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Frog Hopper American Dream ... Back at the Barnyard Bumpers: Bumper cars: 2007-[19] Balloon Race: Balloon Ride: 2008-2015: ... Car Ride: 2006–2009: Nick Jr. Jets ...
A bumper car style attraction where riders can flip upon impact. Themed to Invader Zim. It had constant technical issues and downtime during the park's opening months, and was replaced by Bubble Guppies: Guppy Bubbler. The ride is currently in storage near Sandy's Blasting Bronco. It was an Amusement Products LLC Flip Zone.
In this CGI short produced by Pitch Inc., ants play with a hula hoop-like object. One ant doesn't let another ant play with the object, but that ant gets to do so after it asks the other ant for a turn. This short aired on both Nickelodeon and Nick Jr.; Nick Jr.'s version, entitled "Ants, Ants, Ants", added an intro featuring an anthill.
Logo used since July 5, 2023 [note 1]. This is a list of television programs currently or formerly broadcast on Nickelodeon's morning block, Nick Jr. from 1988 to 2009 and since 2014 under its current name, 2009 to 2012 under the Nickelodeon Play Date/Play Date name, and 2012 to 2014 under the Weekday Mornings on Nick: The Smart Place to Play name.
Bumper cars in Kerava, Finland, powered by pole-mounted contact shoes that supply power from a conductive ceiling. Bumper cars or dodgems are the generic names for a type of flat amusement ride consisting of multiple small electrically powered cars which draw power from the floor or ceiling, and which are turned on and off remotely by an operator.
Nick Jr. also started using a female announcer (who was replaced by a different one in 1995, 1998 and 2003) in its promos and bumpers. Nick Jr. began to invest more into producing original interstitial series (including 1994's Muppet Time, forty two-minute shorts from The Jim Henson Company) in order to stay within a self-imposed limit of five ...
Nick Jr. Channel logo, used on-air from 2018 until 2023. The following is a list of programs broadcast by the Nick Jr. Channel. It was launched on September 28, 2009, as a spin-off of Nickelodeon's long-running preschool programming block of the same name, which has aired since 1988. The channel features original series and reruns of ...
Pinwheel was reformatted as a series of hour-long episodes shown in three- to five-hour blocks, a format which eventually became the model for Nickelodeon's Nick Jr. block. [8] There were a total of 260 Pinwheel episodes recorded from 1977 to 1984. [9] For international distribution, Nickelodeon edited Pinwheel into a package of half-hour episodes.