Part of the quality of animation is the frames per second. Old Looney Tunes are about 24 frames, along with classic Disney movies. That number has decreased over time, and reference frames have increased. Scooby Doo, while awesome, has some of the highest of these frames where all that moves is the mouth. Having cartoons with 11 - 14 frames decreases the costs. Part of the issue is that until the early 90s, cartoons could basically be a commercial for toys and merchandising, subsidizing the toons. Factor in rising popularity of video games, general dislike of cartoons by the mainstream (forgetting about how popular Bugs Bunny, Fred Flintsone, Popeye, etc were with adults), and rising costs of material and labor, its little wonder cartoons have declined in the past 10 - 15 years. There used to be so many good cartoons, we took it for granted. Now it seems we wait for that one break out hit, only to see the network kill it in favor of infomercials.
Not to say all cartoons in the past were good. For every GI Joe there was at least 2 Turbo Teens or Giligan's Planets. Did you know there was a cartoon hawking Rubix Cube?? Mr T had his own show, as did Gary Coleman as an angel. Not only was Alf a live action sitcom, but he too had a cartoon. But I'd still watch those over Sonic and Yugioh.
The animation industry was in complete disarray during the 1970's and 1980's. Disney pretty much kept the animation industry alive during the 1980's with hit movies like
The Little Mermaid and
Beauty and the Beast. In my opinion,
Who Framed Roger Rabbit may have single-handedly revived interest in the old style of cartooning, hearkening back to an era where cartoons were edgy and wacky, and cartoonists like Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, and Friz Freleng were the biggest guys in the industry.
After the success of
Roger Rabbit, even the once mighty Warner Bros. had decided to reignite their animation studio in the late 1980's, producing hits like
Tiny Toons,
Animaniacs, and
Batman: The Animated Series.And then there's John Kricfalusci, the creator of
Ren and Stimpy and major cartoon critic. If any of you read his blog, he's constantly decrying modern cartoons, saying they lack a sense of uniqueness. Everything has become dumbed down for the kiddies, in his eyes. He may be a bit of an elitist, but at least he holds strong opinions.
Pixar did their part to bring CG animation to the mainstream, with their huge hit
Toy Story. Ever since Pixar made their mark, there have been countless imitators and a huge oversaturation of CG movies. DreamWorks, Blue Sky, Sony Pictures Animation, and others are all trying to steal Pixar's thunder, inadvertently destroying whatever is left of hand-drawn animation.
I know I'm rambling now, but I just love talking about animation and cartoons. I'm a huge animation buff.