ABC
WEEKEND SPECIALS
(ABC, September 10, 1977-August 30, 1997)
Various
MAIN CAST:
Michael Young – Host (1979-81)
Willie Tyler & Lester – Hosts
(1981-84)
Frank Welker & Neil Ross – Cap’n O.G. Readmore
(1984-92)
ABC Weekend Specials was ABC’s second attempt at a Movie of the Week anthology
series targeted towards children after The
ABC Saturday Superstar Movie. However, instead of being merely a
proving ground for potential shows for the various studios, Weekend Specials
took on a heavy educational slant encouraging reading with a mixture of
animated and live-action presentations.
A number of children’s books were
adapted for the series, ranging in publication date from only a few years prior
to the show all the way back a few centuries. They included The
Winged Colt of Casa Mia and
Trouble
River by Betsy Byars; Soup
and Me, Soup
for President and Mr.
Little by Robert Newton Peck; The
Contest Kid and the Big Prize, The
Contest Kid Strikes Again and
The
Trouble with Miss Switch by
Barbara Brooks
Wallace; If
I’m Lost, How Come I Found You? by
Walter
Oleksy; Weep
No More My Lady by Mary Higgins Clark; The
Horse that Played Center Field by
Hal Higdon; And
This is Laura by Ellen Conford; The
Ghost of Thomas Kempe by
Penelope Lively; The
Incredible Detectives by
Don and Joan Caufield; Scruffy:
The Tuesday Dog by Jack
Stoneley; Arthur
the Kid by Alan Coren; Zack
and the Magic Factory by
Elaine
L. Schulte; Bunnicula:
A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery by
James and Deborah Howe; The
Red Room Riddle: A Ghost Story by
Scott Corbett; Frank
and Fearless by Horatio Alger Jr.; All
the Money in the World by
Bill Brittain; The
Secret World of Og by Pierre Berton; An
American Ghost by Chester Aaron; The
Dog Days of Arthur Cane by
T. Ernesto
Bethancourt; A
Different Twist by Elizabeth Levy;
The
Bunjee Venture by Stan McMurty; Henry
Hamilton, Graduate Ghost by
Marilyn
Redmond; The
Bollo Caper by Art Buchwald; The
Adventures of a Two-Minute Werewolf by
Gene Deweese; The
Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams Bianco;
The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer by
Mark Twain; Jeter
Mason and the Magic Headset by
Maggie Twohill; Pippi
Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren; The
Mouse and the Motorcycle, Runaway
Ralph and Ralph
S. Mouse by Beverly Cleary; Santabear’s
First Christmas by Barbara Read
and Howard B. Lewis; The P.J.
Funnybunny series by Marilyn Sadler; The Monster Bed by
Jeanne Willis and Susan Varley; Otherwise
Known as Sheila the Great by
Judy Blume; Stanley by
Syd Hoff; Choose
Your Own Adventure: The Case of the Silk King by
Shannon Gilligan; The
Old Man of Lochnagar by Charles, Prince of Wales (which he
narrated) and Sir Hugh Casson;
Commander
Toad in Space by Jane Yolen; The
Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson
Burnett; The
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by
Robert Louis Stevenson. While The
Littles was a book series by John
Peterson, ABC had already been airing an animated
series based on them before airing the two movies as part of
Weekend Specials.
For a bit of variety, several short
stories were adapted or provided inspiration for one. Those included “The
Ransom of Red Chief” by O. Henry, first published in the
July 6, 1907 issue of The
Saturday Evening Post; “The Gold-Bug”
by Edgar Allan Poe,
first published in the June 21, 1843 issue of Philadelphia Dollar Newspaper;
“Jim
Smiley and His Jumping Frog” by Mark Twain, first published in the
November 18, 1865 edition of The
New York Saturday Press; “Rip Van Winkle”
by Washington
Irving, first published in the serial publication The
Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. that
ran from 1819-20; and “The
Parsley Garden” by William Saroyan. There
was also the folktale of Henny Penny
and the fairytales of Puss in Boots,
Jack
and the Beanstalk and Little
Red Riding Hood.
