Zack Ramadan – ThunderCat of the Day
Ho! Zack here, though many folks in the fandom might know me as thezaxfactor from my years as a moderator and staff writer at ThunderCats.org. When I learned that Peter was assembling the stories of fans, nay, aficionados alongside those of writers and crew members, I felt a strong pang of impostor syndrome. What novel revelation could I possibly contribute? But in reading the posts of other ThunderCats of the Day, and speaking to friends who have been featured, I’ve come to realize that the common threads in our stories are what weave us together. So here’s my story; may you see bits of yourself in it the way I’ve seen myself in the stories of Nick, Celesta, Ryan, David, Egmond and others.
ThunderCats has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. It deeply affected me as a young person, helping to shape my moral compass, ground me during tougher times, and (not least of all) expand my budding vocabulary—hereditary, reconnoiter, pusillanimous! I learned how to use a VCR at age 4 and by 1991 had dutifully recorded about 60 episodes on tape.
In the early ’90s, syndication eventually stopped, and I remember scouring the TV guide for years, hoping for a new Saturday morning broadcast. But I also came to know every episode I’d recorded by heart, because those four tapes were like a larder in winter, and a safe source of escape as my family moved repeatedly and I struggled to make friends. In my youthful imagination, Lion-O, Panthro, Cheetara and Tygra were friends enough who, being refugees on a world that didn’t always accept them, could understand why I felt different from other kids.
Official VHS releases, with their beautiful box art, also became something of an obsession. Well into my teens I would beeline to the children’s section in any video store, praying for a volume I’d never seen. To this day I have a recurring dream that takes place in a vast video emporium, where some undiscovered treasure awaits me on a dusty shelf! And I wasn’t the only obsessed kid. In 2018 I acquired a set of all 12 F.H.E. home video volumes from a collector named Jesse Howard, who had bought them with lawn-mowing money as a teenager in 1989.
Ryan Hunter and I joke that the early ’90s were “the dark times”—a stagnant period without reruns or internet-connected fandom, when the episodes we had on tape were our only sustenance. In the age of streaming and social media, it’s hard to imagine that kind of scarcity, but repeated viewings of a subset of episodes only served to purify our connection to the characters we revered and the stories we internalized. The desire to share that connection with other people was inevitable
In Kindergarten, I wrote an extended version of “Mumm-Rana’s Belt,” complete with illustrations and—much to my teacher’s amazement—properly formatted dialogue.
In fourth grade, I gave a presentation on the Snowmen of Hook Mountain choose-your-own-adventure book, designing a big poster and doing my best to impart the full ThunderCats mythos to a room of squirming nine-year-olds—a fruitless evangelism.


Of the kids who remembered ThunderCats, all had long since lost interest. People would pass things down to me—a lunchbox from my cousin, some action figures from a classmate, a puzzle from a friend of my mom—all thoughtful and appreciated, but none scratching my itch for community. So when none of my peers shared my enthusiasm, I exercised my creative muscles in private, writing mediocre fiction, making stop motion animations with my toys,
crafting languages and writing systems and a Grand Unified Theory of Thunderian mythology.
I was determined to not let go. I was also wrestling with my own identity at the time, so the familiar comfort of the world of ThunderCats proved a useful refuge.
And then the Internet changed everything. Logging on in 1997, I found an already vibrant fandom online—quirky, personal websites the likes of which don’t exist anymore—and immediately joined the conversation. Finally there were people I could talk to about this thing that no one my age seemed to care about!I discovered eBay, and gradually expanded my collection of vintage toys and other memorabilia. I got a hold of all the episodes I’d never seen and spent every evening for a few months devouring them (and then hopping onto fan message boards to share my thoughts).


Acquiring copies of some of Leonard Starr’s scripts from James Gauthier gave me new insight into the work of writing for animation and sparked an early love of screenwriting and dramaturgy.

