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1, 2, 3 Go! is a 1961–1962 American-filmed children's television series hosted by Jack Lescoulie with Richard Thomas. [1] The show also featured Richard Morse, only for the first episode as The Courier, and Joseph Warren, who portrayed Thomas Jefferson in the first episode.
KRCG-TV/KMOS-TV/KOMU-TV: Sesame Street (Due to the lack of a PBS station in Mid-Missouri, CBS stations KRCG and KMOS began premiering PBS's Sesame Street on January 4, 1971 as a weekday morning program [9:00-10:00 AM] after a spokesman for a local group replied that KRCG was confident enough for the Citizens of Sesame Street Fund could raise ...
Charli pretends to hang up her washing on an imaginary clothesline. Tim leads a "backwards day" for the rest of Hi-5, where the events of the day take place in a reversed order. Charli gets dressed for the day and puts her clothes on back to front. Kellie helps Chats to write a song for a special friend, before she learns that the song is about ...
Pixie and Dixie (2 August 1971, 3 December 1982) Planet Ajay; Planet Cook; Planet Dinosaur Files; Plasmo; Play Away; Play School; Playdays; The Playlist; Pluto; Pocket Dragon Adventures (4 January 1999) Pocket Money Pitch; The POD; The Poddington Peas; Poetry Pie; The Pogles; Pole Position; Police Academy; Polka Dot Shorts; Poochini's Yard; Pop ...
The Kidsongs Television Show (2 March 2005 – 17 February 2017; 2019) (Abjad) Kitty Cats (Abjad) Kids Diana Show Ultimate Mishmash (22 March 2021 – present) (Zomoroda) Kiteretsu Daihyakka (31 May 2003 – 10 March 2017; 2024–) (Science) Knowledge Quest (21 June 2000 – 14 June 2014) (Science)
Skits: Buster the Bear, Brak's Song Is Interrupted by a Monkey, Make Stuff Happen on the TV, Pizza Song, Clones Shows : Courage the Cowardly Dog —"Dr. Le Quack, Amnesia Specialist" (11 minutes), Dexter's Laboratory —"Lab of the Lost" (7 minutes), Camp Lazlo —"The Wig of Why" (11 minutes), The Amazing World of Gumball —"The Authority ...
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"One, Two, Three, Four, Five" is one of many counting-out rhymes. It was first recorded in Mother Goose's Melody around 1765. Like most versions until the late 19th century, it had only the first stanza and dealt with a hare, not a fish: One, two, three, four and five, I caught a hare alive; Six, seven, eight, nine and ten,