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Boris brings Caillou to the grandparents' house, Grandpa forgets Caillou to bring a teddy car all away to the blue car, feeling disappointed. Meanwhile, Caillou takes Grandma to the garden by working his cooking ingredients for the dirt cycle and drawing a potato. When Boris comes home to Caillou, he does his drawing of a potato and both walk home.
Caillou first aired on Canada's French-language Télétoon channel on September 15, 1997, and was the first show aired on the English-language Teletoon when it launched on October 17 of that year. [32] The series was moved to Treehouse TV in 2010. Caillou made its US debut on PBS Kids on September 4, 2000, and ran on that network until December ...
The show focuses on the Polie family, who live in a teapot-shaped house named Housey in a geometric world (Planet Polie, which in itself is located in a whole galaxy) populated by robot-based characters. The stories revolve around a young robot named Olie learning life lessons and going on wacky adventures (either real or imaginative) while ...
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Build-a-lot was the #1 Action/Arcade game of 2007 on Big Fish Games. [7] Build-a-lot was Casual-Game-of-the-Week at killerbetties.com, who highlighted the simple but smooth and pleasing animation, sound effects and surprisingly fun micromanagement. [8] It was rated 4.5 out of 5 stars by Yahoo! Games users. [9]
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Charley and Mimmo aired in 10–15 minute segments on YTV. The show seems somewhat related to another Canadian children's production Caillou, as it has a similar artstyle and plot (except Caillou has longer stories and live puppet segments in the PBS Kids airings).
His first game was a simulation title that was part of a future media project for a publishing house. When Saito asked to develop a second, the business refused because it was not a video game company. He left the company to personally produce the second game, which built on ideas he conceived while working on his first: elevators and towers.