Inspired by Tygra, 5-year-old me had wanted to be an architect; but now 14-year-old me wanted to be a writer. I still love nothing more than reading the screenplay of an episode of ThunderCats, seeing the writer’s imagination on the page (and occasionally Peter’s notes in the margins!) and looking for details that didn’t make it onto the screen.As I got older and more established in the online community, I found myself moderating forums and writing episode reviews, first for ThunderCatsFans.org and later for ThunderCats.org. I also collaborated alongside Angie Hill and Celesta Johnston as a consultant for the trivia game bonus feature on Warner Bros.’ Season Two Volume Two DVD set.
It was just a few conference calls with a producer, but I remember those discussions so fondly, mostly because I was finally speaking with fellow fans I’d only ever interacted with online.
It was also around this time that I started collecting animation cels. My first cel was from the episode “Leah” from Season Four, and—I still can’t quite believe this—it came from the collection of Dennis J. Woodyard, secondary character designer from those later seasons and writer of two standout Season Four episodes.
Dennis’s detailed blog of pre-production artwork, combined with the scripts I’d been collecting, opened my eyes to the number of behind-the-scenes folks who made ThunderCats what it was and, to a small extent, the variety of career possibilities in the world of film and television. So I pursued a degree in filmmaking, and I continue to work in the world of storytelling—theater for young audiences, specifically—doing everything from camerawork and animation to copywriting and curriculum development. I know for a fact that the inner child that fuels my work today is directly connected to my enduring love of ThunderCats, and I’m glad I was self-aware enough to follow the path it set me on.
The online ThunderCats community has waxed, waned and migrated over the years as websites have come and gone. And when ThunderCats.org went down in 2023, I worried I would lose my connection to the community altogether. But then I started listening to Ryan and David’s ThunderCats Reviews podcast, and I immediately felt something I’d never felt before—real kinship! Here were fans not just dissecting the stories and characters, but discussing the personal significance ThunderCats had in their lives; not debating the value of serious sword-and-sorcery versus Overgardian sci-fi silliness, but embracing all of it; not just talking but loving out loud. I reached out to Ryan immediately, and we struck up a friendship. He even gave me the courage to attend my first convention
where I got to meet Larry Kenney and Peter Newman (and his wife, “Mrs. Tygra,” who was a delight!).
I’ve been making periodic guest appearances on the podcast ever since, even flying across the country to help produce last year’s Holiday Special—an hour-long love letter to both ThunderCats and the podcast’s constellation of listeners. Suddenly, the community I only experienced at a digital distance for decades is feeling more tightly knit than ever.
It isn’t lost on me that, just as it took me time to find the community I needed, the ThunderCats once found themselves adrift, searching for a home.
And while they may have built their community on a rather grand scale, uniting the isolated peoples of a whole planet, they did it through nothing more than altruism and cooperation. 41 years in, as our community continues to grow in size and vibrancy, I hope we can take a lesson from that altruistic spirit and keep engaging each other with the same humanity the characters we love have always exemplified. A lesson in humanity from cat people? Yes, ho!



PummRa is the first – that initial design launches you into a two year career as as an animation character designer. You design the secondary characters for every ThunderCats script up to about number 90 – at which point Rankin/Bass switches you to the development of SilverHawks.

During this evolution, Jules asks you if you know other artists that he might hire to help. You recommend cartoonist extraordinaire Bob Camp, who helped you get jobs in your earliest days in New York. This recommendation leads to Bob working for Rankin/Bass and becomes the entry point of Bob’s eventual career as an animated show creator for Ren & Stimpy and others.
In the art studio on 53rd Street where Rankin/Bass has their artists, there are cassette tapes of ThunderCats and Silverhawks. Listening to them as you draw, you get a feeling for the work, the voices, the style. You do the audition in the Rankin/Bass offices and what feels like the next day you’re in Howard Schwartz recording studio performing the roles of Redfin and the Little Wolf Boy and others for two segments in the Comic Strip, Tigersharks and Minimonsters.
The campaign takes off and you are THE man – featuring in every one of their radio and TV commercials for the next five years, launching you into a new niche as a “man-on-the-street”, and a cascade of residuals powered by the explosion of cable TV.
All these years later, you’re featuring in Landman, one of the most successful TV series of the day and, by the way, you’ve long since moved back to Los Angeles from New York and are living in the house in which you grew up, with your wife of 38 years.

Take the second script I wrote, ‘Mongor.’ It could so easily have been a straightforward account to a somewhat Satanic villain. Out of our discussions came the underlying theme: that fear compounds itself – Mongor becoming more powerful the more he was feared. Not a bad lesson for today, come to think of it!
And that was packaged into an educational program of synopses and morals which also included learning and activities for grades one through six.
PL writes: Collecting these various stories has been somewhat eye-opening. Two things, among many, which I have learned. The first is that the show was more than entertainment for many people. It often provided comfort. A 20-odd year-old Colombian confided that he was lonely at home and bullied at school; that ThunderCats became his family and his refuge. That’s quite astonishing, considering that he would not have seen the show broadcast and only experienced it on DVD. Many ThunderCats fans have shared this kind of information and emotion. The second thing I’ve learned is that all was not sweetness and light among the production staff and crew. That is a surprising revelation to me because I was so heavily and broadly involved in the production. Of course, I was aware there were occasional scratch-ups but I didn’t realize how deep some of the problems ran. (Later, you’ll read Chuck Hasegawa’s comments on this reality.) You may wonder what this has to do with Celesta’s story but some of the information she gave me touches on these two realizations – for for which I thank her; as I do – again – for the wonderful Sword Of Omens illustration she gave me. She is hugely talented.
Len Starr and his original MummRa design














