Big Meaty Claws
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Now 'll never see episodes I forgot.
Including the one that picture is from.
You're in luck ... we have a big list of episodes that are available online. Including "Have You Seen This Snail?"Big Meaty Claws said:
Now 'll never see episodes I forgot.
Including the one that picture is from.
Awesome! Thanks a lot!DadMom AngryPants said:You're in luck ... we have a big list of episodes that are available online. Including "Have You Seen This Snail?"
Thanks, but I can find most episodes online. Also, I have a couple of DVD's with older episodes (1999-2006)SpongeBobfan1987 said:You could check Walmart, Best Buy, and Toys "R" Us. They usually carry a good selection of SpongeBob DVD's. Why rent when you can own?
...And if you're interested in renting SpongeBob SquarePants DVD's the old-fashioned way, check your area for some video rental places (Family Video, which happens to be concentrated in the Midwestern United States is a great example) using the internet or the yellow pages in your phone book.
They also released an all-season set of Star Trek: The Next Generation, but yes, that would be cool if they would release if they would release an all-season set of SpongeBob SquarePants. I also think it would be cool if they syndicated SpongeBob SquarePants reruns for over-the-air broadcast in English (SpongeBob SquarePants can only be found on Tr3s in Spanish) here in the United States on The CW (if The CW adds a kids' subchannel called "CW Kids" that is 50% owned by Nickelodeon/Viacom and 50% owned by Cartoon Network/Time Warner, and eliminating the need for the Vortexx block on Saturday morning), making the cartoon more accessible to non-cable viewers in the United States, and making the United States the second country in North America, after Mexico, to air SpongeBob SquarePants on both cable TV and over-the-air antenna TV. SpongeBob SquarePants (Bob Esponja) airs on Nickelodeon (cable TV) and Canal 5 (over-the-air antenna TV) in Mexico, with the closest Canal 5 affiliates to the Mexican border being XETV-DT 6-2 Tijuana, BN/San Diego, CA and XHJUB-TDT 56-1 Ciudad Juarez, CH/El Paso, TX/Las Cruces, NM.E.V.I.L said:If only at the hopefully not soon end of SB, they release an all-season set like with Friends. ;(
you are a llamaSpongeBobfan1987 said:They also released an all-season set of Star Trek: The Next Generation, but yes, that would be cool if they would release if they would release an all-season set of SpongeBob SquarePants. I also think it would be cool if they syndicated SpongeBob SquarePants reruns for over-the-air broadcast in English (SpongeBob SquarePants can only be found on Tr3s in Spanish) here in the United States on The CW (if The CW adds a kids' subchannel called "CW Kids" that is 50% owned by Nickelodeon/Viacom and 50% owned by Cartoon Network/Time Warner, and eliminating the need for the Vortexx block on Saturday morning), making the cartoon more accessible to non-cable viewers in the United States, and making the United States the second country in North America, after Mexico, to air SpongeBob SquarePants on both cable TV and over-the-air antenna TV. SpongeBob SquarePants (Bob Esponja) airs on Nickelodeon (cable TV) and Canal 5 (over-the-air antenna TV) in Mexico, with the closest Canal 5 affiliates to the Mexican border being XETV-DT 6-2 Tijuana, BN/San Diego, CA and XHJUB-TDT 56-1 Ciudad Juarez, CH/El Paso, TX/Las Cruces, NM.
http://www.siliconbeat.com/2013/04/22/bad-news-for-netflix-subscribers-spongebob-is-going-away/If you’re a Netflix subscriber, get ready to have your kids say goodbye to SpongeBob SquarePants and Dora the Explorer.
Amid all the hoopla about Netflix’s earnings today, investors may have missed this tidbit: the company is losing — or, as Netflix puts it, letting expire — another big content deal, this time with Viacom.
The deal, which gives Netflix the rights to stream content from Nickelodeon, BET and MTV, runs out at the end of May. In a letter to shareholders, Netflix executives said that they are trying to license particular shows from Viacom, but haven’t reached any kind of agreement yet.
The company tried to put a positive spin on the development. The Viacom deal is a broad-based one, giving it access to a wide range of shows. But Netflix has been more selective lately, company officials said.
“As we continue to focus on exclusive and curated content, our willingness to pay for non-exclusive, bulk content deals declines,” officials said in the letter.
And while Netflix is losing access to Viacom shows such as SpongeBob, its recent deals with Disney and Dreamworks Animation means that it has other kids’ content to offer.
But try telling that to your kids when they’re clamoring for Dora this summer.