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Stretch Screamers had several other toy lines including, Mini Stretch Screamers, Blister Beasts, Splat Bugz, and Stretch Screamers Oozers. At one point in the early 2000s, the toys were quite popular, so much so that they had their own McDonald's Happy Meal toy line in 2003. [ 1 ]
"One-screen" formats involve interaction on the TV screen, using the remote control. Remote-control user interfaces are known in human-computer interaction research as "lean back" interaction, [9] and as a 10-foot user interface. [10] Second screen interactive TV, also called Enhanced TV by ABC and ESPN, uses a personal computer or mobile ...
Pages in category "Interactive television" The following 100 pages are in this category, out of 100 total. ... (TV series) Interactive television standards ...
After the last of the toy line was released in December 2004, the fictional toy world eventually encompassed over 200 different figures and characters from the series, 40 interactive playsets (toy re-creations of Simpsons interior settings and town location settings within Springfield), and three non-interactive diorama town settings.
Splatalot! is a medieval-themed physical game show that premiered in Canada on Corus Entertainment's YTV on 14 March 2011, hosted by Jason Agnew and Matt Chin. It premiered in the United Kingdom on CBBC on 13 June 2011 with Dick and Dom as hosts and in Australia on ABC3 on 5 November 2011 with Kayne Tremills and Scott Tweedie as hosts.
The splat remained part of the network's identity as hits such as The Ren & Stimpy Show, Rugrats and Hey Dude cycled through. New episodes of The Ren & Stimpy Show aired on Nickelodeon from 1991 ...
Variations on the "big box" format include a box within a sleeve, such as Unreal, and a box with a fold-out front cover, such as Black & White. Games re-released as budget games usually came in much smaller boxes—a common format for Amiga budget games was a thin square box roughly 13 cm x 13 cm x 2 cm (roughly 5in x 5in x 1in).
Telemedia launched the live interactive TV game shows format in 2003. [3] Since 2001, the company has been continuously producing live quiz shows and has centralized its productions in its Budapest studios. As of November 2006, the sum of its live programs combined from Budapest was 60 hours a day, with more than 2,000 hours per month.