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Hanna–Barbera's World of Super Adventure

Hanna–Barbera's World of Super Adventure is an American animated anthology wheel series that had an original half-hour broadcast run on both NBC's owned-and-operated stations and in broadcast syndication from 1980 to 1984 on Saturday mornings, Sunday mornings and weekdays in all. Packaged together and backed by Hanna-Barbera Productions, it was a re-run "package" combination of several different Hanna-Barbera action-adventure cartoon series that originally ran from 1966 to 1970. These cartoons consisted of Birdman and the Galaxy Trio, Space Ghost and Dino Boy, Fantastic Four, Moby Dick and the Mighty Mightor, Herculoids, Shazzan and Frankenstein, Jr. and The Impossibles. In each of the four seasons it was aired, viewers could get a new show depending on their respective geographic location. Eventually, Hanna Barbera's World of Super Adventure went into syndication at that same time. Later in October 1992, the series was renamed to just "Super Adventures" and updated with a new intro and aired on Cartoon Network. It ran half-hour and two-hour shows on weekdays and weekends. Finally, in the Spring of 1998, Boomerang on the Cartoon Network, revamped the format again, which was now a one hour show, playing on Sundays 8:00-9:00 AM, but just featured the original episodes of Space Ghost and Dino Boy, Shazzan, Moby Dick and The Mighty Mightor, The Herculoids, and The Fantastic Four.

Hanna–Barbera's World of Super Adventure

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The Sons of Hercules

The Sons of Hercules was a syndicated Embassy Pictures television show that aired in the United States of America in the 1960s. The series repackaged 14 Italian sword-and-sandal films by giving them a standardized theme song for the opening and closing titles, as well as a standard introductory narration attempting to relate the lead character in each film to the Greek demigod Hercules. These films however were not all originally made as "Hercules" films in Italy. Although two of them did originally feature Hercules, four of the films were originally Maciste movies in Italy, two of them were originally Ursus movies, and the other six were just isolated gladiator or mythological hero movies that the American distributors didn't feel deserved a full-blown theatrical release in the USA.

The Sons of Hercules

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Elemental Nexus

Elemental Nexus is an action-packed, high-stakes superhero series set in a world where elemental powers shape the balance of reality itself. When a group of diverse individuals with extraordinary abilities is brought together by fate, they must overcome their personal struggles and unite against an emerging force of darkness threatening to engulf the world. From fire-wielding heroes to those with control over nature, these individuals—known as the Manifest Destiny Team—are pushed to their limits as they battle powerful villains and confront the hidden secrets of their pasts. At the center of the story is Logan, a young hero with a fiery suit and a haunted legacy, as he faces the tragic loss of his mother, Summer Elite, a fallen hero. As he takes up the mantle of his mother’s hero name, he must also come to terms with the darker forces trying to control him, led by the manipulative and calculating villain Z-Smoke.

Elemental Nexus

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Doctor Who Rebirth

Doctor Who: Rebirth follows a newly regenerated Doctor whose unstable transformation leaves their memories fractured and the universe changed in unsettling ways. As they uncover the cause of a mysterious cosmic force known as The Rebirth Pulse, the Doctor travels across time and space confronting revived dangers, unexpected allies, and shifting realities. Faced with a universe on the edge, the Doctor must rediscover their identity and forge a new path to protect all of time.

Doctor Who Rebirth

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Xiao Xiao

Xiao Xiao is an internet Flash cartoon series by Chinese animator Zhu Zhiqiang, featuring stick-figure men performing choreographed fight scenes. Some of the cartoons are interactive and game-like. All cartoons are in the Adobe Flash format, although Xiao Xiao #1 was originally in AVI format. It has now been converted to Flash format. "Xiao Xiao" literally is the Chinese character for "small" repeated twice in Mandarin Chinese; here this reduplication connotes an affectionate diminutive – an equivalent might be the English expression "itty bitty" or "lil' old". Each Xiao Xiao cartoon is given a Chinese title with the adjective "Xiao Xiao" preceding a descriptive noun phrase. Xiao Xiao #1 was originally titled "Xiao Xiao Zuo Pin", which translates to "A Little Bit of Creative Work". Since then each Xiao Xiao cartoon has had a different noun succeeding "Xiao Xiao" – #4 is titled "Little Sheriff", and #7 is titled "Little Movie". The term has gradually shifted meaning from the cartoons themselves to the main character, an anonymous black stick-figure – in this context it means something akin to "little fella", appropriate since in most perspectives Xiao Xiao and his fellow stick-people appear tiny and childlike, with disproportionately large heads and small limbs.

Xiao Xiao

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