

Most of the audio and the last 15 seconds of footage have been found.Ī possible clip of this short is featured in a promo.Ī clip of this short is featured in a promo.Ī clip of this short is featured in the intro sequence. The last 10 seconds of footage have been found.Ĭlips of this short are featured in the intro sequence. 5 more currently exist in an incomplete form. 48 shorts are confirmed to exist, but it is unknown how many were made in total.ġ2 of the 48 known shorts are currently lost. DVDs from 2003 to 2004, but that was it in terms of official releases. In 2002, the channel divided its programming into two blocks: a daytime block for preschoolers and a nighttime block for tweens and. At its launch, Noggin was mainly aimed at a pre-teen audience. It launched on Februas a joint venture between Nickelodeon and the Children's Television Workshop (CTW), now known as Sesame Workshop. Shortened versions of "Dance!" and "Bubble Bath!" were released on Nick Jr. Noggin is an entertainment brand owned by Nickelodeon. However, some of them ("Itsy Bitsy Spider!" and "Toys!") don't appear at all on their schedules, indicating that TVO didn't air the complete collection.

TVO's schedule catalogues are the source of official titles for many of the shorts. In Canada, TVOntario aired 46 of the shorts on a rotating schedule. After the second season started airing on April 7th, 2003, Noggin stopped airing the shorts as frequently and adopted the same randomized schedule as Nick Jr.

On Noggin, one short was played before each 30-minute show from 6 AM to 6 PM. Like its other interstitial programming, Nickelodeon had no specific schedule for airing them and played the shorts at random intervals. In the United States, the shorts were shown on Noggin and Nickelodeon during its Nick Jr.
