So few have made it that I’ll flip the answer and instead mention the handful of shows that still survive the cut from my youth.
Surprisingly, Eisner Disney didn’t jew the brand as hard as the others might have, and a lot came from the Disney tv of the late 80s and early 90s.
I’ll admit I haven’t done a deep dive rewatch recently, but top of my head survivors:
DuckTales (1987) - Scrooge bootstraps from boyhood as a shoeshine boy into the richest duck in the world on account of his Scottish thrift and tenacity.
TaleSpin (1990) - Baloo as the a blue collar pilot who lives the dream of running his own shipping business his way until it gets bought by a chick who attempts to “improve” it, but she only ever really manages to keep the bills paid. Most episodes are about the freedom of the skies, and the best don’t involve the skirt.
Goof Troop (1992) - Goofy is a good father after being widowed, trying to teach his kid about how to be honest, and usually succeeding despite being, well, Goofy.
The Adventures of the Gummi Bears (1985) - White people everywhere in medieval Europe? In a Disney show? Hard to believe, but yes. The King wasn’t a fool, the male lead human was clever, the Gummi Bears weren’t pozzed. Nice show with a fun lore build. Glad they haven’t opted to resurrect and sodomize this series like the did the DuckTales reboot.
Batman the Animated Series (1993) - Didn’t find out until after he died that Kevin Conroy (Batman voice) was a faggot. He never intimated such. Men were strong. Chicks were slim and attractive. Joker was funny, and could even be seen as a take on the subversive jew.
Mysterious Cities of Gold (1982) - History, mythology, and magical adventure about the conquistadors. A lot of fun and serial storytelling in a time when it wasn’t common. Anime adapted for American audiences and included some cool historical live action infotainment segments in each episode.
Edit: flow of TaleSpin description
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