How is Mystery Inc. funded?How did Lori survive?The Charlie Francis mystery from FringeHow is Hunter adopted?How does “fighting” work?Is there any information about a future Scooby Doo show that will come after “Scooby Doo Mystery Incorporated”?How come Sherlock still remembers how to play the violin?Mystery surrounding Ichabod's motherMystery in the movie “Julia's Eyes”Was Ahch-To such a mystery?

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How is Mystery Inc. funded?


How did Lori survive?The Charlie Francis mystery from FringeHow is Hunter adopted?How does “fighting” work?Is there any information about a future Scooby Doo show that will come after “Scooby Doo Mystery Incorporated”?How come Sherlock still remembers how to play the violin?Mystery surrounding Ichabod's motherMystery in the movie “Julia's Eyes”Was Ahch-To such a mystery?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








43















Shaggy, Daphne, Velma and Fred usually solve ghost-related abnormal crimes every day, with their Great Dane dog partner Scooby Doo, while traveling across the country (sometimes abroad). They don't seem to be doing any jobs. Although it's noted that some members have rich parents and/or close relatives, we cannot assume that they'll provide money for the kid long term. In the series, we see mostly the team is in their youth, (probably somewhat in their twenties). So it normally means that their parents aren't providing for them now. (common in US and Europe countries). They may need money for food supplies (a huge amount of money considering Shaggy and Scooby's eating capabilities), gas for the van, other vehicle related expenses, and other expenses including paying taxes.



I haven't seen any of them charge for catching the bad guy/ghost from their client. Most of the time they don't get a client but they themselves get caught into the trouble.



How is the team funded? How do they get the money for their expenses?










share|improve this question





















  • 2





    From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

    – Harper
    yesterday






  • 8





    @Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

    – Vishwa
    yesterday











  • I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago











  • @Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

    – F1Krazy
    44 mins ago

















43















Shaggy, Daphne, Velma and Fred usually solve ghost-related abnormal crimes every day, with their Great Dane dog partner Scooby Doo, while traveling across the country (sometimes abroad). They don't seem to be doing any jobs. Although it's noted that some members have rich parents and/or close relatives, we cannot assume that they'll provide money for the kid long term. In the series, we see mostly the team is in their youth, (probably somewhat in their twenties). So it normally means that their parents aren't providing for them now. (common in US and Europe countries). They may need money for food supplies (a huge amount of money considering Shaggy and Scooby's eating capabilities), gas for the van, other vehicle related expenses, and other expenses including paying taxes.



I haven't seen any of them charge for catching the bad guy/ghost from their client. Most of the time they don't get a client but they themselves get caught into the trouble.



How is the team funded? How do they get the money for their expenses?










share|improve this question





















  • 2





    From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

    – Harper
    yesterday






  • 8





    @Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

    – Vishwa
    yesterday











  • I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago











  • @Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

    – F1Krazy
    44 mins ago













43












43








43


4






Shaggy, Daphne, Velma and Fred usually solve ghost-related abnormal crimes every day, with their Great Dane dog partner Scooby Doo, while traveling across the country (sometimes abroad). They don't seem to be doing any jobs. Although it's noted that some members have rich parents and/or close relatives, we cannot assume that they'll provide money for the kid long term. In the series, we see mostly the team is in their youth, (probably somewhat in their twenties). So it normally means that their parents aren't providing for them now. (common in US and Europe countries). They may need money for food supplies (a huge amount of money considering Shaggy and Scooby's eating capabilities), gas for the van, other vehicle related expenses, and other expenses including paying taxes.



I haven't seen any of them charge for catching the bad guy/ghost from their client. Most of the time they don't get a client but they themselves get caught into the trouble.



How is the team funded? How do they get the money for their expenses?










share|improve this question
















Shaggy, Daphne, Velma and Fred usually solve ghost-related abnormal crimes every day, with their Great Dane dog partner Scooby Doo, while traveling across the country (sometimes abroad). They don't seem to be doing any jobs. Although it's noted that some members have rich parents and/or close relatives, we cannot assume that they'll provide money for the kid long term. In the series, we see mostly the team is in their youth, (probably somewhat in their twenties). So it normally means that their parents aren't providing for them now. (common in US and Europe countries). They may need money for food supplies (a huge amount of money considering Shaggy and Scooby's eating capabilities), gas for the van, other vehicle related expenses, and other expenses including paying taxes.



I haven't seen any of them charge for catching the bad guy/ghost from their client. Most of the time they don't get a client but they themselves get caught into the trouble.



