close Encounters of the Weird Mime" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Armando Carrillo, Adrian Gonzales and Craig McCracken | September 16, 1992 | AU27 |
It's an alien invasion! For Pete, not really, but a messed up science project seems to make people think that. Note: In one scene, Donald Duck is shown. | ||||||
11 | "Slightly Dinghy" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday, Don Dougherty, Bernie Petterson and Conrad Vernon | September 17, 1992 | AU15 |
Max wants to find a sunken treasure. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
12 | "Cabana Fever" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Gabe Del Valle, Jim Schumann and Kenny Pittenger | September 18, 1992 | KC9 |
Pete gets away from it all to a deserted island, where his joy is ruined when Goofy shows up. | ||||||
13 | "Where There's Smoke, There's Goof" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti | Carin-Anne Anderson, Lenord Robinson and Heather Martinez | September 21, 1992 | AU21 |
Goofy and Max become their town's new firemen. Absent: Pistol. | ||||||
14 | "Date with Destiny" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | David Silverman, Barry Caldwell and Kurt Anderson | September 22, 1992 | AU28 |
When Max says Goofy is getting married (to avoid an awkward moment at school), Peg sends Pete out to find Goofy's the ideal match. But when Pete can't find one, he sets up Goofy with an unsuspecting maintenance woman. | ||||||
15 | "Hot Air" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Karl Toerge, Armando Carrillo and Adrian Gonzales | September 23, 1992 | KC14 |
After the boys build a glider, Pistol want to fly in it, but they say she is too young. So Goofy takes her to an air show where she ends up saving Pete's life. Absent: Peg | ||||||
16 | "Take Me Out of the Ball Game" | Jamie Mitchell | Catherine Lieuwen | Douglas McCarthy, Spike Brandt and Tony Cervone | September 24, 1992 | AU37 |
Pete and Goofy argue about their boys on the baseball team, much to the boys' dismay. Their coach is the same coach who expelled their fathers from baseball 30 years ago. Absent: Pistol. | ||||||
17 | "Wrecks, Lies & Videotape" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Don Dougherty, Carole Holliday and Bernie Petterson | September 25, 1992 | AU44 |
Max tapes Goofy for the TV show "America's Most Painful Home Videos" to win a prize, but Pete steals the tape to win the prize himself. | ||||||
18 | "Max-imum Protection" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Jim Schumann, Octavio Rodriguez, Kenny Pittenger and Gabe Del Valle | September 28, 1992 | KC30 |
Max fears that his house will be robbed, but when he asks Goofy to get a security system, he refuses. Max decides the best place to be is at Pete's house because they just go the latest in burglar prevention. But Pete doesn't know the security service is run by burglars. | ||||||
19 | "Goofin' Hood and His Melancholy Men" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Barry Caldwell, David Silverman and Roman Arambula | September 29, 1992 | SW46 |
To interest Max in history, Goofy tells him a story about one of his many ancestors. Pete is the evil Sheriff of Nottingham! Absent: Peg and P.J. | ||||||
20 | "Leader of the Pack" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Adrian Gonzales and Julian Chaney | September 30, 1992 | SW31 |
When the Pharaohs, a local high school gang, try to take over the popular fast-food hangout in Spoonerville, Max and P.J. try to stop them with the help of Max's cousin Debbie. Absent: Pete, Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
21 | "Inspector Goofy" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Victor Cook, Don Dougherty, Bernie Petterson and Carole Holliday | October 1, 1992 | SW5 |
Pete gets Goofy a job as a city inspector, but he regrets it when Goofy inspects his business. Note: Max makes a small non-speaking cameo in this episode. | ||||||
22 | "Shake, Rattle & Goof" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti and Mike Reiss | Victor Cook, Carin-Anne Anderson and Lenord Robinson | October 2, 1992 | SW38 |
When Goofy helps Max and P.J. start up a rock band, Pete gets an idea and wants to make them famous by being their manager. | ||||||
23 | "Terminal Pete" | Jamie Mitchell | Catherine Lieuwen | Spike Brandt, Tony Cervone and Douglas McCarthy | October 5, 1992 | W42 |
Pete thinks that he is going to die and makes immediate plans. Features a cameo appearance of Gopher. | ||||||
