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Cousin Skeeter is an American sitcom, that originally aired on Nickelodeon from 1998 to 2002. It starred Robert Ri'chard as Bobby, a young boy whose life is changed when his strange cousin, Skeeter, comes to stay with his family. With Skeeter's help, Bobby learns life lessons and tackles the ups and downs of growing up.
A remix of the song was used as the theme song of American children's sitcom Cousin Skeeter. Although the term "steelo" had already been used by hip hop duo Mobb Deep in their song " Hit It from the Back " (1993), [ 3 ] the popularity of "Steelo" caused the slang word to become widespread, being added to various online dictionaries under the ...
Her first acting gigs were in In Living Color (1989–1994), Hangin' with Mr. Cooper (1992–1997), and Bad Girls of Def (1993–94). [2] She then played a lead role in House Party 3 (1994) and appeared in The Cherokee Kid (1996–97). She was a series regular on Cousin Skeeter (1998–2001) and New Kids on the Planet (1999–2000). [2]
'Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV,' the ID documentary series premiering Sunday, delves into Dan Schneider's hit Nickelodeon shows and the abuse former employees say happened.
702 (pronounced "seven-oh-two") is an American musical girl group whose most notable line-up consisted of LeMisha Grinstead, Irish Grinstead, and Meelah Williams. The group began their musical career as Sweeter than Sugar, formed in 1993 in Las Vegas.
In order to impress Nicole, Skeeter sneaks the kids into a space shuttle which has the four crash-land on the planet, Tunica. But the four find out that the Tunican plot is to take over Earth by replacing every teenager with a Tunican clone. Skeeter's personality gets the kids out of jail and into battle with the evil Tunicans.
Authorities also found journals in which Handy admitted to wanting to find young girls to rape. He also admitted to kissing a 9-year-old girl on the lips who he met on the set of Cousin Skeeter ...
After everything is resolved story-wise, a cast member (or everyone in the final episode) would yell the words "Reprise the Theme Song and Roll the Credits"; the cast then sang the opening theme a cappella and closed the show with a dance number.