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Baby Shark's Big Show! is an American animated children's television series based on the "Baby Shark" brand from The Pinkfong Company. [2] Nickelodeon Animation Studio co-produces the show with Pinkfong. [3] [4] [5] In South Korea, Baby Shark's Big Show! debuted on the Educational Broadcasting System (EBS) with a Christmas special on December ...
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ar.wikipedia.org بيبي شارك; Usage on bn.wikipedia.org বেবি শার্ক; Usage on cy.wikipedia.org
"Baby Shark" (Korean: 상어가족) is a children's song associated with a dance involving hand movements dating back to the late 20th century. In 2016, "Baby Shark" became immensely popular when Pinkfong, a South Korean entertainment company, released a version of the song on June 17, 2016, with a YouTube music video which went viral on social media, in online videos, and on the radio.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
NatGeo's "Rewind the '90s" looks at the birth and significance of the web's dancing baby.
A shark briefly appears in Madagascar 2: Escape to Africa. The Sharknado franchise depicts sharks getting sucked into tornadoes and raining down upon people. A whale shark called Destiny features in the 2016 Disney/Pixar animated film Finding Dory. Undead sharks appear in the 2017 Disney film, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales.
Funnily, the Left Shark’s not-so-on-point moves were captured during a performance of Teenage Dream, which was also the song that set the tone for the dancer’s balloon-fail over the weekend ...
The "Dancing Baby", also called "Baby Cha-Cha" or "the Oogachacka Baby", is an internet meme of a 3D-rendered animation of a baby performing a cha-cha type dance. It quickly became a media phenomenon in the United States and one of the first viral videos in the mid-late 1990s.