When the long-lost Imperial Seal of China resurfaces in France, a rivalry ignites between museums in Beijing and Taipei. Caught in the middle is Antoine, a young man of French-Taiwanese descent, who follows clues left by his grandfather. His journey leads him back to Taiwan, where he must face the pain of his past.
Raised in an orphanage, Shankar and Oishani's daughter Dhriti has a pappening life. And enters Rudra, leading her into the whirlwind of a marriage contract.
Join Tanaka and Aaron at the very heart of DreamWorks itself: The Inspiration Station. Explore local hangouts with Cape Town correspondent Jasmine, discuss topical themes with roving reporter Jordan in Johanesburg, and uncover a world of fun, facts and chats inspired by our most famous DreamWorks characters.
Sol and Dong live with their widower father on an island village, where he works as a fisherman. One day a white puppy enters their lives. They adopt him and name him Max. However, after their father dies at sea and circumstances separate Max from Sol and Dong, Max must find the will to fight his way home, so he can be reunited with his owners.
Loki schemes with Thanos to win back control of Thanos' Battleworld, but what the Mad Titan doesn't realize is that Loki is after a mythical weapon: The Twilight Sword. Follow your favorite Marvel heroes as they try to stop Loki.
Green Screen Adventures is a children's television series which premiered in 2007. The series was originally produced for local broadcast on WCIU-TV in Chicago, which is the flagship station of Weigel Broadcasting, and is designed to fit the FCC's educational and information programming requirements while also being produced locally in Chicago. However the program now also airs nationally on the This TV and Me-TV digital subchannel networks.
Green Screen Adventures features stories and drawings by students in second through eighth grade using sketch comedy, story theatre, game shows, original songs, puppetry and more. Since their debut in 2007, they have featured stories written by almost 1,000 elementary school students.
The show is set around the submissions of short stories, school reports, poetry, essays, basic academic questions and artwork from students in the Chicago Public Schools and other schools in the Chicago area between second and eighth grades. A parent or guardian then signs a standard release for