The monsters briefly larger than a pocket. |
Some adaptations came from outside
of traditional literature. For instance, Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart’s opera, The Magic Flute, was
among them, as was the comic strip Little Lulu. The Matchbox toyline Monster in my Pocket,
which was comprised of little monster figurines, was the subject of an animated
special from Hanna-Barbera
that aired on Halloween in 1992. ABC included an episode of Focus on the Family’s Christian
television series McGee
and Me!, which centered on an artistic 11-year-old boy dealing with
life with the help of his animated imaginary friend, as the pilot for a
potential new series. The series never materialized, but ABC did air another
episode as part of Weekend Specials. Both episodes were edited to allow
for commercials and to tone down the religious content.
The live-action Teddy Ruxpin. |
Semi-related to the literature theme was “The
Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin”, the pilot for a potential series based on the animatronic stuffed bear that
would read stories to children via cassette tape. The original plan by his
creator Ken Forsse was to
make a live-action series using animatronic characters similar to Disney’s Welcome to Pooh Corner and Dumbo’s Circus, which
he had worked on. However, the venture proved to be too difficult and expensive
and never went beyond the pilot episode produced. Instead, The Adventures of Teddy
Ruxpin ended up as a traditionally animated syndicated series. The
pilot was aired as part of Weekend Specials and later in syndication in
two parts.
"The Puppy Who Wanted a Boy" title card. |
Notably, Weekend Specials served
as the springboard for Ruby-Spears Productions’ The Puppy’s Further
Adventures. Based on The Puppy Who
Wanted a Boy by Jane
Thayer, Ruby-Spears
Productions produced four specials that aired at different times during Weekend
Specials’ run. They proved immensely popular during both original airings
and in reruns, leading to ABC greenlighting the series. The show ran for two
seasons on ABC, initially airing as part of The Scooby & Scrappy-Doo/Puppy
Hour alongside Hanna-Barbera’s Scooby-Doo
and Scrappy-Doo (1980). It was
broken off into its own separate series for the second season.
ABC Weekend Specials debuted
on September 10, 1977, following four short story specials that aired between
January and April. Each episode was a half-hour as opposed to Superstar
Movie’s hour-long format, with longer stories being shown in parts across
multiple weeks. Along with Hanna-Barbera and Ruby-Spears, production companies
who contributed to the series included Phoenix Films,
Martin Tahse
Productions, 20th
Century Fox, Tomorrow
Entertainment, Learning
Corporation of America, D’Angelo/Bullock/Allen
Productions, Highgate
Pictures, Scholastic Productions,
Hightide, Brookfield Productions, Rick Reinert Productions,
DiC Entertainment,
Churchill Films, Rabbit Ears Productions, Animation
Cottage, Marvel
Productions, Tashmoo Productions,
White Sneakers, BBC Scotland and Mike Young Productions, as well
as ABC
Circle Films; the production arm of the network created to make content for
Movie of the Week.
Cap'n O.G. Readmore with Vincent Price. |
Beginning with the third season, ABC
added a host segment to introduce the stories and recommend the book the
episode was based on. Michael Young served as the first host for two seasons. He
was replaced by ventriloquist Willie Tyler and his dummy, Lester. In 1984, ABC
introduced the show’s new mascot: Cap’n O.G. Readmore. Readmore was an
anthropomorphic alley cat dressed in a tattered nautical outfit and often found
in the alley behind a library. Reinert created the character for ABC in 1983
after CBS found success with their Read More About It campaign
in association with the Library of Congress. The
character was originally animated for his appearance in reading PSAs, but for Weekend
Specials he became a puppet initially voiced by Frank Welker (who used a
less goofy-sounding voice than in the initial PSAs). Readmore would introduce
the week’s story with live special guests, including Jon “Bowzer” Bauman, Billy Dee Williams, Vincent Price, Jill Whelan, magician Harry Blackstone Jr.,
and others. Welker also took over voicing the animated version in the PSAs. Eventually,
Welker was replaced by Neil Ross, who voiced the character in his own animated
episodes of Weekend Specials with a British accent. In those, he
was president of the Friday Night Book Club comprised of other felines—Kitty
Literature (Ilene Latter),
Ol’ Tome Cat, Wordsy (both Stan
Jones) and Lickety Page (Lucille
Bliss)—and they often found themselves pulled into whatever book they were
reading at the time. They were produced by ABC Entertainment and Rick Reinert
Pictures.
