Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Horrible Histories (2015) Horrible Histories: Gory Games is a children's game show , co-produced by Citrus Television and Lion Television for CBBC , that debuted in 2011. It is a spin-off of hit children's sketch comedy Horrible Histories and is a product of the same creative team.
The first series reached a viewing peak of 50% of UK children aged 6–12, [4] while the second was watched by 34% of UK children aged 6–12, or 1.6 million total. [16] Throughout its run, the show routinely ranked at or near the top of the CBBC ratings, reaching a peak of 548,000 viewers for Episode 10 of Series 5.
Horrible Histories is an educational entertainment franchise encompassing many media including books, magazines, audio books, stage shows, TV shows, and more.. In 2013, Lisa Edwards, UK publishing and commercial director of Scholastic Corporation, described Horrible Histories as one of the company's "crown jewels", and said it is at an "advanced stage of evolution".
Horrible Histories is a children's live-action historical and musical sketch-comedy TV series based on the book series of the same name written by Terry Deary. The comedy series first hit screens in 2009 and is now in its 15th year, with more than 160 episodes over the 11 series. Series producer was Caroline Norris. Series 1 was directed by Chloe Thomas and Steve Connelly, with all future ...
Horrible Histories started on CBBC in 2009. It is a multi-award-winning live-action historical and musical sketch comedy television series, based on the bestselling book series of the same name by Terry Deary.
The Raccoons (4 March 1987, 13 December 2002) The Raccoons and the Lost Star (26 December 1983, 1 January 1992) The Raccoons on Ice (25 December 1982, 1 January 1993) The Racing Set; Radio Roo [52] Radio Studio Compise; Rag, Tag and Bobtail; Ragtime; Rank the Prank; Rastamouse (31 January 2011) Raven; Raven: The Dragon's Eye; Raven: The Island ...
Between September 5 and September 23, the BBC ran a competition to write a sketch for Horrible Histories [6] with the winning entry by Abigail Innes (age 8) from Hull being filmed as part of the seventh series. [7] Her sketch was shown in the last episode of the series.
Horrible Histories with Stephen Fry is the name given to the six-part re-version of the hit children's sketch comedy Horrible Histories for an adult audience. Broadcast in a Sunday-night time slot from 19 June 2011 to 31 July 2011 on BBC One, the programme features a compilation of sketches from the first two series of Horrible Histories, as chosen by that show's producers.