As the camera zoomed in, a spotlight immediately lit up the O, the center of which swung back to reveal Kermit, who introduced the "very special guest star" from this position before retreating behind the sign. The second to last line of the A Pup Named Scooby-Doo theme song.Each episode of The Muppet Show opened on a shot of the title card, which in the first season was less ornate than the one that would replace it the following year.The theme song to The New Scooby-Doo Movies.Most of the theme songs to follow have the line "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?" in them: The remastered version of this song is still used in some video games like Scooby-Doo and the Cyber Chase, Scooby-Doo! Night of 100 Frights, Scooby-Doo! Mystery Mayhem and Scooby-Doo! Unmasked.At the last part of the song, it's been altered from "I know we'll catch that villain" to "I know you'll catch that villain." In SCOOB!, the one verse has been changed.An instrumental karaoke version without lyrics exists on older French broadcasts and the Brazilian Portuguese dub, as well as season 1 episodes in Latin Spanish (with extra vocal effects) and season 2 episodes in Italy.This also exists on season 1 episodes in Italian and season 2 episodes in Latin Spanish. In the German, Greek, Hungarian, and Turkish dubs, the English theme is used.Several foreign-language versions of the show translated the theme lyrics into a different language with the following exceptions:.During the Scoobynatural episode of Supernatural, the theme song is used during a brief montage scene and the case.There is a slight lyrical difference between the opening and closing credits versions of the theme the closing credits version does not include the line "That's a fact!" after the Scooby Snack reference, which is also the version used for the season 2 opening and closing themes.Nichols' original theme is, however, heard under the title card for each episode of both this and the follow-up series, The New Scooby-Doo Movies, and is very prominently used as a background score for most Scooby-Doo episodes through 1979. The current DVD releases of Season 1 do not include the Nichols opening theme on episode 1. It was also heard during its run on Cartoon Network, until Turner decided to remaster all the episodes in 1998. These episodes used Ted Nichols' original instrumental theme, which was unheard for many years until the show's resurrection on USA's Cartoon Express in 1990. After Nichols's theme was used as both the opening and closing theme of the second broadcast episode, A Clue for Scooby Doo, the show's official theme song became the permanent opening credits theme, and was also heard during the closing credits on all but three episodes: Hassle in the Castle, Which Witch is Which?, and A Night of Fright is No Delight. The closing theme of the first show was the more familiar theme song shown above, written by David Mook and Ben Raleigh and recorded by Mook three days before the show's September 13 broadcast premiere. The theme was used for the opening credits of and under the title cards for the premiere episode, What a Night for a Knight. A completely different instrumental theme for the show was written by studio musical director Ted Nichols.You're going to have yourself a Scooby Snack!