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  2. The Cinnamon Bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cinnamon_Bear

    The Cinnamon Bear is an old-time radio program produced by Transco (Transcription Company of America), based in Hollywood, California. The series comprised 26 episodes, and was specifically designed to be listened to six days a week between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

  3. Audible Reboots ‘Cinnamon Bear’ Holiday Radio Classic as ...

    www.aol.com/news/audible-reboots-cinnamon-bear...

    Audible announced “Cinnamon Bear: A Holiday Adventure,” a new family audio series with original musical numbers performed by a star-studded cast — including Alan Cumming as in the title role ...

  4. List of old-time radio programs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_old-time_radio...

    The Cinnamon Bear; The Cisco Kid; City Desk [3] Clara, Lu, and Em; Claudia and David [4] Claybourne; The Clicquot Club Eskimos; The Clitheroe Kid; Cloak and Dagger; The Clock; Club Fifteen; Clutching Hand Confession; Coca-Cola Topnotchers; The Colgate Sports Newsreel; The Collier Hour; Colored Kiddies' Radio Hour and Coloured Kiddies of the Air ...

  5. Christmas in Portland, Oregon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_in_Portland,_Oregon

    According to The Oregonian, "The Cinnamon Bear story, as told in [a] 1937 radio production, was broadcast on radio stations across the country, but it became a particular local tradition when Portland-based Lipman's department store adopted Cinnamon Bear as its Christmas mascot. Along with Santa Claus, children could meet the bear at Lipman's ...

  6. Talk:The Cinnamon Bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Cinnamon_Bear

    As both a fan of the old time radio actor Walter Tetley and a listener familiar with the voices in THE CINNAMON BEAR, I believe I can state categorically that Walter Tetley was not the actor who played Jimmy in TCB. Anyone can verify this by listening to any example of Tetley as Leroy or Julius followed immediately by any example of Jimmy from TCB.

  7. Chuck Schaden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Schaden

    The magazine is now edited and published by Funny Valentine Press. He documented the history of Chicago's WBBM in WBBM Radio: Yesterday and Today (1988), and he also wrote The Cinnamon Bear Book (1987), Speaking of Radio: Chuck Schaden’s Conversations with the Stars of the Golden Age of Radio (2003) and Chuck Schaden's Radio Days (2019).

  8. Cinnamon bear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinnamon_bear

    Cinnamon bear by J.T. Bowen (after John James Audubon). The various color morphs are frequently intermixed in the same family; hence, seeing either a black-colored female with brown or red-brown cubs, a brown-colored female with black or red-brown cubs, or a female of any one of the three colors with a black cub, a brown cub and a red-brown cub, is a common occurrence.

  9. Talk:Mary Gordon (actress) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Mary_Gordon_(actress)

    The Cinnamon Bear, I'd Swear! [ edit ] Mary Gordon's voice -- at least as encountered in the 1939 Jimmy Stewart/Paulette Goddard film "Pot O' Gold" -- is a dead ringer for that of The Cinnamon Bear, a radio special aired for many consecutive Decembers as a Christmas program.