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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
StoryBots is an American children's media franchise that produces educational TV series, books, videos, music, video games, and classroom activities. [1] Its productions include the Netflix series Ask the StoryBots, StoryBots: Answer Time, StoryBots: Super Silly Stories with Bo, and StoryBots Super Songs.
Non-U.S. rights owned by Fox Kids/Jetix Europe until early-2010s Sabrina's Secret Life: 2003–04: Syndication (DIC Kids Network) Les Studios Tex, Archie Comics: Knights of the Zodiac: Cartoon Network: Kaleidoscope Entertainment [note 4] English dub; owned by Toei Animation Strawberry Shortcake: 2003–08: Direct-to-video: American Greetings [4]
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English version for the United States; localization ceased after 78 episodes Franchise owned by Rainbow S.p.A. [4] (Amazon Prime Video) WMAC Masters: 4Kids Productions & Renaissance Alliance Entertainment Currently unlicensed [5] Yu-Gi-Oh! Gallop, NAS & Shueisha Rights now owned by Konami Cross Media NY; originally aired on Kids' WB from 2001 ...
From 1975 to 1981, these shorts were later syndicated to local television stations, mostly independent stations that ran large amounts of non-CG animated cartoons and other children's programming. They also ran in the late 1970s on a few PBS stations running in-school programming.
Liberty's Kids: Historical fiction: 1 season, 40 episodes • Kevin O'Donnell • Michael Maliani: September 2, 2002 – April 4, 2003: PBS Kids • DIC Entertainment • Melusine Productions: TV-Y7: Traditional Baby Looney Tunes: Comedy: 4 seasons, 53 episodes: September 7, 2002 – April 20, 2005 • Kids' WB • Cartoon Network: Warner Bros ...
The merger of Capital Cities Communications into The Walt Disney Company in 1996 marked a shift in the network's Saturday morning cartoon output. The merger resulted in Disney increasing the amount of programming content it produced for the network, including in regards to children's programming (prior to this, most of Disney's animated programming originated on either CBS, with which the ...