24 | "Fool's Gold" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Chris Savino and Joe Horne | October 6, 1992 | SW45 |
When Chainsaw ends up with gold on her nose Pete wants to find out where it came from with the help of Goofy the track down the source but they end up fighting for who gets the gold. | ||||||
25 | "Cat's Entertainment" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Armando Carrillo, Adrian Gonzales, Craig McCracken and Joe Horne | October 7, 1992 | KC59 |
Pete tricks Goofy into giving him his cat Waffles so he can put him in commercials. Absent: P.J. | ||||||
26 | "Waste Makes Haste" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti and Mike Reiss | Lenord Robinson, Victor Cook and Carin-Anne Anderson | October 8, 1992 | AU23 |
Goofy and Pete start a recycling contest. Soon Pete finds out that a millionaire lost a valuable pair of shoes that are made out of solid gold so he tries to become partners with Goofy. | ||||||
27 | "The Ungoofables" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Gabe Del Valle, Jim Schumann and Octavio Rodriguez | October 9, 1992 | SW25 |
Goofy tells about his G-man ancestor, Elliot Goof. Peg plays a gangster's moll to a villainous Pete! Absent: P.J. | ||||||
28 | "All the Goof That's Fit to Print" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday, Don Dougherty, Bernie Petterson and Conrad Vernon | October 12, 1992 | SW3 |
Pete starts his own newspaper to get business for his car dealership, but when a picture of him gets crossed with a picture of an alien he and Goofy have to try and save his image. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
29 | "To Heir Is Human" | Jamie Mitchell | Catherine Lieuwen | Douglas McCarthy and Spike Brandt | October 13, 1992 | SW56 |
Pete puts P.J. to work at his car lot by pretending to be very ill but truly becomes sick when P.J., with the aid of Goofy and Max, begin putting him in daredevil stunts, not to mention the low-cut sales of his cars. | ||||||
30 | "Hallow-Weenies" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Barry Caldwell, David Silverman and Byron Vaughns | October 14, 1992 | KC54 |
Pete acquires the old Spoonerville Mansion to turn it into his new bed and breakfast, but it is haunted by a trio of ghostly musicians. A Halloween episode which features the ghost of Goofy's great-great-grandfather, Gooferamus T. Goofy. | ||||||
31 | "Tub Be or Not Tub Be" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Chris Savino | October 15, 1992 | KC26 |
A bathtub race pits P.J. and Pete together as PJ unwittingly becomes a spy for his father against the Goofs. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
32 | "Major Goof" | Donovan Cook | Dave Mickey Evans | Brad Vandergrift and Joe Horne | October 16, 1992 | AU18 |
Pete's jokes are always causing trouble. This time it gets Peg's uncle, General Robert E. Lee Sparrowhawk (aka Uncle Bob), Goofy, Max and P.J. chosen for a secret mission. Absent: Pistol | ||||||
33 | "A Goof of the People" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Gabe Del Valle, Kenny Pittenger and Kelly Kennedy | October 19, 1992 | AU61 |
Goofy runs for mayor when pollution becomes a problem in Spoonerville. Pete also runs for mayor but turns to out to be bribe-able. | ||||||
34 | "Goof Under My Roof" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold | Armando Carrillo, Adrian Gonzales and Julian Chaney | October 20, 1992 | GP13 |
Pete seems to own half of Goofy's property, so he uses that fact to lord over Goofy. But it turns out Goofy owns part of Pete's house. | ||||||
35 | "Goodbye Mr. Goofy" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti and Mike Reiss | Carin-Anne Anderson, Lenord Robinson and Heather Martinez | October 23, 1992 | SW39 |
One of Pete's plans might cost Goofy his beloved home. | ||||||
36 | "Lethal Goofin'" | Jamie Mitchell | Catherine Lieuwen | Douglas McCarthy and Jon McClenahan | October 26, 1992 | KC33 |
Bullies beware! Max and P.J., new School Safety Patrolmen, are on the prowl. Absent: Goofy, Pete and Peg. | ||||||
37 | "Frankengoof" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday, Don Dougherty, Bernie Petterson and Mauro Casalese | October 27, 1992 | W50 |
Goofy inherits his family's scary Frankengoof castle...and a monster to boot. When Pete tries to be the monster to scare Goofy, he gets more than he bargained for. | ||||||
38 | "E=MC Goof" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Barry Caldwell, David Silverman, Todd Kurosawa and Kurt Anderson | October 28, 1992 | S58 |
