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Mako: Island of Secrets is an Australian television programme for children and teenagers created by Jonathan M. Shiff.Internationally released as Mako Mermaids, the show is a spin-off of H 2 O: Just Add Water and is produced by Jonathan M. Shiff Productions in association with Network Ten, ZDF and Netflix, with assistance from Screen Australia and Screen Queensland.
When a Chinese mermaid named Weilan accidentally releases a water dragon from an ancient relic, she flees to Mako Island with the creature in pursuit. Mermaids Ondina and Mimmi must defend Mako Island and the Gold Coast from destruction. [2] Series three debuted in Australia on 15 May 2016 on Eleven and was released on Netflix on 27 May 2016. [1]
H 2 O: Just Add Water, more commonly referred to as H 2 O, is an Australian fantasy children and teen drama television show created by Jonathan M. Shiff.It first screened on Australia's Network Ten and as of 2009 ran in syndication in over 120 countries with a worldwide audience of more than 250 million.
Netflix has landed the exclusive online rights to teenage mermaid series Mako Mermaids. This is a spinoff of the Australian-made hit show H2O: Just Add Water, which is already available on Netflix ...
Mahō no Mako-chan (魔法のマコちゃん, Mahou no Mako chan, lit. Magical Mako) is a Japanese anime series by Toei Animation. The story is loosely based on the 1837 Hans Christian Andersen tale "The Little Mermaid". It was broadcast from 1970 to 1971 on Nippon Educational TV (NET), later rebranded as TV Asahi.
Max follows Lewis and Cleo to Mako Island, splashes some water on Cleo, and discovers that she is a mermaid as well. He is not shocked, however, because Max was a friend of Miss Chatham's when she was a mermaid along with Gracie and Julia Dove in the 1950s, and was romantically involved with Gracie.
This page was last edited on 30 July 2013, at 19:40 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
Cubis attended St. Aloysius' College, where he was Dux. [13] He then received a scholarship to study a Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Laws at the University of Sydney where he was an editor on the Social Justice Law Review, [14] and resided at St. Andrew's College.