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The original 1987 four-cassette package containing all the episodes of Family Portraits, the test pilot series, was later phased out, and the 1st album release was re-released several times, first with simply a title change and the same tapes, and in 1992 with all references to the Officer Harley character and Odyssey USA removed.
The first Adventures in Odyssey video was released in 1991. This series was created following the success of Focus on the Family's involvement in Tyndale House 's video project, McGee and Me! . Originally, the Odyssey video series was created by a separate staff than that of the radio series, and each episode had a budget of about $400,000; by ...
In 1987, Ryan became a fixture of the radio drama Adventures in Odyssey, as Eugene Meltsner, Harlow Doyle, David Harley, Patrick O'Ryan and over 100 individual characters. He voiced Rabbit in Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore , Digit in An American Tail , Petrie in The Land Before Time , and Willie the Giant in Mickey's Christmas Carol .
John Campbell is an American musical composer.He wrote the music for most of the Adventures in Odyssey radio drama series, [1] as well as Lamplighter Theatre, Paws & Tales, Down Gilead Lane, The Chronicles of Narnia, The Extraordinary Adventures of G.A. Henty, the Father Gilbert Mysteries, and the Ark Encounter. [2]
The 1987 film Adventures in Babysitting featured a version of the song performed by Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes. [13] The 1987 Disney Channel TV special D-TV: Doggone Valentine used the Soul Survivors version, shown with clips of Goofy and other Disney cartoon dog characters in their cars, fighting their way through various traffic jams.
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"Dirty Cash (Money Talks)" is a song by British dance music act the Adventures of Stevie V. It was first released in December 1989 on the Mercury record label, then again in 1990. The 1990 release peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart , number one in the Netherlands, and topped the US and Canadian dance charts.
The song was written by Sandy Linzer and L. Russell Brown, [2] and produced by Linzer. It was the New York -based disco group's only UK No. 1 single, spending two weeks at the top of the charts from July 26 to August 8, 1980, [ 1 ] and was their most successful single on the UK Singles Chart.