Goofy? A rocket scientist? No way, there must be some mix-up somewhere especially since Goofy's boss is a monkey. Absent: Peg. | ||||||
39 | "Pete's Day at the Races" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Chris Savino and Bernie Petterson | October 29, 1992 | AU51 |
Pete tries to win money on what he thinks is a loser of a race horse first by overselling shares in the horse and then by trying with various tricks make the horse lose and the jockey is...Goofy, who finds the cure to make the horse super-fast. Absent: Max. | ||||||
40 | "In Goof We Trust" | Donovan Cook | Dave Mickey Evans | Joe Horne and Brad Vandergrift | October 30, 1992 | AU4 |
Goofy's the Most Honest Man in Spoonerville, and Pete -- who has been just exposed as a fraud on the local news -- uses Goof's quality to drum up business at his lot. However Pete soon finds out that his attempt to continue his deceptive business practices contrasts with Goofy's honesty. | ||||||
41 | "And Baby Makes Three" | Jordan Reichek | Thomas A. Klein and Jordan Reichek | Jordan Reichek | November 2, 1992 | AU57 |
Fearing that a new arrival to Pete's family will get them iced out, P.J., Pistol and Max give Pete a "baby" (actually P.J. in disguise) he'll never forget. | ||||||
42 | "The Incredible Bulk" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Don Dougherty, Carole Holliday and Bernie Petterson | November 3, 1992 | S20 |
Pete puts Goofy's life at risk when he puts him in a wrestling match with Bulk Brogan, a wrestling champ also known as "Myron a Fry Cook". At the end, Pete wins over Goofy, but gets more than he bargained for. | ||||||
43 | "Mrs. Spoonerville" | Nick Herbert | Ross Hastings | Vince James and Michael Salter | November 4, 1992 | W43 |
Pete overhears that Goofy entered a house cleaning contest of Mrs. Spoonerville to win a few items, along with an unclear statement that there is also a prize of $3,000 involved. So, from hearing that, slobbish Pete decides to enter and plays Mr. Clean to all extents in order to win the prize. | ||||||
44 | "For Pete's Sake" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Chris Savino and Paul Tibbitt | November 5, 1992 | KC34 |
Pete accidentally wrecks his Swiss-army hedge clipper, and decides to deceive Goofy into thinking that he did it instead, knowing that it would cost him a lot to replace. Goofy, discovering it and buying into his scheme as planned, writes him an apology note saying he will get him a replacement. When receiving it, Pete however rips it in half, reading only the first half of it. From reading only that portion out of context, coinciding with being just after Pete has cheated a bunch of customers out of selling them defective used cars and realizing it, he becomes downright paranoid and thinks that someone's out to murder him. | ||||||
45 | "Big City Blues" | Jamie Mitchell | Catherine Lieuwen | Douglas McCarthy and Tony Cervone | November 6, 1992 | SW47 |
Max and P.J. forget all their troubles and cares and go Downtown, where things are not great for their dads who go off searching for them. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
46 | "Rally Round the Goof" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold and Davis Doi | Julian Chaney, Armando Carrillo and Craig McCracken | November 9, 1992 | W49 |
Pete wants Goofy to be his good luck charm in a road race. | ||||||
47 | "Window Pains" | Kent Butterworth | Mike Reiss and Jon Vitti | Carin-Anne Anderson, Lenord Robinson and Victor Cook | November 10, 1992 | S35 |
Peg's new window washing job causes a battle between her and Pete over who makes the most money. Absent: Max. | ||||||
48 | "Nightmare on Goof Street" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Kenny Pittenger, Gabe Del Valle and Octavio Rodriguez | November 11, 1992 | AU63 |
Goofy wins a remodeling contest, but Pete tricks him out of it. Thinking he is going to get free remodeling on his house, Pete soon finds himself conned. Absent: Max, P.J. and Pistol. | ||||||
49 | "Where There's a Will, There's a Goof" | Gary Halvorson | Scott Fellows | Phil Weinstein and Sharon Forward | November 12, 1992 | W41 |
Pete and Goofy play brothers to get an inheritance. | ||||||
50 | "Winter Blunderland" | Jordan Reichek | Thomas A. Klein and Jordan Reichek | Bob Camp and Jordan Reichek | November 13, 1992 | J22 |
Pete gets Goofy to play Bigfoot to bring business to his car lot, but it brings along the real Bigfoot instead. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | ||||||
51 | "Gymnauseum" | Steve Clark | Christopher Painter | Alex Almaguer, François Rosso and Ron Zorman | November 16, 1992 | S32 |