Until I began to post the ThunderCAts of the Day, I knew nothing about Ryan and David or the podcast. It’s a work!
And like many kids, I was both terrified of Mumm-Ra and completely unable to look away.As I grew older, Mumm-Ra became my favorite villain and one of my favorite characters from the 1980s.
mpletely different. We had toy-collecting magazines where people advertised figures they were selling. I would circle listings, dream about them, and ask my parents on special occasions if we could order something rare.
One night, while watching a random episode for comfort, I realized there was not a dedicated podcast that covered every episode from start to finish. Many had started and stopped over the years, but none had completed the journey. So we dove in. One episode at a time. One adventure at a time.
I have met fellow fans who became true friends. Through every message, every episode, and every shared memory, I am reminded of something I often say. ThunderCats was never just a show created to sell toys. The writers, creators, artists, and cast poured so much heart into these characters that they became timeless. Forty years later, the stories still resonate beautifully. Not many series from that era can say the same.
fear in young Lion-O’s eyes as he hid behind his Claw Shield. Moments like that stuck with me and made the world feel emotionally grounded in a way I never forgot.
I played that thing until it practically fell apart. I wish I still had it. That toy made me feel powerful, brave, and connected to the universe of the show in a way nothing else did.
Having a strong female character like Cheetara meant a lot to me as a gay kid. She showed me it was completely normal to have girl friends that I admired and played with. She was capable, confident, and an all-around powerhouse, respected by both boys and girls.
That representation mattered more than I realized at the time. She became a symbol of strength for me, someone who helped me feel seen in ways I could not articulate as a child.
JP – Jorge Pelaez writes:
Our goal for the ThunderCats Lair channel is to make it an all-inclusive ThunderCats video encyclopedia combining behind the scenes stories with interviews and current news; everything show- and IP-related. I have been fortunate to make connections throughout my Thundercats social media endeavors, that have led me on the path to fulfilling my creative goals which has been one of the most rewarding achievements of my life.


Some of my art!
I also collaborated creatively with Bull Airs and designed a Thundercats homage shoe releasing in 2026 and hope to eventually make toy design and development my main job rather than, as it is now, a passionate sideline.
PL writes: if I have regrets about my time at Rankin/Bass, one of them would be that I did not get to know so many of the people who worked on the shows. Pete Cannarozi is one. Talking to him for these posts, we realized we probably only met once, at a R/B barbecue at Bass’s house. My excuse is that I was always balls to the wall on my part of the production but I could have, and should have, made more effort. Something that’s heartening – yes, all this intense production happened 40 years ago but almost everyone that I’ve contacted is still working in entertainment and production and still enthusiastic about that work. In a business not famous for longevity of career, that’s a tribute to their talent and attitude.

Bernie was the truly talented composer and arranger responsible for all the ThunderCats score – music, music cues and sound effects. In the beginning, he would go to Rankin/Bass and play Jules compositions on the piano in the office. Given Jules’ approval – and I cannot imagine that was ever withheld… perhaps a comment or two – he then hired the orchestra and recorded his composition and arrangement. This was a full orchestra complete with a string section. Nothing electronically created and everything composed specifically per episode and to the story’s requirements. After a while, of course, we had built up a substantial library which the show increasingly used. The wealth and variety of Bernie’s work is what gives one the feeling that everything was scored to the action. There’s no impression that the show uses generic library music, cues or effects.
I was a perfectionist – still am! – and was rarely satisfied with my first tests but Bernie was usually happy with those first efforts and his catchphrase was ‘Pete! Stop! Don’t improve it.’
I play the situational music – the triumphant flourishes, the fanfares, the demonic cues and the songs which feature while they’re clearing the ice. 1,000 games and still counting. Great fun and I love it – just as I did the several years working on those R/B shows with Bernie Hoffer and Lee Dannacher and that great cast.