It was on in the 80's (specifically, for 13 episodes in 1985 and that's all, it seems), so, not actually all that surprising, whippersnapper. 
I always confuse cartoons that were on in the 80s for being on in the 90s, since I have older siblings and thus grew up on "older" cartoons. I always assumed that the Wuzzles was a really early 90's cartoon. 
And I know this isn't technically 90's, but don't we all just love The Smurfs? The only reason I know that show is because there were reruns in the 90's as I was growing up; I grew to love that show. And I'm probably going to end up hating the new movie.
Oh man. Again, I can't do it. I can't see another one of the shows I grew up on being turned into a movie. Though it IS fun to see the Smurfs merchandise making a comeback. The other day one of my toddlers was wearing a Smurf T-shirt, and I was like, "I bet he doesn't even know who that is!" So I asked him, "Brody, what's on your shirt?" and he told me proudly, "A Snurf."
I'm just sad to see that all of the money hollywood spends on these things is being wasted. What hollywood should be spending money on is finding people who can actually think for a change. And do a remake of the Running Man, but this time, actually follow the plot of the book upon which it's based... (I know the movie is technically considered good, but I shudder at that very notion. The book was fantastic. To see it butchered so heavily into a movie just made me die on the inside. I swear, the producers, director and screenwriter(s) didn't read the book at all. If they did, they would have found a scene that could have gone down in cinema history as one of the best ever. I can envision it right now in my head, frame for frame. Yeah, I'm more than a little peeved at what they did...) Back on topic though, I am just getting saddened by my childhood being murdered in front of me. I have no qualms with reviving my childhood; I wholeheartedly support that. But if you're going to put out a movie on it, much less a live-action/CGI hybrid, there's something wrong. Why not take the financially more stable route and reboot it as a TV show, or a direct to DVD movie, or heck, even a made-for-TV-movie. Just, for the love of god, do not ruin my childhood with this live action crap. I've only seen it work in extremely rare and isolated cases. Otherwise, it's a complete waste of time and money.