Scoobypedia

Rogers is the mayor of Mercado, a town in Mexico.

Physical appearance[]

Rogers is an adult Mexican female with bushy, neck-length black hair. She wears a sombrero lined with red pompoms and a festive blue dress with red and turquoise frills. During the Day of the Dead celebrations, she was briefly seen wearing a skull mask.

Personality[]

Rogers is dedicated to bringing tourists to Mercado, claiming the town's economy was completely dependent on tourism. Therefore, she encouraged tourists to spend money at the town's Day of the Dead festivities and dismissed reports of a ghost bandit terrorizing the townspeople. She discouraged Mystery Inc. from investigating and later attempted to capitalize off the ghost attacks to boost her town's publicity. Ultimately, she was driven by greed and wealth that she placed public safety at risk to protect her town's economy, and this made her a plausible suspect for the ghost attacks. She speaks in a Mexican accent.

History[]

Be Cool, Scooby-Doo![]

Season one[]

Mayor Rogers oversaw her town's Day of the Dead celebrations, welcoming Mystery Inc. to the town as they visited. She mentioned a recently-reported attack of the ghost of bandit Benito Ureno, though she dismissed the reports and discouraged Mystery Inc. from investigations. Later, Rogers confronted them for their disruptive investigative efforts, stating she intended to use the ghost as a trademark for her town's tourism. She kicked Mystery Inc. out of the town, though Mystery Inc. ignored her and continued to investigate.

Rogers was proven innocent after Mystery Inc. arrested Gustavo, a gift shop owner, as the ghost of El Bandito. Gustavo was pursuing El Bandito's lost treasure, but Mystery Inc. finally used the clues to locate the treasure. Rogers joyously claimed the treasure for herself.

Appearances[]

Notes/trivia[]

  • Despite sharing the same surname, Mayor Rogers is not related to Shaggy Rogers.
  • By the surname, it is implied that Mayor Rogers would be Mexican-American, mainly because the Rogers surname is not a Mexican/Hispanic surname, but an American surname, implying that she may be originally from the USA.