Popples Panic at the Library
13th September 1986Cookin Up a Storm
20th September 1986Molars And Biscuspids, And Popples
27th September 1986Treasure Of Popple Beach
4th October 1986Popping at the Car Wash
11th October 1986Springtime's A Poppin
18th October 1986Popples Play Pee Wee Golf
25th October 1986Popples Flood The Fluff-N-Fold
1st November 1986Clean Sweep Of Things
8th November 1986Poppin' Wheelies
15th November 1986Bonnie's Popple Part
22nd November 1986Aisles Of Trouble
29th November 1986Popples Paint Party
6th December 1986Pop-Paring For Bed
13th December 1986Poppolympics
20th December 1986Sports Shop Pop
27th December 1986Taking Out The Trash
3rd January 1987A Hair-Raising Experience
10th January 1987Pop Goes The Radio
17th January 1987Poppin' Pillow Talk
24th January 1987Popples' Alley
4th July 1987Where The Pop Flies
31st January 1987Backyard Adventure
21st February 1987Poppin At The Drive-In
28th February 1987Hurray For Hollywood
7th February 1987Backyard Bigtop
14th February 1987Moving Day
14th March 1987Popple Post Office
18th April 1987Poppin' Around The Block
7th March 1987The Popple Fashion Parade
11th July 1987Tree House Capers
21st March 1987Museum Peace
4th April 1987Funhouse Folly
25th April 1987The Jellybean Jamboree
6th June 1987Cuckoo Choo Choo
4th July 1987The College Of Popple Knowledge
16th May 1987No Bizness Like Popple Bizness
28th March 1987Barn Hoopla
30th May 1987Lemonade Stand-Off
11th April 1987Rock Around The Popples
9th May 1987Fixer-Upper Popples
2nd May 1987The Repair Shop
20th June 1987Private Eye Popples
13th June 1987Poppin' at the Zoo
18th July 1987Popple Cheer
23rd May 1987Decatha-Pop-A-Lon Popples
27th June 1987Popples was a Saturday morning cartoon, based on the Popples toys, that aired in the United States from 1986 to 1987. The pilot was a live-action Shelley Duvall special, in which they were puppets and marionettes; after this was well-received, it was decided to make a cartoon series with the same characters. The cartoon was produced by DIC Entertainment and LBS Communications in association with The Maltese Companies. Like the toys they're based on, the Popples resemble colorful teddy bears or rabbits with long, pompom-tipped tails, and they have pouches on their backs that can be everted so they resemble fuzzy balls. The name "Popple" is a reference to the popping sound they make when unfolding themselves from such a ball, or pulling objects from their pouches. In the cartoon Popples commonly pull large items from their pouches that couldn't possibly fit inside, which come from hammerspace; in "Popples Alley", one of the Popples' human friends looks inside one of their pouches and sees numerous objects floating in a void. Nine of the Popples live with a human brother and sister, Billy and Bonnie Wagner. Billy and Bonnie think they are the only kids who have Popples until a neighbor family moves in and they have their own Popples — the Rock Stars, Pufflings, and Babies. The Popples tend to come around and mess up whatever the kids are trying to do; e.g., if the kids are trying to brush their teeth, the Popples end up spilling water, toothpaste and soap all over the bathroom. If the kids are trying to clean their rooms, the Popples come along, mess up the room even worse and then help them get everything back to normal just in the nick of time. The plot revolved around the children's efforts to hide the existence of the Popples from the adults around them.
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