A new class is about to begin at Motostar Academy – the prestigious academy for road motorcycles in Italy, and this time, for the first time in history, Israel's youth team is sending an Israeli delegation there and participating.
Circleen is a little elf who sleeps in a match-box on the artist’s desk. She helps her to tidy up, and her best friends are the mouse couple Frederic and Ingolf.
Two ordinary panda cubs find themselves on countless adventures thanks to their new friend, Tommy, a little dragon. With the help of his magic soap bubbles, Tommy makes the impossible, possible!
Freek Vonk finds a box of old video tapes in the attic. They are the first short nature films, which he made earlier with his friends Maysem and Bas. The young Freek and his friends discover that they can learn a lot from animals. About nature, but also about themselves.
Yu Na and Min Park want more excitement in their lives, but they don't realise just how crazy things will become when they discover that their once unremarkable parents are actually international spies and have disappeared in suspicious circumstances!
Tib, a little boy living in prehistoric times, has a rather unusual friend: Tatoum, a tyrannosaurus! Unfortunately, not everyone in the tribe is happy with their close friendship: living with a dinosaur isn't easy.
Welcome to How to Squoosh?, the "live" TV show that squooshes, crushes and flattens monsters and everything that scares kids, big and small. Witches, ogres, ghosts and hairy monsters of all kinds better hold on if they don’t want to end up flatter than a pancake.
Warner Bros. Animation and Cartoon Network commissioned a Plastic Man television pilot episode "Puddle Trouble" in 2006. Produced by Andy Suriano and Tom Kenny, and designed and storyboarded by Stephen DeStefano. Tom Kenny also performed the voice of Plastic Man in the program. Cartoon Network decided not to pick up Plastic Man as a series and has never aired the episode. "Puddle Trouble" has been released on the Plastic Man: The Complete Collection DVD set. In 2012, Andy Suriano and Tom Kenny would later collaborate, under the DC Nation label, to produce a micro-series successor to the unaired pilot.