Join the PAW Patrol on a Look and Find adventure! Use the included write-and-erase marker to circle hidden objects in 10 busy, illustrated Look and Find and "spot the difference" scenes. When you're done, just wipe the pages clean to play again! Look and Find play encourages focus and exploration, and using a marker helps build fine-motor skills.
Write and erase in this new Sesame Street Look and Find book! This book is filled with Look and Find challenges and Picture Puzzles for you and your child to enjoy! Look and learn as you explore each page with classic Sesame Street characters. Use the erasable marker to circle what you find. When you're done, erase it, and you can start all over again! Featured: 5 Look and Find spreads, 5 Picture Puzzle Spreads, 2 Spreads in back with additional findems and answer keys, 1 erasable marker
Join the PAW Patrol, Blue's Clues, and all your Nick Jr. friends on a Look and Find adventure! Use the included write-and-erase marker to circle hidden objects in 10 busy, illustrated Look and Find scenes. When you're done, just wipe the pages clean to play again! Look and Find play encourages focus and exploration, and using a marker helps develop fine-motor skills.
Kids can practice basic early learning concepts with their favorite Nickelodeon characters in this fun write-and-wipe coloring and activity book. It even comes with a handle, a marker, and two sheets of stickers! Friendly faces from Nickelodeon’s most popular shows introduce letters of the alphabet, numbers 1 to 10, colors, and shapes in this cheerful write-on/wipe-off spiral-bound book with a handle that includes a write-on/wipe off marker. Nickelodeon Write & Wipe: Learn With Us! has 40 full-color, write-on/wipe off pages; 20 black-and-white coloring and activity pages; and two sheets of stickers. This book features five Nickelodeon shows: Butterbean’s Café, Blues Clues & You!, PAW Patrol, Blaze and the Monster Machines, and Dora the Explorer.
Created around the world and available only on the web, internet "television" series are independently produced, mostly low budget shows that often feature talented but unknown performers. Typically financed through crowd-funding, they are filmed with borrowed equipment and volunteer casts and crews, and viewers find them through word of mouth or by chance. The fifth in a series focusing on the largely undocumented world of internet TV, this book covers 573 children's series created for viewers 3 to 14. The genre includes a broad range of cartoons, CGI, live-action comedies and puppetry. Alphabetical entries provide websites, dates, casts, credits, episode lists and storylines.
A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. Beyond the Movie Theater excavates the history of non-theatrical cinema before 1920, exploring where and how moving pictures of the 1910s were used in ways distinct from and often alternative to typical theatrical cinema. Unlike commercial cinema, non-theatrical cinema was multi-purpose in its uses and multi-sited in where it could be shown, targeted at particular audiences and, in some manner, sponsored. Relying on contemporary print sources and ephemera of the era to articulate how non-theatrical cinema was practiced and understood in the US during the 1910s, historian Gregory A. Waller charts a heterogeneous, fragmentary, and rich field that cannot be explained in terms of a master narrative concerning origin or institutionalization, progress or decline. Uncovering how and where films were put to use beyond the movie theater, this book complicates and expands our understanding of the history of American cinema, underscoring the myriad roles and everyday presence of moving pictures during the early twentieth century.