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Zoom show number 229, WGBH-TV, Boston. Presentation of this program is made possible by a grant from General Foods Corporation, by public television stations, and by grants from the Ford Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Come on and zoom, zoom, zoom, I'll zoom. You gotta zoom, zoom, zoom, I'll zoom. Everybody's doing it, everybody's doing it Everybody's having a ball, yeah So we'll just zoom, zoom, zoom-a-zoom Come on and zoom-a-zoom-a-zoom-a-zoom
I'm Edith I'm Luis I'm Laurie My name's Danny I'm Bernadette I'm Leah My name's Neil Who are you? What do you do? How are you? Let's hear from you We need you We're gonna zoom, zoom, zoom-a-zoom Come on and zoom-a-zomba-zomba-zomb Come on, give it a try We're gonna show you just hören We're gonna teach you that fly H Sith試AM Come on, Gemini Come on, Gemini
Come on and zoom, come on and zoom, zoom. It's time to roll out the barrel. Here's a barrel syncing by Leonard Robin of Staten Island, New York. Close your eyes and throw a ball up in the air and try to catch it. Keep your eyes closed. Can anyone do it three times in a row? And to find out what's inside today! One, two... You're not throwing it high enough! One more. You're out! You're out! You were talking about the girls! You have to wake up and do it! Let's say, um... One, two, three. I didn't throw it high enough.
I know. No, don't throw it too high. Don't throw it too high. Three. One more. Go, Lori. It's high, Liliana. Girls, girls. I know, man. I did it. I did it. Now what did he do? Yeah, yeah, he's bringing it all the way up. Uh-huh. About an inch away. About an inch. more than you did that's oh you did it that's kind of hard you know i know because you don't know not too hard you did not too slow i know it's funny because you don't know where it's going to land i know not too long i know it seems like it's easy but when it's not really Let's try one small, one small. Don't throw it so high. Gee, you're waiting for me already.
Don't throw it too high. Throw it straight up and keep your hands. Open your eyes. It's hard. One, two. He's throwing it high. Look at that. Here's a doodle sent in by Geraldine Swazewski of Evanston, Illinois. Can you guess what it is? What is it? It's a soda machine's view of a dime. During the winter, it is very quiet here, in our Indian pueblo.
There isn't any tourists around here now, only the Indians that live in the village. I'm Laverne Concha. I'm a Taos Pueblo Indian. We have no running water in our own house, so I have to get the water from the Taos River that runs through the village. This is our oven. It's made of the same material that our houses are made of. Mud and straw and water. After we lit the fire, we have to let it set for an hour before we can bake. My mother bakes in special Indian bread that we sell to the tourists in the summer.
The bread is made with salt, grease, yeast, warm water and a little bit of sugar and a It's a lot of flour. Now, go get the tomorrow we have. It takes about 45 minutes. Don't burn yourself. My mother baked 60 loaves a day in the summer. Just get it here.
Two... One blue... Blue... My mother taught me to bead on a loom that she made herself. A lot of our women in our pueblo make beads and sell them at the craft shop. It's an easy loom to make. She took an old ski, put two blocks of wood on each end, And put some nails on the end of the ski, then I just want some string around the nails At the end they'll have to be the same This is my grandpa little Joe
He lives up in the mountains. Sometimes he comes down to the pueblo to visit us. My grandfather was born in the pueblo, and I was too. Grandpa is speaking to us in Tewa, which is our language in our Pueblo. He is telling us a story when he was about my age. He went with his grandfather and two uncles to Oklahoma. He was visiting some Indians, and when they got there, they had a feast.
. . I really like wintertime in the Pueblo, everything is quiet and covered with snow. Here's a doodle sent in by Gene Freudenberg of College Point, New York. Can you guess what it is? What is it?
It's a camel passing a pyramid. Lots of kids wrote in and asked what rehearsals were like. Recently, we learned a song with five different languages in it. Here we are rehearsing with Newt Whalen, and next week we'll do the production. I'm sure you can. Here we go. One, two, three, four. Beautiful. Louise, you teach us the Spanish version. What are the words? Todo. Todo. All. El mundo. El mundo. The world. Ama. Ama. Loves. Sábado. Sábado. Saturday. Noche. Noche. Night. Okay, let's say it.
All the words together. Todo el mundo. Ama. Sábado. Okay, why don't we do that as a cha-cha let's try it as a I'm a samba roboche You forgot the U at the end. Oh. Well, whatever you feel like doing. Let's do the cha-cha one second. Here we go. One, two, three, four. I'm a samba roboche I'm a samba roboche Yeah, beautiful. I love it. Okay. Chinese. Chinese. Word, syllable by syllable.
I think, Danny, when you're playing this, you know, if you hit the triangle just every once in a while, Not every other beat, but kind of if you're going along. You know, just kind of ping it every once in a while. Let's have just a few sounds before we begin to get us into it. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. Two, three, four.
Ready, two, three, sing. Warm and sing, Washington, you'll wash up. beautiful how about one more with the american finish off with the american Here we go. Ready? And one, two, three, four. Everybody's on a Saturday night. Everybody's on a Saturday night. Everybody, everybody, everybody, everybody, everybody, everybody's on a Saturday night. Oh, that was good.
Here's a doodle sent in by Mala Stromae of Fairbanks, Alaska. Can you guess what it is? What is it? It's a giraffe that did a somersault and got his head stuck in the ground. Doo-wa-zoom-doo, doo-wa-zoom-doo, doo-wa-zoom-doo. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. I'll see you next time.
