Road Rovers is an action adventure / comedy cartoon. written and produced by Tom Ruegger, that premiered on Kids WB on September 2, 1996. It lasted only one season and ended on February 22, 1997. Re-runs of the show continued for a short time on Kids WB and then on Cartoon Network until 1999. Much of the humor contained in the show was derived from popular culture of the mid 1990s.
The show follows the adventures of the Road Rovers, a team of five super-powered crime fighting anthropomorphic dogs, known as "cano-sapiens". The leader of the rovers is Hunter, a golden retriever mix from the United States. The Rovers' boss is a scientist known as "The Master" who oversees their operations and supplies them with equipment from their subterranean headquarters.
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NPR Topics: Arts & Entertainment'Boss' Fans Share Tips On Rockin' A Political Party Thu, 28 Aug 2008 00:01:00 -0400
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In his latest movie, Traitor, Don Cheadle plays a CIA operative who goes undercover to work with a terrorist group — but then becomes a suspected terrorist himself.
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“The New Electric Ballroom” affirms Enda Walsh’s growing reputation as a contender to take his place in the long, distinguished line of great Irish playwrights.
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In the past the Toronto International Film Festival helped to set up Hollywood’s awards season. This year it may be more about solving the industry’s problems.
Arts & CultureUnder SuspicionDavid Denby Mon, 25 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000
Jiří Menzel’s “I Served the King of England” is a Czech national epic served up with champagne and truffles. This graceful and leisurely movie, adapted from a 1974 novel by the masterly Bohumil Hrabal, covers an enormous time span, starting in the nineteen-thirties, then passing through the . . .
Three’s CompanyHilton Als Mon, 25 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000
In 1969, Larry Neal, a black writer, published an essay titled “Any Day Now: Black Art and Black Liberation.” In it, Neal tried to clarify the goals of the Black Arts Movement, an ideological aesthetic that was first laid out by the poet and activist Amiri Baraka, after Malcolm X’s . . .
The Theatre Mon, 25 Aug 2008 04:00:00 -0000
BOYS IN TIGHTS “Billy Elliot,” the long-awaited musical adaptation of the film about an unlikely aspiring young ballet dancer, which is a hit in London’s West End, has music by Elton John and a book and lyrics by Lee Hall. Stephen Daldry directs, at the Imperial (previews begin Oct . . .
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