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Bug Juice: My Adventures at Camp is an American docuseries that premiered on Disney Channel on July 16, 2018. It is a revival of the original Bug Juice program that aired on Disney Channel from February 28, 1998 to October 15, 2001.
Bunk'd is an American comedy television series created by Pamela Eells O'Connell that originally aired on Disney Channel from July 31, 2015 to August 2, 2024. The series is a spinoff of Jessie and for the first three seasons includes returning stars Peyton List, Karan Brar, and Skai Jackson, as well as Miranda May who has starred over the series' entire run.
Later, Destiny and Gwen spot a camper named Ruby who matches Destiny's description. Destiny and Gwen try to keep Ruby from getting in trouble, but they are unsuccessful, and Lou eventually decides to expel Ruby from camp. Feeling bad for Ruby, the girls admit their scheme to Lou, who reveals that she knew all along and had hired Ruby to prank them.
Bug Juice is a Disney Channel reality television series that premiered on February 28, 1998. The series focuses around 20 kids and their experiences at summer camp.Together, the kids work hard to excel in their activities and become friends. [1]
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He is a recurring cast member in the mockumentaries of Christopher Guest and Eugene Levy, including Best in Show (2000), A Mighty Wind (2003), For Your Consideration (2006), and Mascots (2016). In 2020, he was cast along with his wife Rachelle in the award-winning mockumentary Reboot Camp .
Twelve years later in 1998, the twins are coincidentally sent to the same all-girls summer camp in Maine, Camp Walden. Annie and Hallie first meet at the end of a fencing match, when they remove their masks and see that they look exactly alike. A comical hostility between the twins leads to a prank war that ends when the camp counselors fall ...
Camp Agawam is a boys' camp located on Crescent Lake in Raymond, Maine, United States, and is one of the oldest summer camps for boys in the United States. [4] [5] The camp was founded in 1919 by Appleton A. Mason, and remained in the Mason family until 1985. The Boston Globe described the camp in 1988 as "an old camp with old ideas."