The series had three opening
sequences during its run. The first, designed by Rick Reinert Studios, featured
a book on a desk in the middle of a library magically opening and releasing
various figures into the air. It would be followed by the titles Children’s
Novels for Television or Short Story Specials before the title
actually appeared. This was the longest-running of the titles, going from the
show’s inception until the middle of 1990. The second intro combined computer
animation and live action segments as real children are sucked into the world
of books and become part of the story, and Cap’n O.G. Readmore leading the way.
This sequence was animated by American
Film Technologies. In 1994, the third intro saw the ABC logo jump off of a
book on a library shelf to another book on a desk. Upon opening that book, the
logo dives into various worlds inhabited by letters before ending up on the
front cover of the book.
ABC Weekend Specials ran for
an impressive 17 seasons. However, as studios began to turn their focus towards
the more lucrative syndication market throughout the 80s and beginning of the
90s, ABC found itself lacking sufficient content for many seasons. Older
episodes were rerun with Readmore segments added to them, as were reruns of
episodes from their weekday series, ABC Afterschool Specials.
Between 1993-96, ABC would use the Weekend Special timeslot to air
unaffiliated specials called ABC Saturday Morning Specials that took a
broader educational direction. ABC’s Wide World of Sports for Kids also
aired two specials during this time. Eventually with a dearth of new content
and frequent preemptions by local affiliates, Weekend Specials came to
an end.
The official debut of O.G. Readmore. |
The series in its entirety has never
been released to home video; however, many individual segments have by their
various production companies and rights holders. “Escape of the One Ton Pet” was
released
to VHS by FHE Video. “Portrait of Grandpa Doc” was released
to DVD in 2008 by Phoenix Learning Group. “The
Seven Wishes of Joanna Peabody” was released to VHS by Learning Corporation
of America. “The
Haunted Mansion Mystery”, “Cap’n
O.G. Readmore Meets Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde”, “PJ’s
Unfunnybunny Christmas” and “PJ
Funnybunny: Very Cool Easter” were released to VHS by Anchor Bay
Entertainment between 1997-99. ABC themselves released “The Amazing Bunjee
Venture” to VHS
in 1999. The Teddy Ruxpin pilot was released
to VHS by Lions Gate Home Entertainment
in 1988. “Cap’n O.G. Readmore’s Puss in Boots” and “Jack
and the Beanstalk” were released to VHS by Beacon Home Video in 1990, with
the latter re-released by ABC Kids Video in 1993, while “Little
Red Riding Hood” was released in 1988 by VCI Entertainment. “Henry
Hamilton, Graduate Ghost” also saw a VHS
release. In 1984, Scholastic published The
Adventures of Cap’n O.G. Readmore by Fran
Manushkin and Manny
Campana.
EPISODE GUIDE:
Short Story Specials:
“Valentine’s
Second Chance” (1/29/77) – A safecracker gets a second chance at freedom when
he has to rescue a boy from a time-locked safe.
“The
Haunted Trailer” (3/26/77) – Sisters discover that their motor home is haunted.
“My
Dear Uncle Sherlock” (4/16/77) – A young detective and his uncle team-up to
figure out who robbed the neighborhood recluse.
“Homer
and the Wacky Doughnut Machine” (4/30/77) – A young mechanical genius invents a
machine to help his uncle’s failing coffee shop.
Season 1:
“The
Winged Colt” (9/10-24/77) – Charlie can’t convince his uncle that their winged
horse can fly and has to find it when it disappears.
“The
Ransom of Red Chief” (10/22/77) – Two kidnappers get more than they bargained
for when they kidnap a financier’s son for ransom.
“Portrait
of Grandpa Doc” (11/5/77) – A young artist plans a tribute for his grandfather
for encouraging his dreams.
“Trouble
River” (11/12-19/77) – A boy and his grandmother raft down a dangerous river to
escape a group of renegades.
“Tales
of the Nunundaga” (11/26-12/3/77) – A Native American boy sets out to recover
his tribe’s sacred bow from an enemy.
“The
Escape of a One-Ton Pet” (1/7-21/78) – 14-year-old Pru runs away with an
orphaned bull in order to protect it from being slaughtered.
“Soup
and Me” (2/4/78) – Friends Soup and Rob end up in women’s clothing, running
from bullies, and destroying a Halloween party all in one day.