Pete starts the exercise kick when he think he's going to lose his beloved Peg. | ||||||
52 | "Come Fly with Me" | Nick Herbert | Ross Hastings | Michael Salter and Vince James | November 17, 1992 | J40 |
When Pete gets zapped by his computer, he turns into a fly. | ||||||
53 | "As Goof Would Have It" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Octavio Rodriguez, Kenny Pittenger and Jim Schumann | November 18, 1992 | AU52 |
Pete tricks a diet food company by using a picture of Goofy to display himself. Will he pull it off? Maybe.... not. Absent: Pistol | ||||||
54 | "Calling All Goofs" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday and Bernie Petterson | November 19, 1992 | W53 |
When Goofy can't afford to go to Tierra del Foongo for his family reunion-because of a dirty trick pulled on him by Pete, Peg decides to avenge Goofy and bring the reunion to him with Pete's credit card. Pete literally wakes up to his worst nightmare with his house full of...Goofs. In response to it, he tries everything in his scheming power to shake them. | ||||||
55 | "Buddy Building" | Jamie Mitchell and Jon McClenahan | Catherine Lieuwen | Douglas McCarthy and Jon McClenahan | November 20, 1992 | W19 |
A new kid in town threatens Max and P.J.'s friendship with each other. | ||||||
56 | "Dr. Horatio's Magic Orchestra" | Gary Halvorson | Scott Fellows | Sharon Forward and Phil Weinstein | November 23, 1992 | J62 |
Pete buys a mechanical band that plays a song ("When the Saints Go Marching In") he hates! | ||||||
57 | "Goofs of a Feather" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Holly Forsyth and Chris Savino | November 24, 1992 | AU48 |
When Pete kills a duck while hunting, the duck family takes up residence in his house. Absent: Max. | ||||||
58 | "Goof Fellas" | Steve Clark | Christopher Painter | François Rosso and Alex Almaguer | November 25, 1992 | J64 |
When Goofy and Pete are witnesses to an attempted murder, they are placed in the Witness Protection, but Goofy does not seem to comply with the rules. Absent: Max, P.J. and Pistol. | ||||||
59 | "The Good, the Bad and the Goofy" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold and Davis Doi | Armando Carrillo, Karl Toerge and Craig McCracken | November 26, 1992 | FR17 |
The police think that Pete is a hard-to-catch burglar, thanks to Goofy. But they get the real burglars at the end. Absent: Max, P.J. and Pistol. | ||||||
60 | "Educating Goofy" | Dan Povenmire | Dan Povenmire and Swampy Marsh | Dan Povenmire and Kevin Kaliher | November 27, 1992 | KC60 |
Goofy's going back to school to finish what he began, but Max, before, is ashamed for him. | ||||||
61 | "Peg o' the Jungle" | Jordan Reichek | Thomas A. Klein and Jordan Reichek | Bob Camp and Jordan Reichek | November 30, 1992 | GP65 |
Goofy teaches Pete to be a man with sensitivity after he forgets his and Peg's anniversary....again. | ||||||
62 | "Partners in Grime" | Kent Butterworth | Jon Vitti and Mike Reiss | Carin-Anne Anderson, Victor Cook, Lenord Robinson and Heather Martinez | December 1, 1992 | AU55 |
Pete and Goofy are partners in a catering business. | ||||||
63 | "A Pizza the Action" | Robert Alvarez | Don Christensen and Derek Iversen | Jim Schumann, Kenny Pittenger, Octavio Rodriguez and Gabe Del Valle | December 2, 1992 | J6 |
When Pete gets stuck with a failing pizza franchise, Goofy is the only person that Pete thinks can get it off his hands. With the help of Max, Goofy tries to bring the franchise back. | ||||||
64 | "To Catch a Goof" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday, Don Dougherty and Bernie Petterson | December 3, 1992 | FR24 |
Pete goes on a diet, Goofy works on his ninja training techniques, and a burglar is roaming around town. The police catch the burglar at the end. | ||||||
65 | "Gunfight at the Okie-Doke Corral" | Steve Clark | Christopher Painter | Alex Almaguer and François Rosso | December 4, 1992 | FR36 |
When Max doesn't want to wear his glasses Goofy tells him the story of ancestor Mopalong Goofy who wore glasses. Absent: P.J. and Pistol. |
Year 1: ABC Saturday Morning (1992)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
66 | 1 | "Queasy Rider" | Genndy Tartakovsky | Richard Pursel and Bill Burnett | Jeff DeGrandis and Brandon Kruse | September 12, 1992 | KC69 |
Max's exciting ride on Goofy's old motorcycle takes a turn for the worse when he encounters some mean biker dudes. Absent: Peg and Pistol. | |||||||
