Wumpa's World
Wumpa's World 沃帕的世界 | |
---|---|
Genre |
Children's Fantasy |
Created by |
Treehouse TV CCTV Cité-Amérique TVB |
Narrated by | Lorne Cardinal (English) |
Country of origin |
Canada China Hong Kong Macau |
Original language(s) |
English French Chinese |
No. of seasons |
1 (Canada version) 2 (China version) |
No. of episodes |
26 (Canada) 36 (China) |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Treehouse TV CCTV |
Running time |
15 mins. (approx) 20 mins. (China) |
Release | |
Original network |
Treehouse TV The Knowledge Channel APTN CCTV TVB TDM |
Original release | Late 2000 – May 2002 |
Wumpa's World (Chinese: 沃帕的世界; pinyin: wò pà de shìjiè) was a Chinese-Canadian television series for children which first aired on many networks including Treehouse TV, The Knowledge Channel, APTN, CCTV, TVB and TDM with 26 15-minute episodes from August 2001 to May 2002. The pilot episode aired in late 2000. Today, the show's episodes are only seen in reruns late during the night and earlier during the day. The characters are puppets.
Characters
- Wumpa (Chinese: 沃帕; pinyin: Wò pà; Lorne Cardinal) is a brown walrus who tells real-life stories which take place in a medium version of the Arctic Circle. At the end of each show, Wumpa sings his very own "goodbye song" by playing a bass guitar that looks like a didgeridoo. Most of the show's episodes end with Wumpa's goodbye song's most famous line, which is "Well, bye-bye, and don't forget, always keep your tusks shiny and your blubber clean". He only occasionally appears in the story itself.
- Zig (simplified Chinese: 弯; traditional Chinese: 彎; pinyin: Wān) and Zag (Chinese: 曲; pinyin: Qū) are two young snowmobiles. Zig is yellow and pink, while Zag is blue and orange. A bicycle bell is mounted on Zig's handlebars and a horn is mounted on Zag's.
- Tiguak (simplified Chinese: 钛瓜; traditional Chinese: 鈦瓜; pinyin: Tài guā; Tim Gosley)[1] is a polar bear who lives in an igloo and mostly eats fish. He has a bed and a toy bear he calls "Mr. Snoozers".
- Seeka (Chinese: 塞卡; pinyin: Sāi kǎ; Jani Lauzon)[2] and Tuk (simplified Chinese: 笃; traditional Chinese: 篤; pinyin: Dǔ) are snow hares who live in a den with two entrances – one for each of them.
References
External links
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