Continuity mistake: When Fred and Daphne arrive at a temple screen, the top lavender strip on Daphne's skirt is missing.
Continuity mistake: When we see Fred holding the picture of Champion in the Mystery Machine, he is holding one sheet of paper. When we see a full view of the gang in the next shot, Fred is now holding two sheets.
Continuity mistake: When Scooby is in Buck Masters' office, he sees a pointer dog on top of a stand and then does an impression of it by pointing his finger and freezes. When the camera closes in on Scooby in the next shot, the stand has disappeared.
Continuity mistake: When Scooby Doo rushes back on to the beach and Shaggy asks him, "What's with you?", Scooby's eyebrows disappear briefly.
Continuity mistake: In the shot of Scooby Doo turning on the radio at the beach, his spots are missing.
A Gaggle of Galloping Ghosts - S1-E11
Audio problem: The Frankenstein monster growls like the werewolf at one point in the laboratory.
Plot hole: Given he fell down into a ravine it seems impossible for Carl to have got back to his trailer before Mystery Inc does.
Bedlam in the Big Top - S1-E10
Continuity mistake: Velma throws the umbrella to Scooby pointed end first, but when it arrives at Scooby, the umbrella is handle-end first.
Bedlam in the Big Top - S1-E10
Continuity mistake: After the umbrella turns inside out, Scooby loses his grip with the umbrella and falls to the trampoline, but the umbrella does not follow Scooby down.
Bedlam in the Big Top - S1-E10
Continuity mistake: The table behind Shaggy changes color several times as he performs the Lion Tamer act in the cage with the lion.
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