Classic Nick Online

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The Shows:

Adventures of Black Beauty

Adventures of Pete & Pete

Adventures of the Little Koala

Against the Odds

Are You Afraid of the Dark?

Bananaman

Belle and Sebastian

Clarissa Explains It All

Count Duckula

Curious George

Danger Mouse

David the Gnome

Dennis the Menace

Doctor Snuggles

Don't Just Sit There!

Double Dare

Eureeka's Castle

Fifteen

Finder's Keepers

Flipper

Going Great

Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics

Heathcliff

Hey Dude

Inspector Gadget

Kid's Court

Lance Link: Secret Chimp

Lassie

Littl' Bits

Little Prince

Livewire

Looney Toons

Make the Grade

Mapletown

Maya the Bee

Mister Wizard

Mysterious Cities of Gold

Nick News

Nick Rocks

Noozles

Out of Control

Picture Pages

Pinwheel

Salute Your Shorts

Sharon, Lois & Bram's Elephant Show

Sixteen Cinema

Sk8 TV

Spartakus & the Sun Beneath the Sea

Special Delivery

Star Trek: The Animated Series

Third Eye

Today's Special

Turkey TV

Welcome Freshman

Wild & Crazy Kids

You Can't Do That on Television

Zoo Family

 

Other Nick Gems - Misc. shorts, claymation, etc.

 

Kid's Court

 

Hosted by Paul Provenza
Aired on Nick in the late 1980s.

Kid's Court was a simulated court run by kids. It was hosted by Paul Provenza, and the cases were based on letters they received, and the plaintiff and defendant would represent the different viewpoints of the letters. During the show, they were both allowed to state their case, and answer questions from the audience. At the end, the audience would vote on who was right by clapping their hands, and the "Honorable Judge O'Meter" would measure who got the most noise. After the ruling, host Paul Provenza would ask for suggestions from kids from the audience on what the guilty party's sentence should be. He would get about four suggestions, and then they would vote on which one in the same manner.

Kid's Court always closed with "sound-offs," when kids from the audience would tell what happened that was unfair to them, and then everyone in the audience would yell unfair. Kid's Court was also a part of "Cable in the Classroom", a gimmicky campaign where teachers were encouraged to tape shows and air them for their classes.

 

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