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The kids create their own holiday to celebrate Grampu and each give him a gift. Oobi makes a statue of Grampu out of clay, Kako makes food, and Uma sings a short song. The statue looks nothing like Grampu and the food is disgusting, but Grampu has a great time and enjoys Uma's song.
Oobi has been one of Nickelodeon Pakistan's flagship series since 2009; as of 2023, it continues to air on the channel once a day. [64] [65] The show has been dubbed in different languages. From 2005 to 2006, an Icelandic-dubbed version of Oobi aired on Stöð 2. [66] In China, a Mandarin Chinese dub aired on HaHa Nick from May 1 to August 5, 2005.
Oobi was the studio's first show. It starred a cast of bare-hand puppets, led by a boy named Oobi. It premiered on Noggin in 2000. [11] The first season was made up of two-minute shorts, while the second and third seasons were made up of longer episodes spanning 10-13 minutes each. [12] Go, Baby!
The channel's schedule was divided into two blocks: one for older children and teenagers, and one for preschoolers. [2] For its first three years, the older-skewing block made up most of Noggin's schedule, and the preschool shows were limited to the morning hours. In April 2002, the preschool block was extended to last for 12 hours each day.
Tim Lagasse (born 1968/1969) [1] is an American puppeteer, puppet designer, actor and director. He has worked on films and television programs for Sesame Workshop, Nickelodeon, Disney XD, and HBO. He is known for playing the title character on Noggin's Oobi, [2] and Crash on Disney XD's Crash & Bernstein. [3]
Jared Faber (also known as J-Radical) is an American musician, composer, and producer who works primarily in television and film.He composed the theme songs for Oobi, As Told by Ginger, Emily's Reasons Why Not, and Suburgatory. [1]
Oobi may refer to: Oobi (TV series) , an American children's program on the Noggin network Oobi (toy) , Parker Brothers toy introduced in 1971, to send messages from one location to another
Noggin grouped the final two episodes as an hour-long special, and they aired on 25 March 2001. Leading up to them, Noggin reran a marathon of the entire series, promoted as the Big Kids Big Marathon. From April 2002 to January 2004, Noggin aired reruns of Big Kids during its overnight programming block, The N. [6] [7] [8]