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Tim Lagasse and Cathy McCullough on the set of Oobi in 2004 Oobi is an American children's television series produced by Little Airplane Productions. The show's concept is based on a technique used by puppeteers in training, in which they use their hands and a pair of ping pong balls instead of a full puppet. The main characters are bare hand puppets with eyes and accessories, played by Muppet ...
[46] [47] [48] In 2005, Oobi episodes were posted online to Nick Jr. Video, a broadband video channel. [49] Later that year, the show was part of "Cox Family Fun Night," a weekly event that was shown every Sunday for subscribers of the Cox cable company. [50] Throughout 2005, select General Motors cars had TVs preloaded with Noggin shows ...
Noggin's original logo. The following is a list of programs featured on Noggin. The brand launched in 1999 as a joint venture between MTV Networks (owners of Nickelodeon) and Sesame Workshop. [1] Noggin started out as a cable TV channel. The channel's schedule was divided into two blocks: one for older children and teenagers, and one for ...
Oobi was the studio's first show. It starred a cast of bare-hand puppets, led by a boy named Oobi. It premiered on Noggin in 2000. [11] The first season was made up of two-minute shorts, while the second and third seasons were made up of longer episodes spanning 10-13 minutes each.
Most of the new characters originated in Noggin's online games. Noggimation Boy first appeared as part of the "Noggimation Quilt," [8] an online feature where users could create and upload their own animations. After enough animations were posted, Noggin put them together as the patches of a digital quilt.
The show began as a series of three shorts, shown as part of Noggin's Phred on Your Head Show. When A Walk in Your Shoes started its first long-form season, two of the shorts were combined to make up one long-form episode ("City / Country & Circus / Suburb"), and the other short was appended to a separate episode ("Big Boss / 4th Grader & Candy ...
They officially debuted on April 7, 2003, as part of the Noggin channel redesign. Moose and Zee's first day also introduced Tweenies, Miffy and Friends, and the second season of Oobi (the first season of Oobi shorts had aired since 2000). [3] Segments with Moose and Zee continued to appear daily on Noggin throughout their run.
Out There is a drama television series produced by Sesame Workshop and Noggin LLC for the Noggin channel. [4] It aired as part of Noggin's nighttime programming block, The N . When the show started development, Sesame Workshop co-owned Noggin, and Out There was launched as a tween-oriented project for the network.