“The
Puppy Who Wanted a Boy” (5/6/78) – Petey the puppy will do anything to adopt a
boy of his own.
Season 2:
“The
Seven Wishes of Joanna Peabody” (9/9/78) – Joanna is granted seven wishes by
her fairy godmother and learns a lesson about sharing.
“The
Contest Kid and the Big Prize” (9/16/78) – Harvey wins first prize in a
contest: the services of a butler for a month.
“If
I’m Lost, How Come I Found You?” (9/30-10/7/78) – Orphan Wilbur “Quacky”
Quackenbush finds the father he always wanted in the young man who hides from
the cops in his aunt’s house.
“The
$1,000 Bill” (10/28/78) – Finding a large amount of cash encourages an
insurance salesman to tell off his boss and quit, only to discover the money is
counterfeit.
“Little
Lulu” (11/4/78) – Little Lulu and her friends champion for women’s rights when
the boys protest that their summer camp has become co-ed.
“Soup
for President” (11/18/78) – Soup runs for school president against the toughest
kid in school.
“Weep
No More, My Lady” (2/10/79) – Skeeter adopts a brave dog and both end up the
prisoner of a vengeful man in the swamp.
“The
Horse That Played Centerfield” (2/24-3/3/79) – The NY Goats are on a losing
streak until they put Oscar in centerfield, only to have him horsenapped during
the World Series.
“The
Baby with Four Fathers” (3/31/79) – Four boys decide to adopt the baby girl
they find.
“The
Puppy’s Great Adventure” (5/12/79) – Petey wants to prove he’s an individual
when his owner’s new parents don’t like dogs.
Season 3:
“The
Big Hex of Little Lulu” (9/15/79) – Little Lulu schemes for ways to make her
friend Tubby donate money for uniforms for the neighborhood hockey team.
“The
Contest Kid Strikes Again” (9/22/79) – Harvey wins some chickens that he uses
to help his friend’s financial troubles.
“The
Girl with ESP” (10/20/79) – A seemingly average girl suddenly develops the
ability to see the future.
“The
Ghost of Thomas Kempe” (11/3-10/79) – A ghost causes trouble for young James
when he refuses to become his apprentice, and James turns to a handyman for
help.
“The
Incredible Detectives” (11/17/79) – A group of pets band together to rescue
their kidnapped master.
“The
Revenge of Red Chief” (12/15/79) – Red Chief gets involved in two drifters’
scheme involving a fake rain-making machine.
“The
Puppy’s Amazing Rescue” (1/26/80) – Petey and Dolly have to brave the
wilderness to rescue their humans from an avalanche.
“The
Gold Bug” (2/2-9/80) – A young boy, an ex-slave and a treasure hunter set out
to find Captain Kidd’s buried gold.
“The
Trouble with Miss Switch” (2/16-23/80) – Rupert and Amelia discover their
teacher is actually a witch and help her battle an evil witch to free the
Witches’ Council.
Season 4:
“Scruffy”
(10/4-18/80) – Scruffy is a stray dog who tries to survive in a strange and
unforgiving world.
“Arthur
the Kid” (1/3/81) – Three bumbling outlaws advertise for a new boss and end up
with a 10-year-old boy.
“Zack
and the Magic Factory” (1/10-17/81) – Zack and Jenny run a magic shop and put
their skills to use to save their aunt’s magic-making factory from demolition.
“Mayday!
Mayday!” (1/24-31/81) – A family’s airplane crashes in the High Sierras and the
kids set out to find help for their trapped parents.
Season 5:
“The
Puppy Saves the Circus” (9/12/81) – Petey ends up with amnesia and becomes a
performer in a circus, saving it.
“The
Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” (9/19/81) – A young boy plans to
win a frog-jumping contest at any cost.
“Bunnicula,
the Vampire Rabbit” (1/9/82) – Mysterious goings on lead the family pets to
believe the new pet rabbit may be a vampire.
“Miss
Switch to the Rescue” (1/16-23/82) – Miss Switch returns to help Rupert rescue
Amelia from evil mages Mordo and Saturna.
“The
Joke’s on Mr. Little” (2/6/82) – An unusual teacher out-tricks an inventive
pair of practical jokers.
Season 6:
“The
Haunted Mansion Mystery” (1/8-15/83) – Angel and her neighbor investigate the
haunted mansion in their neighborhood.
