Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Adam Reid makes a guest appearance in this episode as his real-life role as a writer on the show, and is also slimed, prompting the only time in the show's history where someone wrote their own slime gag. 1988 Nickelodeon Slime-In Contest winner Jennifer Dudley (who was slimed three times, the only Slime-In winner to get the bucket more than ...
You Can't Do That on Television is a Canadian sketch comedy television series that aired locally in 1979 before airing in the United States in 1981. It featured adolescent and teenage actors performing in a sketch comedy format similar to America's Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In and Canada's Second City Television.
NFL Slimetime features highlights and game footage that recaps the previous week's NFL action. Just like with Nickelodeon's first live NFL telecast on January 10, 2021 (the NFC Wild Card playoff game between the Chicago Bears and New Orleans Saints), these highlights are flavored with digital, comic strip-like animation [13] such as white smoke, green slime, [14] and blue lightning.
The green slime inspired bystanders and Twitter users to make references to Flubber, Ghostbusters and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. In reality, this happens all the time — and not just in Toronto.
The Green Slime, a 1968 tokusatsu science fiction film "Green Slime", a 1984 song by The Fuzztones; Green Slime, a Dungeons & Dragons entity; Green slime, a component of TV series You Can't Do That on Television
Green Slime Mine Cart Coaster: a mini roller coaster that only existed at California's Great America in Splat City. Gak Kitchen: a small area where the Gak and Slime was made for the game shows in the Slime Bowl. These kitchens were converted to character meet and greet areas in 1997, and became home to Tommy, Chuckie, and Angelica from Rugrats.
Nash says his team initially debated whether the color of the splat should be slime green or orange. "We somehow got some information as to what colors adults least liked at the time. And lime ...
Slime by Numbers; Kids sat above their parents holding numbered buckets of slime. The parents had to pick a number, and the kid who had the bucket with the number the parent chose got to pour the bucket of slime over the head of the person seated below them. The last parent remaining would move on to the final round.