The series was produced by
Filmation Associates, who first approached
Sherwood Schwartz to license the show in 1971, and again in 1972 and 1973. According to Filmation co-founder
Lou Scheimer, Schwartz was in the middle of trying to revive the live-action series and declined to have the show adapted into a cartoon. By 1974, after failing to sell a ''Gilligan's Island'' revival to any of the networks, Schwartz agreed to license the show, on condition that he was allowed to have great creative input, including hands-on supervision of not only the scripts, but the storyboards as well. Like the original series,
The New Adventures of Gilligan contained an adult
laugh track, which was common practice with most Saturday-morning cartoons of the era. One unique feature of
Gilligan was the fact that it was produced and animated in the United States, where most shows at that time were animated overseas in order to cut production costs. However, Filmation's dedication to having its shows produced locally did not help the production values, as many felt the animation of
Gilligan was of poor quality. As the series did not secure the rights to "The Ballad of Gilligan's Isle", a spoken-word poem with lyrics and backing music vaguely reminiscent of the theme (but distinct enough to avoid copyright issues) was substituted as the opening introduction. All of the voice actors except for Bob Denver read portions of the poem. The show debuted on ABC
Saturday morning on September 7, 1974. The series ran for two seasons and 24 episodes, The network, still reeling from the ratings disaster in 1975–76 connected with ''
Uncle Croc's Block'', was reluctant to order anything new from Filmation Associates. Reruns of the series aired on Sunday mornings during the 1976–77 season. In 1982, another ''Gilligan's Island
-based animated series was created, this time entitled Gilligan's Planet''. The premise for that series centered around the castaways creating a spaceship and winding up on a deserted planet. The series is owned by
Warner Bros. Television Studios through
Turner Entertainment Co., rather than Filmation's successor
Universal Television, due to the show being a part of the pre-May 1986
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer library. == Episodes ==