Grabbit the rabbit and his charming supporting cast of delightful clay characters come to life in a series of classic fables (including those of Jean La Fontaine and Joel Chandler Harris) adapted to modern settings and presented with warmth, humor, and enchanting music.
Zokko was a BBC television programme for children that ran on Saturday mornings between 1968 and 1970. It was devised by veteran children's TV producer Molly Cox, and featured a mixture of animations, film clips, magic and narrated cartoons. The show was named after its "presenter", a talking pinball machine which introduced the clips and then scored them in its robotic voice e.g. "Zokko, Score 7". The programme is regarded as "the first televised children's comic". Apart from a compilation of highlights, only one complete episode remains in the BBC's archives.
In the new unique show, teams of four or more will compete with each other. They will have to prove to TV viewers and a hundred experts led by Sergei Lazarev that they really are the best! The winner will receive the Show Cup and a cash prize of 5 million rubles.
Bjørnis isn't just your typical cozy teddy bear. He is in fact a real hero in a real fire station, and loves driving a fire truck and putting out fires. Together with his colleagues, he solves assignments every day.
Funny peasant granny moves from her village to Belgrade with her grandson so he can finish elementary school in the city. The clash between the human, rural, and honest and the depraved, false, and petty-bourgeois is inevitable.
Saba is a strong, studious young woman who was raised by a family that supports her ambitions. Ammar, her love interest, is a well educated, handsome young man who has it all and knows it. He begins to display narcissistic tendencies shortly after their marriage, which harms their relationship and affects Saba’s self worth. When Ammar’s best friend Faakhir becomes a form of emotional support for Saba, tensions rise between the three, and make for a complicated dynamic.