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"I'm Just a Bill" is a 1976 Schoolhouse Rock! segment, featuring a song of the same title written by Dave Frishberg. The segment debuted as part of "America Rock," the third season of the Schoolhouse Rock! series. It is represented in popular culture more than most parts of the educational television series.
It was deemed the largest attendance to date of the venue. Dorough played five songs, accompanying himself on the piano: "Three Is a Magic Number," "Figure Eight," "Conjunction Junction," "Preamble," and "I'm Just a Bill." (Dorough had only performed lead vocals on the original version of "Three Is a Magic Number"). He also performed ...
During the height of their popularity in the 1940s, Warner Bros.'s Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies animation unit produced 3 cartoons featuring the pair as cats or mice named "Babbit and Catstello". One of the cartoons, Bob Clampett's A Tale of Two Kitties (1942), introduced Tweety. The other cartoons are A Tale of Two Mice and Mouse-Merized Cat.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Screen Songs (formerly known as KoKo Song Car-Tunes) are a series of animated cartoons produced at the Fleischer Studios and distributed by Paramount Pictures between 1929 and 1938. [1] Paramount brought back the sing-along cartoons in 1945, now in color, and released them regularly through 1951.
Real Stories of the Highway Patrol ("I'm Looking Out for You") – Belize; composed by [[Larry Brown (musician)|Larry Brown and Chuck Barth; Reba ("I'm a Survivor") – Reba McEntire; The Rebel ("Ballad of Johnny Yuma") – Richard Markowitz and Andrew J. Fenady; performed by Johnny Cash; Red Dwarf ("In the Sun") – Howard Goodall, performed ...
This program aired at 8 a.m. (CST) and lasted 1 hour—and briefly for 1.5 hours billed as "The Children's Hour ... and a Half." [3] During a typical episode, Kelly would generally draw cartoons, read the Sunday comics page of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, [4] or introduce a cartoon, such as an episode of Davey and Goliath or JOT.
This season returns the show to its original one-hour format and also features episode segments from various cartoon shows. Instead of classic 1960s-era cartoons being showcased like the original format, this show now features Cartoon Network's earlier original cartoons, such as Dexter's Laboratory, The Powerpuff Girls, Johnny Bravo, and many more.