Join the WellieWishers as they imagine, sing, dream and discover just what it takes to be kind. When the WellieWishers step into their colorful garden boots, they’re ready for anything – stomping in muddy puddles, dancing with fireflies and navigating the ins and outs of friendship through play and imagination.
International Vlogger Saara dives wirelessly into the lives of three contenders for the ultimate wifi gameshow, setting crazy challenges for them and their families and causing havoc round their homes.
When Jess and Haley become step sisters after their parents secretly get married. The two must learn to get along and adjust to the new way of life. One things for sure. This Country town may not be the big enough for both of them.
Bric-A-Brac is a British children's television series devised by Michael Cole and Nick Wilson, and starring well known children's television presenter Brian Cant. It was produced by the BBC and originally ran from 1 October until 5 November 1980, with another series from 18 August to 29 September 1982. It was repeated frequently until 1989.
The programme was set in a fictitious junk shop, with its shopkeeper played by Cant, who would deliver a monologue to camera. Each episode centred around a particular letter of the alphabet, with different items beginning with that letter found and discussed by the shopkeeper. Cant's script made heavy use of alliteration, and made use of tongue-twisters. At the end of each episode, he would wind up and set off a traditional clockwork toy, upon which the camera would focus whilst the credits rolled.
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.
For the sake of his children, a middle-aged Durai marries Roja, who is half his age. Will this marriage of convenience turn into their 'happily ever after'?