“The
Red Room Riddle” (2/5/83) – Two kids are trapped in a haunted mansion and a
ghost tells them they have to solve the riddle of the red room to escape.
“Horatio
Alger Updated: Frank and Fearless” (2/12-19/83) – A young boy stands to lose
his inheritance to his wicked stepmother and her son.
“All
the Money in the World” (3/19/83) – A boy learns that wishing for all the money
in the world may not be as good as it seems.
“The
Secret World of Og” (4/30-5/14/83) – Five young siblings journey to the magical
world of Og where two of them end up jailed by a town sheriff.
Season 7:
“Cougar!”
(1/7-21/84) – Two siblings are stranded on an island with kidnappers and a
hungry cougar.
“The
Dog Days of Arthur Cane” (2/18-25/84) – A selfish teenager is transformed into
a shaggy dog by a full moon and a magic amulet.
“A
Different Twist” (3/10/84) – A young girl disguises herself as a boy in order
to get into an all-boy production of Oliver.
“The
Amazing Bunjee Venture” (3/24-31/84) – Two kids accidentally end up back in
time where they befriend a dinosaur with an inflatable trunk and decide to
bring him back to the present.
“Bad
Cat” (4/14/84) – Bad Cat wants to prove that a cat can have class without being
tough.
Season 8:
“Henry
Hamilton, Graduate Ghost” (12/8-15/84) – Henry receives his first haunting
assignment and ends up helping a family learn to believe in themselves.
“The
Bollo Caper” (2/2/85) – Leopard Bollo escapes from being turned into a fur coat
and goes to Washington to get himself declared an endangered species.
“The
Adventures of a Two-Minute Werewolf” (2/23-3/2/85) – Walt decides to learn why
he’s able to turn into a werewolf for two minutes at a time.
“The
Return of the Bunjee” (4/6-13/85) – Bunjee, Karen and Andy go back in time
again to find a mother for the Bunjee babies that hatched, only to end up in
medieval times.
“The
Velveteen Rabbit” (4/20/85) – Robert believes his toy rabbit is real, and he
becomes real when a fairy saves him from being burned as the cause of Robert’s
scarlet fever.
Season 9:
“The
Adventures of Con Sawyer and Hucklemary Finn” (9/7-14/85) – A gender-swapped
retelling of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
“Jeeter
Mason and the Magic Headset” (10/5/85) – Jeter Mason’s moon rock speaks to her
through a radio headset and allows her to do anything with its powers.
“Cap’n
O.G. Readmore’s Jack and the Beanstalk” (10/12/85) – The Friday Night Book Club
makes fun of the characters in their favorite fairy tales, prompting them to come
to life and kidnap O.G.
“Pippi
Longstocking” (11/2-9/85) – Tommy and Annika get an adventurous new neighbor:
orphan Pippi Longstocking.
“Columbus
Circle” (11/23/85) – Members of the Columbus Circle Club attempt to play a
practical joke on a snobby new neighbor.
“The
Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin” (11/30-12/7/85) – Teddy and Grubby leave their home
island to follow a treasure map to a collection of crystals.
Season 10:
“Cap’n
O.G. Readmore Meets Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” (9/13/86) – Lickety Page is sucked
into Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and O.G.
has to rescue him.
“The
Day the Kids Took Over” (9/20-27/86) – After a fall, Mayor Van Winkle finds
himself in a world run by children.
“Liberty
and the Littles” (10/18-11/1/86) – The Littles end up on Liberty Island where
they find their French ancestors are being persecuted by an evil general.
“The
Mouse and the Morotcycle” (11/8-15/86) – Keith befriends talkative mouse Ralph
who ventures out on his motorcycle to find a medicine for Keith’s illness.
“Santabear’s
First Christmas” (11/22/86) – Santa appoints a young bear as his apprentice to
deliver toys to the forest animals.
Season 11:
“Cap’n
O.G. Readmore Meets Red Riding Hood” (4/2/88) – Underestimating the value of a
good villain, O.G. ends up meeting a Red Riding Hood who is the Big Bad Wolf.
“Here
Comes the Littles” (4/23-5/7/88) – The Littles help Augustus save his family’s
property from his corrupt uncle.
Season 12:
“Cap’n
O.G. Readmore’s Puss in Boots” (9/10/88) – O.G. tells his friends the tale
about his ancestor, Puss in Boots.
