Television Nostalgia



Here's Boomer
is an American adventure/drama series produced by Paramount that premiered on the NBC network on March 14, 1980.[1] A television movie called A Christmas for Boomer aired on December 6, 1979 and served as thepilot.[2] A spin-off of the live-action series The Red Hand Gang, the show follows the adventures of the titular stray dog, "Boomer" and ran for two seasons, ending its run in August 1982, with the final original episode, "Flatfoots," airing on July 3 of that year.
 
I was actually on Romper Room back in the mid 70's. I won the musical chairs contest. Musical chairs is a game where your start with like 10 kids and 9 chairs. We all walk around the chairs when the music is on and when it stops you sit down. The kid who didn't get a seat was out. It came down to me, this cac girl. I knew they were going to try and let her win. They stopped music at a point where the cac girl was in the best position to win. I bum rushed that chair and won. I was the neighborhood hero for a day.
 
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Picture Pages is an educational television segment aimed at preschool children, teaching lessons on basic arithmetic,geometry, and drawing through a series of interactive lessons that used a workbook that viewers would follow along with the lesson.

Picture Pages started on a local Pittsburgh children's show in 1974 with the Picture Pages puzzle booklets given away at asupermarket chain. It debuted as a national segment of the Captain Kangaroo show in 1978, in which Captain Kangaroo would do the lessons on his "magic drawing board". Later, the segments were taken over by Bill Cosby and the lessons were used with his marker named "Mortimer Ichabod Marker" (or "M.I.", for short).
 


Picture Pages is an educational television segment aimed at preschool children, teaching lessons on basic arithmetic,geometry, and drawing through a series of interactive lessons that used a workbook that viewers would follow along with the lesson.

Picture Pages started on a local Pittsburgh children's show in 1974 with the Picture Pages puzzle booklets given away at asupermarket chain. It debuted as a national segment of the Captain Kangaroo show in 1978, in which Captain Kangaroo would do the lessons on his "magic drawing board". Later, the segments were taken over by Bill Cosby and the lessons were used with his marker named "Mortimer Ichabod Marker" (or "M.I.", for short).

Damn I remember this!!

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