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Any US old farts

Do you remember this show from your childhood?

[media=https://youtu.be/zgtV4Yat6AU]

And that Little Adam is another story
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cherokeepatti · 70-79, F
No, lived in a rural area for a long time and we didn’t get but two good public tv channels. So that’s what we were stuck with watching for cartoons. That and a PBS type channel. Watched a local bandstand show on Saturday mornings and also local wrestling.
HumanEarth · F
Does Howdy Doody have wooden balls?
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@HumanEarth Read up on it. Available on Amazon.
MissNen · 61-69, F
Nope, must have been before my time. 🥸
4meAndyou · F
Nope. I don't think I ever saw it.
Poppies · 61-69, F
I may be an old fart but I don't remember this show at all.
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@Poppies I'm beginning to think the syndication was in limited areas. I have always been in the DC Baltimore area
Poppies · 61-69, F
@Gibbon I asked AI and it says the show did air in my area. I just don't remember it!
bowman81 · M
I'm older than dirt but I don't remember this one at all. 🤣
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@bowman81 The show was syndicated but I don't know which market areas. I remember seeing it in the morning. Here's the AI summary and description:

The Big World of Little Adam was an educational animated television series that debuted in syndication in 1964, created by producer Fred Ladd. The show capitalized on the excitement of the Space Race by packaging NASA color documentaries about space technology and exploration into 110 five-minute episodes.

To make the technical content more accessible to children, Ladd added limited animation wraparounds featuring a curious boy named Little Adam and his freckled younger brother, Wilbur. These animated siblings appeared at the beginning and end of each segment to introduce the documentaries and explain complex concepts to young viewers.

The series featured voice work by John Megna as Little Adam and Craig Sechler as Wilbur. Episodes were broadcast either as standalone five-minute segments or bundled into half-hour blocks on local stations. The show covered topics ranging from the Mercury and Gemini programs to plans for Mars missions, with episode titles including Aerospace Ship, Man on the Moon, and Zero Gravity.

The series faded from syndication by the early 1970s because the rapid advancements in space exploration, particularly the Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969, quickly rendered the NASA documentaries obsolete. The fast-paced evolution of space technology meant the educational content could not keep up with the "big world" of real-time scientific progress.
bowman81 · M
@Gibbon Maybe because I was in school all day then. But I missed this one completely. Perhaps it wasn't syndicated in the Detroit area?
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@bowman81 it might not have been there. I have always been somewhere around the DC and Baltimore area
DrWatson · 70-79, M
I don't remember it.
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@DrWatson I know it was syndicated but not what areas. It was on from 1964 to the very early 70s
DrWatson · 70-79, M
@Gibbon

It's possible that I simply didn't watch it. Our TV stations were in New York City.
candycane · 36-40, F
Gibbon · 70-79, M
@candycane 1964 to the early 70s so before your time

 
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