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Kids' WB: Warner Bros. Animation Amblin Entertainment: TV-G: Traditional Pinky and the Brain: Comic science fiction: 4 seasons, 66 episodes: Tom Ruegger: September 9, 1995 – November 14, 1998: Kids' WB: Warner Bros. Animation: TV-Y: Traditional The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries: 5 seasons, 52 episodes: September 9, 1995 – December 18, 2002 ...
The Jack and Triumph Show; Jack's Big Music Show; Janet's Planet; The Jeff Dunham Show; The Jim Henson Hour; Jim Henson's Animal Show; Jim Henson's Creature Shop Challenge; Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories; The Jimmy Dean Show; Johnny and the Sprites; Johnny Jupiter; Joya's Fun School; Julie's Greenroom
WBAL-TV: Paul's Puppets children's marionette show that ran from 1948 to 1958 WBAL-TV : P.W. Doodle ( Royal Parker ), children's cartoons and Mickey Mouse Club reruns 1962-1965 Maryland Public Television : Bob the Vid Tech (with Bob Heck ) Children's Interstitials and specials 1993-2010
The Cat&Birdy Warneroonie PinkyBrainy Big Cartoonie Show; The Charlie Horse Music Pizza; Chic-a-Go-Go; Chief Halftown (TV program) The Children's Hour (TV program) CityKids; Commander Tom Show; Conan and the Young Warriors; Conan the Adventurer (1992 TV series) Cover to Cover (1965 TV program) The Crayon Box; Cro (TV series) Croc Files
Since 1979, Nickelodeon has made some of the best kids' shows out there. I don't know about y'all, but this network was a MA-JOR fixture in my life growing up. Nickelodeon / Via giphy.com
The Magic House is a British children's television animation puppet show created by Joe Austen, that was broadcast on Scottish Television from 7 January 1994 to 30 July 1996. . The television programme was adapted from a series of children's books written and illustrated by Austen in the early 198
Its format is an audience-participation comedy series that focuses on Weiner and his puppets making a show. While early episodes do not have much of a plot or story line the show started to integrate these elements later in season one. In addition to 68 normal episodes, Nickelodeon aired five Weinerville television specials.
Eureeka's Castle's ending credits state the show comes from an original concept by Debby Beece and Judy Katschke. In 1988, development of the show began by staff members at Nickelodeon and animator Eli Noyes and his partner Kit Laybourne, whose wife Geraldine Laybourne was the Head of Programming for Nickelodeon. [2] "