How is the team funded? How do they get the money for their expenses?







plot-explanation scooby-doo






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 44 mins ago









F1Krazy

11.9k4 gold badges46 silver badges60 bronze badges




11.9k4 gold badges46 silver badges60 bronze badges










asked yesterday









VishwaVishwa

6,9745 gold badges33 silver badges73 bronze badges




6,9745 gold badges33 silver badges73 bronze badges










  • 2





    From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

    – Harper
    yesterday






  • 8





    @Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

    – Vishwa
    yesterday











  • I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago











  • @Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

    – F1Krazy
    44 mins ago












  • 2





    From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

    – Harper
    yesterday






  • 8





    @Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

    – Vishwa
    yesterday











  • I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

    – Criggie
    3 hours ago











  • @Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

    – F1Krazy
    44 mins ago







2




2





From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

– Harper
yesterday





From the same guy who funds the Friends' apartments..

– Harper
yesterday




8




8





@Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

– Vishwa
yesterday





@Harper they actually had jobs and paid the rent. Chandler paid huge chunk on their apartment while Joey chips in, and Monica paid significantly less because the apartment was on her nana's name and was rent controlled. Ross paid for his own apartment and Pheobe lived near central park and not in a big one, so it would cost less, probably

– Vishwa
yesterday













I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

– Criggie
3 hours ago





I can figure out who you mean by "Team Scooby Doo", but is it worth including their real name of "Mystery Incorporated" too ?

– Criggie
3 hours ago













@Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

– F1Krazy
44 mins ago





@Criggie I've taken the liberty of making the edit myself.

– F1Krazy
44 mins ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















55
















According to Scooby-Doo Behind the Scenes (released in 1998; see Wikiquote), the initial money to start out was given to them by Daphne’s dad:




Daphne: "Well, Daddy gave us the money to start off. (shows an image of the check that first financed Mystery Inc.) We didn't even have a car, so we gave our parents gas money to drive us around."









In addition, many of the different canons have shown them having jobs. (In some of these they are adults though.) From the Wikia page for Scooby-Doo:




  • Junior detectives-for-hire: Contrary to the above, when the gang was in their preadolescence, they worked out of a clubhouse, calling themselves the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency, and charged a minimal fee for their services in solving the mysteries in their hometown of Coolsville. (APNSD)

  • Actor: Scooby got the role of Sandy Duncan's dog, after solving the case at Mammoth Studios. (TNSDMovies: Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hyde)

  • Carnival owner: Scooby, along with the rest of the gang, was given a share of Dick Van Dyke's carnival, after saving it from going under. (TNSDMovies: The Haunted Carnival)

  • Construction worker: He, Shaggy, and Fred took questionable jobs at a construction site. (TSDS: High Rise Hair Raiser)

  • Freelance journalist: Scooby, Shaggy, Scrappy, and Daphne became freelance journalists, forming the second incarnation of the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency. (TNS&SDS, TNSDMysteries)

  • Gym teacher: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy were hired as gym teachers at Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, or so they believed. (Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School)

  • Co-racecar driver. (Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf)

  • Aiport customs: He and worked in customs at an airport during the break-up of Mystery Inc., but were fired when they ate all the confiscated cheese. (Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island)

  • Detective: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy worked for Shaggy's uncle Fearless Shagaford at the Fearless Detective Agency. (The Scooby & Scrappy Doo Puppy Hour)

  • Additionally, Scooby assisted Shaggy when he was a paper boy, by unloading the delivered papers into his bike's basket. When the gang discovered Shaggy's boss stole his bike chain to work his counterfeiting machine, Shaggy quit, and so did Scooby. (APNSD: A Bicycle Built for Boo!)






share|improve this answer






















  • 4





    nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

    – Luciano
    yesterday











  • @Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

    – Vishwa
    yesterday






  • 1





    In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    22 hours ago











  • considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

    – John
    18 hours ago











  • Pioneers in the "gig economy."

    – mxyzplk
    11 hours ago


















20
















Something else that might impact things:



Scooby Doo MAY be set in a period of economic recession.



It is never outright said in the show or by any of the creators, but there is a lot of evidence that points towards the Scooby Doo universe being in the middle of an economic recession:



(source: http://scoobyfiles.toonzone.net/monsters/index.html, as well as a number of other articles that pop up when googling "scooby doo recession")



  1. Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people: an airport, mansions, castles, a ski resort, an amusement park,... Every location looks broken down, unused and abandoned, like the economy just doesn't support the activities they encompass.

  2. Nearly every criminal was motivated by monetary greed: a rare coin, a family treasure, a smuggling operation, theft for resale,... And even those that weren't motivated directly by monetary greed just wanted a job, or in one case were motivated by hatred against robots, who tend to steal jobs. There were no crimes of passion or crimes of hatred of other people, which means that most people just wanted to get money.

