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3 Video games. 4 Music videos. 5 Television shows. 6 Commercials. ... Minnie the Moocher (1932) - short (the dancing walrus rotoscoped from Cab Calloway dancing)
Music performed by Cab Calloway and his orchestra. This short contains the earliest known footage of him and his orchestra performing. The walrus' dancing is rotoscoped from footage of Calloway himself. Sometimes seen with a refilmed TV title card; transfers with original titles were featured on some on 1980s video compilations.
On April 29, 2022, during the Disney Jr. Fun Fest event, it was announced that Michelle Lewis and Charlton Pettus' preschool series Kindergarten: The Musical had been green-lit for Disney Jr. Lewis and Pettus executive producer alongside Tom Warburton, Kay Hanley and Dan Petty, with Laurie Israel serving as co-producer/story editor.
A single song in Dancing Stage 1.5 (Uh La La La Maniac Single) features one hand due to an oversight, a single song in Ultramix 2 (Skulk Challenge Single) features at least one hand but the chart is unused and inaccessible without hacking the game, and four songs in Solo 2000 [citation needed] feature at least one hand.
This version of the Fun Factory lasted from 1991 to September 1994, when it was replaced with The DJ Kat Show weekend spin-off, KTV. A partial list of series shown on the Sky One-era Fun Factory include: Barbie; Barbie and the Rockers (UK Title: Barbie and the Rock Stars) Beverly Hills Teens; BraveStarr; Charlie Brown; Dick Tracy; Fat Albert ...
Dancing with the Stars is borrowing a page from some of the best dance videos of previous eras when the eight remaining dance teams will compete to songs behind some of music’s most iconic videos.
The show began as a series of direct-to-video features which were recorded in front of a live audience, similar to Scotland's The Singing Kettle series.. The first Fun Song Factory was released on 1 December 1994, and was released as part of a series of original straight-to-video content commissioned by Abbey Home Entertainment's Abbey Broadcast Communications subsidiary.
The Japanese version is titled Bust a Move: Dance & Rhythm Action (バスト ア ムーブ Dance & Rhythm Action, Basuto A Mūbu Dance & Rhythm Action), but in all other regions it was released as Bust a Groove, to avoid a trademark conflict with the Japanese puzzle game Puzzle Bobble, which was released in North America and Europe as Bust-A-Move.