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The Christmas Raccoons is the first of four Canadian animated television specials, before the main animated television series succeeding it, The Raccoons, took place. [1] It was first broadcast on CBC in Canada on 17 December 1980 and three days later in first-run syndication in the United States on 20 December. [ 2 ]
The Little Drummer Boy (NBC, 1968) Directed by Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin, Jr. and others. Written by Romeo Muller. Two years after CBS got heavy with A Charlie Brown Christmas, the Peacock network ...
Funky Monkey; Garfield: The Movie; Going to the Mat; Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban [2] [3] Home on the Range; Howl's Moving Castle; The Incredibles; In Orange; In Search of Santa; Kangaroo Jack: G'Day U.S.A.! Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events; The Lion King 1½; Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas; Mulan II; My Scene ...
It came after the first two Raccoons seasonal specials, which were The Christmas Raccoons (1980) and The Raccoons on Ice (1981). [2] There are some thematic elements that did not exist in the first two specials, such as the Raccoons' world being separate from that of the humans, but it is the first one to develop the look and feel of the series.
A young boy named Billy and Annabelle the calf have a special Christmas wish. Billy becomes unable to speak after the death of his parents and experiences bullying.
This funky Christmas carol has a serious message—don't leave your woman alone when Santa comes to town. In "Back Door Santa," Clarence Carter warns, "I make all the little girls happy while the ...
The Raccoons is a Canadian animated television series that ran on CBC from November 11, 1985, to March 19, 1991, in Canada and on Disney Channel from July 4, 1985, to August 28, 1992, in the U.S., with three preceding television specials from its inception in 1980, and one direct-to-video special in 1984.
Clapping hand. A clap is the percussive sound made by striking together two flat surfaces, as in the body parts of humans or animals. Humans clap with the palms of their hands, often quickly and repeatedly to express appreciation or approval (see applause), but also in rhythm as a form of body percussion to match the sounds in music, dance, chants, hand games, and clapping games.