  3. Most of the criminals had skills that could easily land them a job: several PhDs, lawyers, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs,... People that could easily legitimately make money using their skills in legal manners,... If there were any jobs around.

  4. They don't seem to make all that much money for food and other necessities. In a number of episodes, Scooby and Shaggy react very hungrily when they encounter large amounts of food, as if they don't know when they next get food. And they seem to easily be bribed by relatively small amounts of Scooby Snacks from time to time. And look at how scraggly Shaggy looks. It seems like they're struggling to get by for the most part.

  5. The gang actually is around high-school age: between 15 and 17. They might look older, but their official age as given in the show bible were given as Fred and Shaggy being 17, Daphne being 16 and Velma being 15. So if these kids are of high-school age, why are they not at school? It seems like these are just a bunch of bored kids that have nothing better to do with their time than to drive around the country in search of things to do.

All of this evidence points to Scooby Doo, and especially the original 2 seasons, to be set in the middle of an economic recession. Most people with specialized skills don't have jobs, and have turned to crime in hopes of getting money. Tourism and education have gone down the drain because people don't have the money to travel or pay for education.



So they might simply not need that much money because there isn't that much to spend it on. The gang may just simply be a roaming group of high school age teenagers that are in search of anything to do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

    – F1Krazy
    20 hours ago






  • 2





    Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

    – Vishwa
    19 hours ago












  • This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

    – Kevin
    13 hours ago











  • Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

    – computercarguy
    8 hours ago


















1
















They all have rich parents and don't travel far, so considering gas prices are low in the US, it is very plausible that they use their allowance to chip in for gas and that is all they need. Even Scooby-Doo comes from a rich dog family, and Shaggy received some big plantation as an inheritance. Only Velma is middle-class, but she worked for her parents in a museum.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Any sources to back up this answer?

    – DustinDavis
    yesterday






  • 2





    Especially that part about "low gas prices".

    – Shawn V. Wilson
    yesterday






  • 8





    @ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

    – Chronocidal
    yesterday







  • 7





    @ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday







  • 4





    @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

    – Chronocidal
    22 hours ago




















3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









55
















According to Scooby-Doo Behind the Scenes (released in 1998; see Wikiquote), the initial money to start out was given to them by Daphne’s dad:




Daphne: "Well, Daddy gave us the money to start off. (shows an image of the check that first financed Mystery Inc.) We didn't even have a car, so we gave our parents gas money to drive us around."









In addition, many of the different canons have shown them having jobs. (In some of these they are adults though.) From the Wikia page for Scooby-Doo:




  • Junior detectives-for-hire: Contrary to the above, when the gang was in their preadolescence, they worked out of a clubhouse, calling themselves the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency, and charged a minimal fee for their services in solving the mysteries in their hometown of Coolsville. (APNSD)

  • Actor: Scooby got the role of Sandy Duncan's dog, after solving the case at Mammoth Studios. (TNSDMovies: Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hyde)

  • Carnival owner: Scooby, along with the rest of the gang, was given a share of Dick Van Dyke's carnival, after saving it from going under. (TNSDMovies: The Haunted Carnival)

  • Construction worker: He, Shaggy, and Fred took questionable jobs at a construction site. (TSDS: High Rise Hair Raiser)

  • Freelance journalist: Scooby, Shaggy, Scrappy, and Daphne became freelance journalists, forming the second incarnation of the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency. (TNS&SDS, TNSDMysteries)

  • Gym teacher: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy were hired as gym teachers at Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, or so they believed. (Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School)

  • Co-racecar driver. (Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf)

  • Aiport customs: He and worked in customs at an airport during the break-up of Mystery Inc., but were fired when they ate all the confiscated cheese. (Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island)

  • Detective: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy worked for Shaggy's uncle Fearless Shagaford at the Fearless Detective Agency. (The Scooby & Scrappy Doo Puppy Hour)

  • Additionally, Scooby assisted Shaggy when he was a paper boy, by unloading the delivered papers into his bike's basket. When the gang discovered Shaggy's boss stole his bike chain to work his counterfeiting machine, Shaggy quit, and so did Scooby. (APNSD: A Bicycle Built for Boo!)






share|improve this answer






















  • 4





    nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

    – Luciano
    yesterday











  • @Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

    – Vishwa
    yesterday






  • 1





    In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    22 hours ago











  • considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

    – John
    18 hours ago











  • Pioneers in the "gig economy."

