A list of puns related to "More Songs From Pooh Corner"
Hi /r/BookCollecting, I have a friend who has a first edition of A House on Pooh Corner with its original dust jacket. It has some minor water damage on the hard cover and wear/discoloration of the dust jacket. My friend is not having much luck finding someone who can appraise the book. Are there any here knowledgeable in collectible book appraisal who I could put in contact with the book's owner?
https://i.imgur.com/Ioh3YHi.jpg
When I was a kid I owned a ton of Winnie the Pooh VHS tapes and I distinctly remember one of the tapes had an end credits sequence with a song that is STILL stuck in my head. The animation showed ink drawings of Pooh and Piglet walking around in the snow and the song had lyrics that said something about βshorter days and longer nightsβ. It was a male singer and the instrumentals were sort of soft acoustic, maybe guitar. Iβve spent my night going through every damn Winnie the Pooh VHS tape that is listed on the Wikipedia page and I canβt find a single fit. The credits to the Tigger movie are sort of similar and the song sounds a bit similar but thatβs definitely not what Iβm thinking of. I am 100% sure that it had the exact words βshorter days and longer nightsβ, Iβm 100% sure it was a Winnie the Pooh tape, and Iβm 100% sure I am going to go insane if I canβt find the name of the song. Please help.
I don't know if I'm going crazy or what but I can't seem to find this song I remember from Winnie the Pooh. I thought it was the intro to the New Adventures of WtP but that's not right. I just remember it was this kinda soft rock song with a bit of guitar in it. And I'm pretty sure one of the Lyrics was " The many adventures of, Winnie the Pooh" followed by this guitar lick. And I'm pretty sure it's not from the original show of the same name as those lyrics. The songs from the original show seem a lot slower paced. Am I crazy or does anyone else know the song I'm talking about? Thanks
Pooh fans, I have a few questions, I'd gladly take any answer.
β’ Which one should I read? β’ Should I do both? β’ Can I read House at Pooh Corner without the first book?
Thanks!
Wow I really really really really hate China soooo much!!
Namesake: Return to Pooh Corner by Kenny Loggins https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_iV4mol-Otw
Cry: BZZZ!
User: Penter Tonics. A stupid child. His backstory is he likes cheese and his parents couldn't afford his cheese habit. They kicked him out and he is now the Great Cheese Heister.
Appearance: It takes the appearance of a beehive with a yellow spirit in it that has the same shape as Echoes ACT1. It hovers like the spirit is bees. It has square fingers like Master Hand and is hidden by the hive. It looka like it posesses the hive, but the hive is actually part of the Stand. Behind its hive mask, his eyes are visible and are similar to a human's, with white outsides abd dark pupils.
Stats:
Long-Distance Operation/Remote-Controlled
Speed: B
Power: D
Precision: C
Potential: D
Range: A
Durability: D*
Abilities:
Turnstep - Can vanish if moving past a bigger object. If it or its user moves past an object with an opposite viewpoint, it can vanish and appear behind another area like that. If he passes behind a pillar, he can Turnstep and appear behind a different pillar.
Thought I'd ask here first in case anyone has a copy I haven't seen listed ready.
I'm looking for early or first edition copies of AA Milne's Winnie the Pooh stories. It doesn't have to be in perfect condition, in fact the more loved the better, but all the ones I've seen online have been going for several thousand pounds, more than I ever thought was possible for a book!
I'm looking for well loved, used and not 'collected' copies for a birthday present, and wondered if any of you might have copies languishing somewhere.
Please get in touch if you do! Thank you.
A meatier meteor meets Eeyore the meat-eater.
"Welcome to Pooh Corner" is a live-action/puppet television series that aired on Disney Channel, featuring the characters from the Winnie the Pooh universe portrayed by actors in human-sized puppet suits, except Roo, who was originally a traditional puppet. The animatronic costumes used for the characters were created by Alchemy II, Inc., headed by Ken Forsse who later created Teddy Ruxpin. The show was first aired on April 18, 1983, the day The Disney Channel was launched.[1] Its timeslot for its early run was at 8:30 a.m. Eastern/Pacific Time, making it the third program of The Disney Channel's 16 (later 18) hour programming day. Reruns of the show aired on The Disney Channel until at least January 1997.
Hal Smith, Will Ryan, and Laurie Main were the only three actors from the original four Pooh shorts to reprise their roles here (Smith, who had voiced Owl ever since the beginning of Disney's Winnie the Pooh franchise, had recently replaced Sterling Holloway as the voice of Pooh; Ryan had provided Rabbit's voice in the 1983 short Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore, replacing Junius Matthews; and Main was the narrator for Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore, replacing Sebastian Cabot). The show's title derives from the second Winnie the Pooh storybook, The House at Pooh Corner.
This series was the only incarnation in the history of Disney's incarnations of Winnie the Pooh in which we could actually see the narrator aside from only hearing his voice. He would present each episode. The show would start off with him greeting the viewers "Welcome to Pooh Corner" and then relate what he was talking about to an event that occurred in the Hundred Acre Wood, the home of the Pooh characters, and then he would proceed to read from a book entitled Welcome to Pooh Corner. He would then narrate the episode acted out by the characters. The action was filmed before a blue screen, rather than using traditional sets (the same technique was used for Dumbo's Circus, another live-action/puppet series that ran on The Disney Channel).
Since the show was designed for The Disney Channel before it began airing commercials, there were no breaks for commercials. As a result, the show lasted a full thirty minutes. The main story ran about twenty minutes followed by two shorter segments. The first segment was a sing-along music video featuring one of nine songs, used over and over throughout the show's run. These songs were written by the Academy Award winning Sherman Brothers
... keep reading on reddit β‘π
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