Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: Just before the mask is pulled off the Creeper, Scooby's collar splits into two parts and then changes back again.
Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: When the Mystery Machine approaches the bank guard on the ground near the fallen tree with his car ransacked, the guard has nothing in his hand, but when Daphne goes over and touches the guard, he is now holding a piece of paper.
Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: When Daphne asks Velma if she is all right after Scooby and Shaggy knocked her over, Daphne's pink leggings are missing.
Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: When the Creeper is finally captured, we see a view of all the gang and the Creeper in hay bales and Fred is next to the Creeper. When Scooby walks over to the Creeper, Fred has suddenly disappeared.
Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: After the gang's encounter with the hermit they head back to the Mystery Machine, and when Fred opens the passenger door in the wideshot its colors are the usual blue, green, and orange, but in the closeups the door's exterior is solid green. The style of the door handle is also different in the closeups.
Jeepers It's the Creeper - S2-E3
Continuity mistake: When we see Daphne in the Mystery Machine at the end of the episode, her scarf is coloured green but changes to purple in the next shot, then it's back to green when they return the chick.
Answer: During most episodes of "Scooby Doo, Where Are You?," the gang often split up to explore the latest haunted mansion or abandoned windmill or deserted amusement park. Scooby and Shaggy would generally end up together, Velma would often go off alone, and Daphne would frequently go exploring with Fred. It seemed to be a running theme in the "Scooby Doo" cartoons that Daphne was perpetually flirting with Fred. Fred, however, always seemed much more obliviously preoccupied with finding the next clue, foiling Daphne's amorous intentions. I have always been under the impression that the Scooby-Doo gang was a pretty sexually ambiguous group. More than a few people have suggested that athletic, well-coiffed, ascot-wearing Fred, and bookish Velma were early archetypes of gay/lesbian teens. The show existed in a time when several cartoons suggested sexual ambiguity in its characters: Effete Snagglepuss, a repeatedly drag-wearing Bugs Bunny (who even appeared in TV's first same-sex wedding with phallic rifle-toting Elmer Fudd), prim and polite gophers Mac and Tosh, Peppermint Patty, Marcie, Schroeder and Linus from the "Peanuts" cartoons. But whether or not any then subversive homosexual undertones were ever intended in any of the characters, the oft-paired Daphne and Fred never seemed able to get their relationship beyond the lukewarm stage, much to Daphne's apparent chagrin.
Michael Albert