    – mxyzplk
    11 hours ago















55
















According to Scooby-Doo Behind the Scenes (released in 1998; see Wikiquote), the initial money to start out was given to them by Daphne’s dad:




Daphne: "Well, Daddy gave us the money to start off. (shows an image of the check that first financed Mystery Inc.) We didn't even have a car, so we gave our parents gas money to drive us around."









In addition, many of the different canons have shown them having jobs. (In some of these they are adults though.) From the Wikia page for Scooby-Doo:




  • Junior detectives-for-hire: Contrary to the above, when the gang was in their preadolescence, they worked out of a clubhouse, calling themselves the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency, and charged a minimal fee for their services in solving the mysteries in their hometown of Coolsville. (APNSD)

  • Actor: Scooby got the role of Sandy Duncan's dog, after solving the case at Mammoth Studios. (TNSDMovies: Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hyde)

  • Carnival owner: Scooby, along with the rest of the gang, was given a share of Dick Van Dyke's carnival, after saving it from going under. (TNSDMovies: The Haunted Carnival)

  • Construction worker: He, Shaggy, and Fred took questionable jobs at a construction site. (TSDS: High Rise Hair Raiser)

  • Freelance journalist: Scooby, Shaggy, Scrappy, and Daphne became freelance journalists, forming the second incarnation of the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency. (TNS&SDS, TNSDMysteries)

  • Gym teacher: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy were hired as gym teachers at Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, or so they believed. (Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School)

  • Co-racecar driver. (Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf)

  • Aiport customs: He and worked in customs at an airport during the break-up of Mystery Inc., but were fired when they ate all the confiscated cheese. (Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island)

  • Detective: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy worked for Shaggy's uncle Fearless Shagaford at the Fearless Detective Agency. (The Scooby & Scrappy Doo Puppy Hour)

  • Additionally, Scooby assisted Shaggy when he was a paper boy, by unloading the delivered papers into his bike's basket. When the gang discovered Shaggy's boss stole his bike chain to work his counterfeiting machine, Shaggy quit, and so did Scooby. (APNSD: A Bicycle Built for Boo!)






share|improve this answer






















  • 4





    nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

    – Luciano
    yesterday











  • @Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

    – Vishwa
    yesterday






  • 1





    In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    22 hours ago











  • considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

    – John
    18 hours ago











  • Pioneers in the "gig economy."

    – mxyzplk
    11 hours ago













55














55










55









According to Scooby-Doo Behind the Scenes (released in 1998; see Wikiquote), the initial money to start out was given to them by Daphne’s dad:




Daphne: "Well, Daddy gave us the money to start off. (shows an image of the check that first financed Mystery Inc.) We didn't even have a car, so we gave our parents gas money to drive us around."









In addition, many of the different canons have shown them having jobs. (In some of these they are adults though.) From the Wikia page for Scooby-Doo:




  • Junior detectives-for-hire: Contrary to the above, when the gang was in their preadolescence, they worked out of a clubhouse, calling themselves the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency, and charged a minimal fee for their services in solving the mysteries in their hometown of Coolsville. (APNSD)

  • Actor: Scooby got the role of Sandy Duncan's dog, after solving the case at Mammoth Studios. (TNSDMovies: Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hyde)

  • Carnival owner: Scooby, along with the rest of the gang, was given a share of Dick Van Dyke's carnival, after saving it from going under. (TNSDMovies: The Haunted Carnival)

  • Construction worker: He, Shaggy, and Fred took questionable jobs at a construction site. (TSDS: High Rise Hair Raiser)

  • Freelance journalist: Scooby, Shaggy, Scrappy, and Daphne became freelance journalists, forming the second incarnation of the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency. (TNS&SDS, TNSDMysteries)

  • Gym teacher: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy were hired as gym teachers at Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, or so they believed. (Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School)

  • Co-racecar driver. (Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf)

  • Aiport customs: He and worked in customs at an airport during the break-up of Mystery Inc., but were fired when they ate all the confiscated cheese. (Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island)

  • Detective: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy worked for Shaggy's uncle Fearless Shagaford at the Fearless Detective Agency. (The Scooby & Scrappy Doo Puppy Hour)

  • Additionally, Scooby assisted Shaggy when he was a paper boy, by unloading the delivered papers into his bike's basket. When the gang discovered Shaggy's boss stole his bike chain to work his counterfeiting machine, Shaggy quit, and so did Scooby. (APNSD: A Bicycle Built for Boo!)






share|improve this answer















According to Scooby-Doo Behind the Scenes (released in 1998; see Wikiquote), the initial money to start out was given to them by Daphne’s dad:




Daphne: "Well, Daddy gave us the money to start off. (shows an image of the check that first financed Mystery Inc.) We didn't even have a car, so we gave our parents gas money to drive us around."









