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The Charlie Horse Music Pizza; Chic-a-Go-Go; The Chica Show; Choose Up Sides; Chowder (TV series) Chucky (TV series) CityKids; The Clyde Frog Show; Colby's Clubhouse; Come On Over (TV series) Commander Tom Show; Commander USA's Groovie Movies; Cousin Skeeter; Crank Yankers; Crash & Bernstein; Crashbox; The Crayon Box; Critters: A New Binge ...
First-run syndication (season 2) H-B Production Co. in association with: Fil-Cartoons Tama Production (season 1) Mr. Big Cartoons (season 1) Wang Film Productions (season 1) Additional animation: Kennedy Cartoons (uncredited) Big Star (uncredited) TV-Y7: Traditional Doug: Comedy Adventure: 7 seasons, 117 episodes: Jim Jinkins: August 11, 1991 ...
The Basil Brush Show; The Beano's Dennis the Menace and Gnasher Show; Bear Behaving Badly; Becca's Bunch; Becky and Barnaby Bear; Big & Small; Big Babies; The Big Breakfast; Big City Park; Big Cook, Little Cook; Biggleton; Bill and Ben (TV series) Billy Bean and His Funny Machine; Birthday People; Bits and Bobs; Bitsa; Bo' Selecta! Bodger ...
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.
Allegra's Window is an American musical children's television series that aired on Nickelodeon during its Nick Jr. block from October 24, 1994, to December 8, 1996, [2] [1] with reruns being shown until February 5, 1999; [3] it was later shown on Noggin from February 2, 1999, to April 6, 2003.
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
Produced and broadcast in the world's largest television market, the show became popular with millions of children. As characterized by The New York Times, The Magic Garden "was a cheerful, low-budget, inadvertently psychedelic half-hour show in which Ms. Janis and Ms. Demas sat on giant toadstools, spoke to flowers, sang songs and told stories ...
Television shows which feature the use of puppetry, including hand puppets, marionettes, animatronics, and other techniques. For films featuring puppetry, see Category:Puppet films. For films in which puppets are animated by using stop motion, see Category:Stop motion.