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The Digswell Dog Show; Dinky Dog; Dog City; Dog of Flanders (TV series) Dog Signal; Doggy Day School; Dogs in Space (TV series) Dogstar (TV series) Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds; Doki (TV series) Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz; Droopy, Master Detective; Dug Days; Dynomutt, Dog Wonder
18. Bad Dog Overboard / Dr. Bad Dog's 2½ Day Diet; Berkeley, Vic, Mr. Potanski, Trevor and Grandfather Potanski go for a fishing competition / Berkeley tries to put Mr. Potanski into a diet. 19. Super Bad Dog / A Man's Best Fred; Berkeley becomes a superhero / Trevor becomes obsessed with a robot called Fred. 20. If I Were a Bad Dog / Bad ...
Doggy Day School (Escuela para perros in Latin America, or Escola Pra Cachorro in Brazil) is an animated children's television series created by Cathy Moss, who also created Franny's Feet. It debuted on Nickelodeon in Brazil on 12 October 2009.
Dog City was originally an hour-long, broadcast on May 5, 1989, as an episode of The Jim Henson Hour, featuring the characters as puppets. [3] In Dog City: The Movie, Ace Yu inherits a bar-restaurant called the Dog House following the death of his Uncle Harry and is harassed for protection money by crime syndicate boss Bugsy Them (who was responsible for the death of Uncle Harry).
Go, Dog. Go! [1] is an animated children's educational television series based on the 1961 children's book of the same name by P. D. Eastman, which was developed for Netflix by Adam Peltzman. Co-produced by DreamWorks Animation Television and WildBrain Studios, the series premiered on January 26, 2021. [2]
Go! is a 1961 children's book written and illustrated by P. D. Eastman. It describes the actions and interactions of a group of highly mobile dogs , who operate cars and other conveyances in pursuit of work, play, and a final mysterious goal: a dog party.
"The dog ate my homework" (or "my dog ate my homework") is an English expression which carries the suggestion of being a common, poorly fabricated excuse made by schoolchildren to explain their failure to turn in an assignment on time. The phrase is referenced, even beyond the educational context, as a sarcastic rejoinder to any similarly glib ...
Scrappy-Doo is a fictional character in the Scooby-Doo franchise. A Great Dane and the nephew of Scooby-Doo, he was created by Hanna-Barbera Productions in 1979 [1] [2] and appeared in various incarnations of the Scooby-Doo cartoon series.