In addition, many of the different canons have shown them having jobs. (In some of these they are adults though.) From the Wikia page for Scooby-Doo:




  • Junior detectives-for-hire: Contrary to the above, when the gang was in their preadolescence, they worked out of a clubhouse, calling themselves the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency, and charged a minimal fee for their services in solving the mysteries in their hometown of Coolsville. (APNSD)

  • Actor: Scooby got the role of Sandy Duncan's dog, after solving the case at Mammoth Studios. (TNSDMovies: Sandy Duncan's Jekyll and Hyde)

  • Carnival owner: Scooby, along with the rest of the gang, was given a share of Dick Van Dyke's carnival, after saving it from going under. (TNSDMovies: The Haunted Carnival)

  • Construction worker: He, Shaggy, and Fred took questionable jobs at a construction site. (TSDS: High Rise Hair Raiser)

  • Freelance journalist: Scooby, Shaggy, Scrappy, and Daphne became freelance journalists, forming the second incarnation of the Scooby-Doo Detective Agency. (TNS&SDS, TNSDMysteries)

  • Gym teacher: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy were hired as gym teachers at Grimwood's Finishing School for Girls, or so they believed. (Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School)

  • Co-racecar driver. (Scooby-Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf)

  • Aiport customs: He and worked in customs at an airport during the break-up of Mystery Inc., but were fired when they ate all the confiscated cheese. (Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island)

  • Detective: He, Shaggy, and Scrappy worked for Shaggy's uncle Fearless Shagaford at the Fearless Detective Agency. (The Scooby & Scrappy Doo Puppy Hour)

  • Additionally, Scooby assisted Shaggy when he was a paper boy, by unloading the delivered papers into his bike's basket. When the gang discovered Shaggy's boss stole his bike chain to work his counterfeiting machine, Shaggy quit, and so did Scooby. (APNSD: A Bicycle Built for Boo!)















share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









LaurelLaurel

2,7019 silver badges21 bronze badges




2,7019 silver badges21 bronze badges










  • 4





    nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

    – Luciano
    yesterday











  • @Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

    – Vishwa
    yesterday






  • 1





    In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    22 hours ago











  • considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

    – John
    18 hours ago











  • Pioneers in the "gig economy."

    – mxyzplk
    11 hours ago












  • 4





    nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

    – Luciano
    yesterday











  • @Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

    – Vishwa
    yesterday






  • 1





    In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

    – TheLethalCarrot
    22 hours ago











  • considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

    – John
    18 hours ago











  • Pioneers in the "gig economy."

    – mxyzplk
    11 hours ago







4




4





nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

– Luciano
yesterday





nice! I wasn't expecting this much realism from a cartoon :)

– Luciano
yesterday













@Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

– Vishwa
yesterday





@Laurel thank you for the great answer, I really wish every cartoon may have this kind of realism even if it's meant for teeny tiny kids.

– Vishwa
yesterday




1




1





In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

– TheLethalCarrot
22 hours ago





In the two films Mystery Inc is incredibly popular and considering people dress like them they probably have merch and sponsorships. I don't think there's anything explicit though.

– TheLethalCarrot
22 hours ago













considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

– John
18 hours ago





considering the show has two dogs talking in English (and/or mumbling), this is a lot of back story to enable sustenance!

– John
18 hours ago













Pioneers in the "gig economy."

– mxyzplk
11 hours ago





Pioneers in the "gig economy."

– mxyzplk
11 hours ago













20
















Something else that might impact things:



Scooby Doo MAY be set in a period of economic recession.



It is never outright said in the show or by any of the creators, but there is a lot of evidence that points towards the Scooby Doo universe being in the middle of an economic recession:



(source: http://scoobyfiles.toonzone.net/monsters/index.html, as well as a number of other articles that pop up when googling "scooby doo recession")



  1. Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people: an airport, mansions, castles, a ski resort, an amusement park,... Every location looks broken down, unused and abandoned, like the economy just doesn't support the activities they encompass.

  2. Nearly every criminal was motivated by monetary greed: a rare coin, a family treasure, a smuggling operation, theft for resale,... And even those that weren't motivated directly by monetary greed just wanted a job, or in one case were motivated by hatred against robots, who tend to steal jobs. There were no crimes of passion or crimes of hatred of other people, which means that most people just wanted to get money.

  3. Most of the criminals had skills that could easily land them a job: several PhDs, lawyers, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs,... People that could easily legitimately make money using their skills in legal manners,... If there were any jobs around.