If you want to learn how, write Zoom. Who? Why Zoom? C-double-O-M-Box-street-five-O-Boston-Best-O-2-1-3-4-7-to-Zoom. And we'll send you a Zoom card with the directions. Here's a poem sent in by Jennifer Hart of Waltham, Massachusetts. it's the sky does anyone live in the sky the sky that is so high that's blue and white and black at night does anyone live in the sky that's good here's a poem sent in by julie gottlieb of los angeles california what makes the wind blow the wind howls the wind growls the wind goes It blows hard. It blows soft. It blows harsh. It blows cold.
It blows, it blows, it blows. That's what it is sometimes in your bedroom, you get the window and the window. Here's a poem sent in by Sharon Spiro of Setterrier, Washington. I am a tree. I am a tree. Oh, it's so fun out all day growing in the sun. And when winter comes, I lose all my leaves. People picked them up to make winter wreaths. Oh, it's so fun being a tree blowing in the wind. Whee! That's huge! Here's a poem sent in by Barbara Doherty of Mount Vernon, Illinois. Rain. When the sun seems to run out without any notice and the clouds turn inside out, the rain is near. Quiet finds its way into your small part of the world with rain at its side. The sky comes alive with emotion Excited, sad, laughing and crying Not knowing what to do
Rain starts falling with a soft, happy sound Then at last a roar builds in itself And at last it cools The happiness and sunshine come again As if they have always been there And quiet makes its way into the earth once more That gives a lot of feelings That gives a lot of feelings Here's a doodle sent in by Libby Lyons of Portland, Indiana. Can you guess what it is? What is it? It's a keyhole view of a zebra going uphill. Huub-dulby dub-dulby dub-dulby dub-dulby, rabbi dubby dubby dub-dulby... Huub-dulby dubby dubby b-uub huub-dulby duby dub-dulby dub-dulby
ruby dubby dubscribe dub-dulby dup-dulby dubs Huub-dulby duff duff dup-dulby dubs dubs dubs Hey stranger, what's your name? beer dubs dubs dubs dubs houb, ruub-oi dubs dubs dubs dubs I'm getting out of here. Hi, you must be new in this town. Yikes, are you a nutty? Hello, what's your name? That's a nice name. I'm Lori. Why should I be? I'm a taboo. Um, can you cash this ten dollar check for me?
Oh, sure. Thanks. You're welcome. Let's see. I can't read this, can you? I need glasses. Oh, thanks. Thanks. Thanks. The best of us, our best of us. Our best of us, our best of us, our best of us, our best of us. Our best of us, our best of us, our best of us, our best of us, our best of us. We're here. That's the one. Let's get her. Bring her down to the station. We're also. No, no, no. But she wasn't. We're just singing officer, right? Let's take you down to station too. What are these crappy people? Rubied Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby Dubby
I'll be right back. This week there's锅. And now back to Zoom. Abablo, abablo, abablo
Ab bloop Zoom will resume after this important message. Although, for lunch shave. Well, somehow what you wish? Well, like bind elsewhere. You do not know where business are, and if you want to know how you should come, then you do not know where business are. You got an idea sitting on the shelf? Send it to Zoom! Send it to Zoom! A promo play that you wrote yourself?
Send it to Zoom! Send it to Zoom! A story or a riddle that no one can get? Or something for the bell that's a sure success Well, you write it all down with your name and address Cause you've still got a sentence of Zoom Who? Why Zoom, C-O-O-M, Box 3-5-O, Boston, Max, 0-2-1-3-4, sentence of Zoom We're gonna Zoom, Zoom, Zoom-a-Zoom Come on and Zoom-a-Zoom-a-Zoom-a-Zoom Come on, give it a try We're going to show you just fine We're going to teach you to fly high Come on and zoom, come on and zoom, zoom Come on and zoom, come on and zoom, zoom Come on and zoom, come on and zoom, zoom Come on and zoom, come on and zoom, zoom Presentation of this program was made possible in part by a grant from General Foods Corporation and by public television stations.
Series
ZOOM, Series I
Episode Number
229
Producing Organization
WGBH Educational Foundation
Contributing Organization
WGBH (Boston, Massachusetts)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip/15-71ngfff7
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Description
Series Description
"ZOOM is a children's show comprised of weekly half-hour episodes which showed what youngsters do and think. Seven ZOOMers hosted each episdoe, and the cast changed over run of series. ZOOM premiered locally as ""Summer-Do"" in 1970, and premiered nationally in January 1972. ZOOMers played games, told jokes, riddles (called Fannee Doolees) and stories and did crafts projects...and invited ideas from their audience. The result was an avalanche of ZOOMmail - in the first season, over 200,000 letters. Additionally, the Ubbi Dubbi language was invented by ZOOM."
Description
#229
Genres
Children’s
Media type
Moving Image
Duration
00:29:21
Embed Code
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Credits
Producing Organization: WGBH Educational Foundation
Production Unit: Media Library and Archives
AAPB Contributor Holdings
WGBH
Identifier: 127051 (WGBH Barcode)
Format: U-matic
Generation: Copy: Access
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Citations
Chicago: “ZOOM, Series I; 229,” WGBH, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed December 26, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-15-71ngfff7.
MLA: “ZOOM, Series I; 229.” WGBH, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. December 26, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-15-71ngfff7>.
APA: ZOOM, Series I; 229. Boston, MA: WGBH, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-15-71ngfff7