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Larry Smith Puppets; Late Night Liars; Legends of the Hidden Temple; Let's Be Real; The Letter People; Lidsville; Liquid Television; Little Big Awesome; Little Muppet Monsters; Live Hot Puppet Chat; Lomax, the Hound of Music; Losing It with John Stamos; Lost Ollie; Lost on Earth; The Lost Saucer; Los Luchadores
2 seasons, 21 episodes: David Kirschner: February 25, 1991 – May 23, 1993: ABC (season 1) 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 ...
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.
50 Essential Nickelodeon Shows That All The '80s And '90s Kids Were Obsessed With March 19, 2022 at 7:46 PM Since 1979, Nickelodeon has made some of the best kids' shows out there.
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
These '90s and 2000s shows shaped the childhoods of many kids and remain a source of nostalgia for a lot of adults. The post 30 Nostalgic Posts About Iconic TV Shows And Films From The ‘90s And ...
Zoobilee Zoo is a children's television series featuring actors dressed as animal characters that originally aired from 1986 to 1987. [1] It continued to run in syndication until 2000 [2] on several television channels including commercial network television stations, PBS stations, The Learning Channel, and Hallmark Channel.
The first of these blocks was the CBS Kidshow (using the tagline, "The CBS Kidshow: Get in the Act."), which debuted in October of that year and featured programming from the Canada-based animation studio Nelvana [6] (such as Anatole, Mythic Warriors, Birdz, Rescue Heroes and Flying Rhino Junior High), replacing Think CBS Kids. [7]