  4. They don't seem to make all that much money for food and other necessities. In a number of episodes, Scooby and Shaggy react very hungrily when they encounter large amounts of food, as if they don't know when they next get food. And they seem to easily be bribed by relatively small amounts of Scooby Snacks from time to time. And look at how scraggly Shaggy looks. It seems like they're struggling to get by for the most part.

  5. The gang actually is around high-school age: between 15 and 17. They might look older, but their official age as given in the show bible were given as Fred and Shaggy being 17, Daphne being 16 and Velma being 15. So if these kids are of high-school age, why are they not at school? It seems like these are just a bunch of bored kids that have nothing better to do with their time than to drive around the country in search of things to do.

All of this evidence points to Scooby Doo, and especially the original 2 seasons, to be set in the middle of an economic recession. Most people with specialized skills don't have jobs, and have turned to crime in hopes of getting money. Tourism and education have gone down the drain because people don't have the money to travel or pay for education.



So they might simply not need that much money because there isn't that much to spend it on. The gang may just simply be a roaming group of high school age teenagers that are in search of anything to do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

    – F1Krazy
    20 hours ago






  • 2





    Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

    – Vishwa
    19 hours ago












  • This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

    – Kevin
    13 hours ago











  • Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

    – computercarguy
    8 hours ago















20
















Something else that might impact things:



Scooby Doo MAY be set in a period of economic recession.



It is never outright said in the show or by any of the creators, but there is a lot of evidence that points towards the Scooby Doo universe being in the middle of an economic recession:



(source: http://scoobyfiles.toonzone.net/monsters/index.html, as well as a number of other articles that pop up when googling "scooby doo recession")



  1. Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people: an airport, mansions, castles, a ski resort, an amusement park,... Every location looks broken down, unused and abandoned, like the economy just doesn't support the activities they encompass.

  2. Nearly every criminal was motivated by monetary greed: a rare coin, a family treasure, a smuggling operation, theft for resale,... And even those that weren't motivated directly by monetary greed just wanted a job, or in one case were motivated by hatred against robots, who tend to steal jobs. There were no crimes of passion or crimes of hatred of other people, which means that most people just wanted to get money.

  3. Most of the criminals had skills that could easily land them a job: several PhDs, lawyers, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs,... People that could easily legitimately make money using their skills in legal manners,... If there were any jobs around.

  4. They don't seem to make all that much money for food and other necessities. In a number of episodes, Scooby and Shaggy react very hungrily when they encounter large amounts of food, as if they don't know when they next get food. And they seem to easily be bribed by relatively small amounts of Scooby Snacks from time to time. And look at how scraggly Shaggy looks. It seems like they're struggling to get by for the most part.

  5. The gang actually is around high-school age: between 15 and 17. They might look older, but their official age as given in the show bible were given as Fred and Shaggy being 17, Daphne being 16 and Velma being 15. So if these kids are of high-school age, why are they not at school? It seems like these are just a bunch of bored kids that have nothing better to do with their time than to drive around the country in search of things to do.

All of this evidence points to Scooby Doo, and especially the original 2 seasons, to be set in the middle of an economic recession. Most people with specialized skills don't have jobs, and have turned to crime in hopes of getting money. Tourism and education have gone down the drain because people don't have the money to travel or pay for education.



So they might simply not need that much money because there isn't that much to spend it on. The gang may just simply be a roaming group of high school age teenagers that are in search of anything to do.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

    – F1Krazy
    20 hours ago






  • 2





    Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

    – Vishwa
    19 hours ago












  • This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

    – Kevin
    13 hours ago











  • Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

    – computercarguy
    8 hours ago













20














20










20









Something else that might impact things:



Scooby Doo MAY be set in a period of economic recession.



It is never outright said in the show or by any of the creators, but there is a lot of evidence that points towards the Scooby Doo universe being in the middle of an economic recession:



(source: http://scoobyfiles.toonzone.net/monsters/index.html, as well as a number of other articles that pop up when googling "scooby doo recession")



  1. Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people: an airport, mansions, castles, a ski resort, an amusement park,... Every location looks broken down, unused and abandoned, like the economy just doesn't support the activities they encompass.

  2. Nearly every criminal was motivated by monetary greed: a rare coin, a family treasure, a smuggling operation, theft for resale,... And even those that weren't motivated directly by monetary greed just wanted a job, or in one case were motivated by hatred against robots, who tend to steal jobs. There were no crimes of passion or crimes of hatred of other people, which means that most people just wanted to get money.

  3. Most of the criminals had skills that could easily land them a job: several PhDs, lawyers, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs,... People that could easily legitimately make money using their skills in legal manners,... If there were any jobs around.

