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On December 5, 2006, comedian and co-host Rosie O'Donnell of The View used a series of ching chongs to imitate newscasters in China. [3] O'Donnell made a comment in reference to people in China talking about Danny DeVito's drunken appearance on the show, "You know, you can imagine in China it's like, 'Ching-gong-hu-gong, ching-chang-kong. Ching ...
Winx Club [5] [2] (moved to Nickelodeon) The Woody Woodpecker Show (exclusive to Cartoon Network Philippines) X-Men: Evolution [5] [2] Xiaolin Chronicles; Yo-Kai Watch; Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters (exclusive to Cartoon Network Philippines) Zoids: Chaotic Century [4] (exclusive to Cartoon Network Philippines) Zoids: Fuzors (exclusive to Cartoon ...
Justice Pao is a 236-episode television series from Taiwan, first airing on Chinese Television System (CTS) from February 1993 to January 1994. Background [ edit ]
From a television episode: This is a redirect from a television or radio episode title to a related work or lists of episodes.The destination may be an article about a related episode, a subsection or a standalone list of episodes.
Mei Fang, Wu Ching-hsien, Chang Fu-chien, Yang Kuei-mei, Penny Lin, Lee Chih-Ching, Hsiang-Lun Pang, Wu Pong-fong, Mariko Okubo, Vannesa Wang, Lin Yi Xiong 40 Finished February 8 TVBS Entertainment Channel iQIYI: 墜愛 Moonlight Romance: Amber An, Edison Song, James Wen, Samuel Gu, Patricia Lin, Duke Wu, Helen Cheng 15 Finished March 6
Ching Chang Ka Mukut 366B Motu Patlu Ki Air Taxi 367A Motu Ka Khazana 367B Every Man Is A Police Man 368A Motu Patlu Morcha 368B Motu Patlu Ki Marathon 369A Blue Fire 369B Boxer's Car From Modern City 370A Motu Ka Biliards 370B Hero Don 371A Machhron Ka Humla 371B John The Jalpari 372A Motu The Radio Jockey 372B Motu Loves Dancing 373A
Master Soo orders an assembly line of sushi from Japan to his castle. Garu, Abyo, Ching and Pucca follow the assembly line to Tokyo. While there, Ching and Pucca wear geisha outfits, while Abyo and Garu go to see sumo wrestling. Abyo challenges one of the wrestlers, but is ultimately defeated. Angered, Garu challenges the wrestler, and wins.
As the voice of the title character, Keye Luke is (to date) the only actor of Chinese ancestry to play the part in any screen adaptation. [3] Luke had previously portrayed "Number One Son" Lee Chan opposite Warner Oland whose characterization had a relatively limited vocabulary in the long-running Charlie Chan film series of the 1930s and 1940s by 20th Century Fox and later, Monogram Pictures.