“Runaway
Ralph” (10/29-11/5/88) – After being grounded, Ralph runs away from home to a
summer camp where he has to clear his new friend’s name when he’s accused of
theft.
“P.J.
Funnybunny” (2/4/89) – P.J and his friends want to become famous by contacting
aliens.
“The
Monster Bed” (9/9/89) – A young boy ends up transported to a spot under a
monster’s bed.
Season 13:
“Ralph
S. Mouse” (2/16-23/91) – Ralph and Ryan come up with a plan to help the bellboy
who was forced to leave the inn where they are staying.
“Otherwise
Known as Sheila the Great” (3/23/91) – Going to summer camp forces Sheila
Tubman to overcome her fears of dogs and swimming.
Season 14:
“McGee
and Me!: The Big Lie” (1/25/92) – To make friends in his new neighborhood, Nick
makes up stories about an old man’s house that leads to bullies wrecking it.
“Cap’n
O.G. Readmore Meets Chicken Little” (4/18/92) – O.G. reads Chicken Little to his friends.
“The
Kingdom Chums: Original Top Ten” (5/2/92) – The Kingdom Chums teach kids the
meaning of the 10 Commandments.
Season 15:
“McGee
and Me!: Take Me Out of the Ballgame” (9/12/92) – Nick’s baseball team thinks
they’re a cinch to win against their rivals thanks to their new player.
“Monster
in My Pocket: The Big Scream” (10/31/92) – A group of good monsters end up
shrunken and team-up with a horror author’s daughter to stop bad monsters.
“Stanley
and the Dinosaurs” (11/7/92) – While visiting the museum, Stanley’s mind goes
to an alternate timeline where dinosaurs and cavemen roam together.
“Choose
Your Own Adventure: The Case of the Silk King” (12/12-19/92) – Two kids end up
on various adventures while searching for their missing uncle.
“The
Parsley Garden” (3/27/93) – A young boy deals with his own identity and
prejudice against immigrants during the Great Depression.
“The
Legend of Lochnagar” (4/24/93) – A Scotsman relocates to a mysterious land in
the Scottish mountains inhabited by a race of little people.
“Commander
Toad in Space” (5/8/93) – Toad and his crew have to return an ancient artifact.
Season 16:
“P.J.’s
Unfunnybunny Christmas” (12/11/93) – To get the video game he wants for
Christmas, P.J. masquerades as Santa to encourage the townspeople to shop at
his father’s toy store.
“The
Magic Flute” (4/30-5/7/94) – The Queen of the Night gives a young prince a
magic flute so that he can rescue her daughter.
Season 17:
“The
Secret Garden” (11/5/94) – An orphan and her sickly cousin enjoy the magic in a
neglected garden.
“Jirimpimbira:
An African Folk Tale” (2/25/95) – A boy sets out to find food and water for his
village, but ends up enriching himself when given a set of magical bones.
“P.J.
Funnybunny: A Very Cool Easter” (3/30/96) – P.J. ignores the cold weather to
plan an Easter parade and egg hunt.
“The
Magic Pearl” (8/4-18/96) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
ABC
Saturday Morning Specials:
“CityKids”
(1/30/93) – While David tries to approach a girl he likes, Susan deals with
racial discrimination and sexual harassment.
“The
Great Alaska Dog Sled Race” (3/6/93) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
“Rhythm
and Jam: Rhythm & Rap” (9/18/93) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
“Rhythm
and Jam: Melody & Harmony” (9/25/93) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
“Kids
on ice: A Skating Adventure!” (2/12/94) – Behind-the-scenes look at the US
Figure Skating Championships.
“Money
Made Easy: The ABC Kids’ Guide to Dollars and Sense” (4/2-9/94) – Explaining
banking and finance to kids.
“A
Day at the Races” (6/11/94) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
“Crash
the Curiosaurus” (1/14-21/95) – A dinosaur and two children explore the
American Museum of Natural History.
“Wild
Things: An Earth Day Special” (4/22/95) – Exploring the animal kingdom.
“The
Secret of Lizard Woman” (11/12/95) – A boy searching for his uncle learns about
his Native American heritage.
“Back
to School with Schoolhouse Rock” (9/14/96) – NO SYNOPSIS AVILABLE.
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