  4. They don't seem to make all that much money for food and other necessities. In a number of episodes, Scooby and Shaggy react very hungrily when they encounter large amounts of food, as if they don't know when they next get food. And they seem to easily be bribed by relatively small amounts of Scooby Snacks from time to time. And look at how scraggly Shaggy looks. It seems like they're struggling to get by for the most part.

  5. The gang actually is around high-school age: between 15 and 17. They might look older, but their official age as given in the show bible were given as Fred and Shaggy being 17, Daphne being 16 and Velma being 15. So if these kids are of high-school age, why are they not at school? It seems like these are just a bunch of bored kids that have nothing better to do with their time than to drive around the country in search of things to do.

All of this evidence points to Scooby Doo, and especially the original 2 seasons, to be set in the middle of an economic recession. Most people with specialized skills don't have jobs, and have turned to crime in hopes of getting money. Tourism and education have gone down the drain because people don't have the money to travel or pay for education.



So they might simply not need that much money because there isn't that much to spend it on. The gang may just simply be a roaming group of high school age teenagers that are in search of anything to do.






share|improve this answer













Something else that might impact things:



Scooby Doo MAY be set in a period of economic recession.



It is never outright said in the show or by any of the creators, but there is a lot of evidence that points towards the Scooby Doo universe being in the middle of an economic recession:



(source: http://scoobyfiles.toonzone.net/monsters/index.html, as well as a number of other articles that pop up when googling "scooby doo recession")



  1. Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people: an airport, mansions, castles, a ski resort, an amusement park,... Every location looks broken down, unused and abandoned, like the economy just doesn't support the activities they encompass.

  2. Nearly every criminal was motivated by monetary greed: a rare coin, a family treasure, a smuggling operation, theft for resale,... And even those that weren't motivated directly by monetary greed just wanted a job, or in one case were motivated by hatred against robots, who tend to steal jobs. There were no crimes of passion or crimes of hatred of other people, which means that most people just wanted to get money.

  3. Most of the criminals had skills that could easily land them a job: several PhDs, lawyers, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs,... People that could easily legitimately make money using their skills in legal manners,... If there were any jobs around.

  4. They don't seem to make all that much money for food and other necessities. In a number of episodes, Scooby and Shaggy react very hungrily when they encounter large amounts of food, as if they don't know when they next get food. And they seem to easily be bribed by relatively small amounts of Scooby Snacks from time to time. And look at how scraggly Shaggy looks. It seems like they're struggling to get by for the most part.

  5. The gang actually is around high-school age: between 15 and 17. They might look older, but their official age as given in the show bible were given as Fred and Shaggy being 17, Daphne being 16 and Velma being 15. So if these kids are of high-school age, why are they not at school? It seems like these are just a bunch of bored kids that have nothing better to do with their time than to drive around the country in search of things to do.

All of this evidence points to Scooby Doo, and especially the original 2 seasons, to be set in the middle of an economic recession. Most people with specialized skills don't have jobs, and have turned to crime in hopes of getting money. Tourism and education have gone down the drain because people don't have the money to travel or pay for education.



So they might simply not need that much money because there isn't that much to spend it on. The gang may just simply be a roaming group of high school age teenagers that are in search of anything to do.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 21 hours ago









NzallNzall

7354 silver badges15 bronze badges




7354 silver badges15 bronze badges










  • 2





    This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

    – F1Krazy
    20 hours ago






  • 2





    Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

    – Vishwa
    19 hours ago












  • This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

    – Kevin
    13 hours ago











  • Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

    – computercarguy
    8 hours ago












  • 2





    This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

    – F1Krazy
    20 hours ago






  • 2





    Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

    – Vishwa
    19 hours ago












  • This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

    – Kevin
    13 hours ago











  • Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

    – computercarguy
    8 hours ago







2




2





This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

– F1Krazy
20 hours ago





This doesn't hold true for every incarnation - separate episodes of What's New, Scooby-Doo? depict a rollercoaster park and shopping mall that are both thriving (until the monster-of-the-week shows up, of course). But you did specify "especially the original 2 series", so have an upvote anyway, for some very clever and detailed analysis.

– F1Krazy
20 hours ago




2




2





Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

– Vishwa
19 hours ago






Appreciate the different POV answer,Thanks... What I thought on the point 1, Nearly every episode was set in some sort of abandoned place where there would otherwise be a lot of people. I think that's because Ghosts usually prefer those kind of places, innit?

– Vishwa
19 hours ago














This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

– Kevin
13 hours ago





This is clearly inapplicable to some incarnations, particularly A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, where both Scooby and Daphne are independently wealthy (but then, APNSD doesn't really take its setting very seriously in the first place).

