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The following is a list of local children's television shows in the United States. These were locally produced commercial television programs intended for the child audience with unique hosts and themes.
Uncle Buddy's Phantom Funhouse is an early multimedia hypermedia text written by John McDaid and released by Eastgate Systems in 1993. [1] The main portion of Funhouse was written for Macintosh's HyperCard app, but portions of the hypermedia novel are also contained in the original box (containing artifacts from Uncle Buddy's literary estate, [2] including physical tapes, playing cards, and ...
The Miami Toy Show typically attracts guests from South America, Canada, and Europe, as well as drawing attention from the local market (for instance, South Florida). Other large toy shows, like those held annually in Chicago and in Glendale CA, [4] York PA [5] and Kalamazoo MI [6] also benefit from international, as well as local, exposure ...
Jay Foreman is an American businessman who lives and works in Boca Raton, Florida.He is president and CEO of Basic Fun!, [1] which began as The Bridge Direct in 2009. Basic Fun! and its related companies, Good Stuff, K'nex, Uncle Milton, and PlayHut, design, develop and market toys for children and adult collectors.
The nuts fall asleep as well, unaware of being targeted by the mouse queen's son, Reginald. He plans to steal the Christmas star on the top of the tree and take over the Christmas Kingdom. With his army of mice, he attempts to capture the nuts. The nuts fight toy soldiers, who prove no match against the mice.
Kalamazoo elected him Mayor three times, 1887-1889. [10] Otto served the community and his business at his big roll top desk for sixty-seven years and worked right up until his death in 1936. Herbert Everard was also an active member of the Kalamazoo Community, serving as school board president for many years.
Buddy the rescue dog got a new toy, and he just could not hold back his excitement. His human captured the ecstatic pooch playing with his bright green fetch machine -- called GoDogGo -- and it ...
Eastgate Systems was founded by Mark Bernstein in 1982 and developed hypertext tools. [12] Joyce and Bolter launched Storyspace in 1987, at the first annual Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) conference on Hypertext. [13]