67 | 2 | "Maximum Insecurity" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Rob LaDuca and Chris Savino | September 19, 1992 | AU67 |
Max and P.J. teaches Leech a lesson about Stealing. If Max and P.J. do not clear themselves of being framed for stealing, they will be sent up the creek. | |||||||
68 | 3 | "Puppy Love" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold and Derek Drymon | Armando Carrillo and Julian Chaney | September 26, 1992 | KC70 |
P.J. wants to impress a girl at school and ask her to the Spring Fling, with the help of Pete, Peg and Max. Absent: Goofy. | |||||||
69 | 4 | "Great Egg-Spectations" | James Stenstrum | Thomas Hart | Mauro Casalese | October 3, 1992 | AU66 |
Max finds an egg and it hatches into a baby dinosaur. Absent: Peg. | |||||||
70 | 5 | "Three Ring Bind" | Rob LaDuca | Rich Fogel and Mark Seidenberg | Carole Holliday and Bernie Petterson | May 4, 1992 (Disney Channel preview)[2] October 10, 1992 (ABC Saturday Morning) | AU68 |
Pistol plays born free with a bad circus's animals, but Pete is worried about her. | |||||||
71 | 6 | "Pistolgeist" | Lenord Robinson | Mark Sacareni | Jon McClenahan and Chris Otsuki | October 17, 1992 | W76 |
P.J. and Max build Pistol a cardboard spaceship based on Pistol's favorite book with unexpected results. | |||||||
72 | 7 | "Bringin' on the Rain" | Steve Clark | Christopher Painter | François Rosso and Alex Almaguer | October 24, 1992 | S77 |
A drought hits, and Pete does anything to get water to his garden, even if he has to steal it from Goofy. Which gets Goofy in trouble and jailed but the end Pete goes to jail and has the same roommate Goofy has when he was in jail. (Gopher from Winnie the Pooh makes a second cameo appearance.) Absent: Pistol. | |||||||
73 | 8 | "Talent to the Max" | Dan Povenmire | Dan Povenmire and Swampy Marsh | Dan Povenmire and Kevin Kaliher | October 31, 1992 | KC73 |
P.J. cannot tell Max that his magic act is not real. | |||||||
74 | 9 | "Tee for Two" | Lenord Robinson | Mark Sacareni and Bill Burnett | Chris Otsuki and Jon McClenahan | November 7, 1992 | W78 |
It's Peg vs. Pete when she wants to save a miniature golf course he wants to tear down. | |||||||
75 | 10 | "Goofin' Up the Social Ladder" | Robert Renzetti | Glenn Leopold and Davis Doi | Julian Chaney and Armando Carrillo | November 14, 1992 | S71 |
Peg tries to unload some high class real estate, and the gang helps her out. | |||||||
76 | 11 | "Sherlock Goof" | Paul Tibbitt | Stephen A. Sandoval | Stephen A. Sandoval and Chris Savino | November 21, 1992 | KC72 |
Let's go off to jolly old England with another one of Goofy's ancestors, a detective named Sherlock Goof. Absent: Peg, P.J. and Pistol. | |||||||
77 | 12 | "From Air to Eternity" | Kurt Anderson | Kevin Campbell | Bernie Petterson | November 28, 1992 | SW75 |
P.J. is afraid of heights, and he's afraid to tell his dad. Absent: Peg. | |||||||
78 | 13 | "Clan of the Cave Goof" | Lenord Robinson | Mark Sacareni and Thomas Hart | Jon McClenahan and Chris Otsuki | December 5, 1992 | KC74 |
Goofy tells Max about his cavemen ancestor, Caveman Goof, how important regular dental checkups are. Absent: P.J. |
Holiday special
The Goof Troop Christmas special was originally syndicated as a stand-alone special during November–December 1992; the airdate varied from market to market.
Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
"Goof Troop Christmas: Have Yourself a Goofy Little Christmas" | Robert Alvarez, Robert Renzetti and Genndy Tartakovsky | Scott Fellows, Christopher Painter and Glenn Leopold | Kurt Anderson, James Stenstrum, David Silverman, Barry Caldwell, Bob Camp and Octavio Rodriguez | November 26, 1992[3][4] | FR01 |
Pete is tired of Goofy shorting out his electricity and blowing up his Christmas decorations every year, so takes the family and leaves for Asperin, Colorado. But Max, not wanting to be alone with Goofy, convinces him to join the Petes at their snowy retreat. |
Films
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Storyboard by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "A Goofy Movie" | Robert Alvarez | Glenn Leopold | Kurt Anderson, Carole Holliday and David Schwartz | April 7, 1995 |
2 | "An Extremely Goofy Movie" | Robert Alvarez | Mark Saraceni | David Silverman, Todd Kurosawa, Barry Caldwell and Karl Toerge | VHS/DVD: February 29, 2000 |
References
- Goof Troop at Toonopedia
- Tweet by CDCB
- "Disney plans family shows". Alabama Journal. Montgomery, Alabama. November 24, 1992. Retrieved December 6, 2020.
- This special was given a syndication window of November 26 to December 13, 1992.