– Kevin
13 hours ago













Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

– computercarguy
8 hours ago





Interesting take, but 1. There are thousands of these places around, even in a boom time. 2. Most criminals are motivated by greed, and showing murders by spouses makes a bad cartoon. 3. Most were supposed to be mad scientists, so motive is not necessarily relevant. 4. As teens and a dog, they would of course want to eat any food in front of them. 5. Most of the time, it was during night time, to catch ghosts, or it could be their summer jobs.

– computercarguy
8 hours ago











1
















They all have rich parents and don't travel far, so considering gas prices are low in the US, it is very plausible that they use their allowance to chip in for gas and that is all they need. Even Scooby-Doo comes from a rich dog family, and Shaggy received some big plantation as an inheritance. Only Velma is middle-class, but she worked for her parents in a museum.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Any sources to back up this answer?

    – DustinDavis
    yesterday






  • 2





    Especially that part about "low gas prices".

    – Shawn V. Wilson
    yesterday






  • 8





    @ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

    – Chronocidal
    yesterday







  • 7





    @ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday







  • 4





    @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

    – Chronocidal
    22 hours ago















1
















They all have rich parents and don't travel far, so considering gas prices are low in the US, it is very plausible that they use their allowance to chip in for gas and that is all they need. Even Scooby-Doo comes from a rich dog family, and Shaggy received some big plantation as an inheritance. Only Velma is middle-class, but she worked for her parents in a museum.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Any sources to back up this answer?

    – DustinDavis
    yesterday






  • 2





    Especially that part about "low gas prices".

    – Shawn V. Wilson
    yesterday






  • 8





    @ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

    – Chronocidal
    yesterday







  • 7





    @ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday







  • 4





    @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

    – Chronocidal
    22 hours ago













1














1










1









They all have rich parents and don't travel far, so considering gas prices are low in the US, it is very plausible that they use their allowance to chip in for gas and that is all they need. Even Scooby-Doo comes from a rich dog family, and Shaggy received some big plantation as an inheritance. Only Velma is middle-class, but she worked for her parents in a museum.






share|improve this answer













They all have rich parents and don't travel far, so considering gas prices are low in the US, it is very plausible that they use their allowance to chip in for gas and that is all they need. Even Scooby-Doo comes from a rich dog family, and Shaggy received some big plantation as an inheritance. Only Velma is middle-class, but she worked for her parents in a museum.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









TK-421TK-421

1,7565 silver badges20 bronze badges




1,7565 silver badges20 bronze badges










  • 4





    Any sources to back up this answer?

    – DustinDavis
    yesterday






  • 2





    Especially that part about "low gas prices".

    – Shawn V. Wilson
    yesterday






  • 8





    @ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

    – Chronocidal
    yesterday







  • 7





    @ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday







  • 4





    @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

    – Chronocidal
    22 hours ago












  • 4





    Any sources to back up this answer?

    – DustinDavis
    yesterday






  • 2





    Especially that part about "low gas prices".

    – Shawn V. Wilson
    yesterday






  • 8





    @ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

    – Chronocidal
    yesterday







  • 7





    @ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

    – Lightness Races in Orbit
    yesterday







  • 4





    @BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

    – Chronocidal
    22 hours ago







4




4





Any sources to back up this answer?

– DustinDavis
yesterday





Any sources to back up this answer?

– DustinDavis
yesterday




2




2





Especially that part about "low gas prices".

– Shawn V. Wilson
yesterday





Especially that part about "low gas prices".

– Shawn V. Wilson
yesterday




8




8





@ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

– Chronocidal
yesterday






@ShawnV.Wilson Current typical price of 1 litre of Petrol ("Gas") in USD for Germany: $1.93, UK $1.58, Zimbabwe $1.05, Mexico $0.80, USA $0.76 - do note that the only country listed that is almost as cheap as in the USA (i.e. Mexico) is one where fuel is subsidised by the Government, instead of Taxed.

– Chronocidal
yesterday





7




7





@ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

– Lightness Races in Orbit
yesterday






@ShawnV.Wilson Fuel prices in the US are incredibly low. Or, rather, elsewhere they are incredibly high. :)

– Lightness Races in Orbit
yesterday





4




4





@BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

– Chronocidal
22 hours ago





@BlueRaja-DannyPflughoeft "Canon", no. Real, yes. In absence of something being deliberately indicated as "different" from real-life, it makes sense. (Incidentally, this is one of the reasons that the rest of the world dislike Americans: despite having one of the lowest gas prices in the world, you complain about "how expensive" you think it is...)

– Chronocidal
22 hours ago



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