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In each episode, the characters have a cartoonish adventure, and ultimately must "build a word" using synthetic phonics to solve a problem. Some episodes focus on concepts such as rhymes, compound words, and plural formation with -s. WordWorld is designed to teach children how to spell.
Giving it a "B+", Bob Paxman of Country Weekly wrote that "she belts out this empowerment tune with conviction [and] the soulful boldness we've come to expect" and "the anthemic nature of the song seems to call for dual voices, particularly on the chorus", although he added that "lyrically, 'PrizeFighter' contends only in the middleweight division, striking one as a cross between a high school ...
Prizefighter or Prize Fighter may also refer to: ... (song), a song from the ... "Prize Fighter", a season 6 episode of The Loud House
The Electric Company – Theme song composed by Eric Rogers; performed by original cast; The Electric Company (2009 TV series) ("Turn Up the Power") – original cast; Elena of Avalor – Gaby Moreno; Ellen - composed by W. G. Snuffy Walden; ("So Called Friend") – Texas; The Ellen Burstyn Show ("Nothing in the World Like Love") – Rita Coolidge
It was originally released as "Wheels"/"Tell the World", but when both sides of the single started to take off, Warwick Record split the single into two: "Wheels"/"Am I Asking Too Much", and "Tell the World"/"For My Angel". [4] The String-A-Longs version sold 7 million copies, while all versions of the song sold 16 million combined. [4]
On September 8, 2012, Sanchez released a six-song non-conceptual EP, Half Measures, under his side project The Prize Fighter Inferno. On April 23, 2021, Sanchez released a new full-length album under The Prize Fighter Inferno titled The City Introvert. On December 20, 2024, Sanchez released an album of cover songs titled Claudio Covers. [5]
The name appears in several episodes of the long-running television show M*A*S*H, most notably in the 10th season episode 'Heroes' where fictional prize fighter 'Gentleman Joe' Cavanaugh visits the outfit and Margaret remarks "Is that what it takes to get a steak dinner around here, a visit from some Joe Palooka"
Children from the Corona Theatre School—referred to collectively as the Pink Windmill Kids—were on hand to offer protection and break into one or two song and dance routines per episode. The show featured Rod Hull's chanted catchphrase "There's somebody at the door, oh, there's somebody at the door" every time a visitor rang the doorbell of ...