All aboard the Calypso!
Accompanied by 5 teenagers of different nationalities, Captain Cousteau, leader in environmental awareness, explores the marine world on their legendary floating laboratory: the Calypso. Eager to discover the wonders of the sea, he piques the curiosity of his young heirs, always hungry to discover the wonderful diversity of the marine world...
Rocco the squirrel lives in the forest and faces new challenges in every episode. How to carry a juicy plum? How to cross a puddle? How to keep warm on a snowy day and much more. Young viewers can identify with Rocco’s challenges and share the joys of his success.
Jackanory is a long-running BBC children's television series that was designed to stimulate an interest in reading. The show was first transmitted on 13 December 1965, the first story being the fairy-tale Cap-o'-Rushes read by Lee Montague. Jackanory continued to be broadcast until 1996, clocking up around 3,500 episodes in its 30-year run. The final story, The House at Pooh Corner by A. A. Milne, was read by Alan Bennett and broadcast on 24 March 1996. The show returned on 27 November 2006 for two one-off stories.
The show's format, which varied little over the decades, involved an actor reading from children's novels or folk tales, usually while seated in an armchair. From time to time the scene being read would be illustrated by a specially commissioned still drawing, often by Quentin Blake. Usually a single book would occupy five daily fifteen-minute episodes, from Monday to Friday.
Philippe Cousteau Jr., grandson of the legendary Jacques Cousteau, explores the most spectacular places - on the earth, inside the earth, and above the earth - in this riveting earth science series.
The story begins on a tiny island called Morrowland, which has just enough space for a small palace, a train station and rails all around the island, a grocery store, a small house, a king, two subjects, a locomotive named Emma, and a locomotive engineer by the name of Luke.