Children's Shows: Celebs Rumors

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You won’t believe how cheap ‘Bluey’s Big Play’ tickets are

“Bluey” is ending after its supersized Season Three finale were unfounded.A show spokesperson “double-confirmed” to the Australian Broadcasting Company that the popular animated series has “no plans to end the show,” according to the “Today” Show. While fans wait to see what adventures are in store for Bluey, Bingo, Chilli, and Bandit in Season Four, they can catch ‘Bluey’s Big Play’ live on tour all year long.Best of all, tickets for the touring roadshow featuring all of your favorite characters are shockingly cheap.At the time of publication, our team found some seats going for as low as $8 before fees on Vivid Seats.Yes, really.While that price is a bit of an outlier, other shows have tickets starting anywhere from $26 to $370 before fees (to be fair, the show with $370 tickets is also an outlier).New York-based “Bluey” fans are in luck, too.On May 25-26, the show rolls into Brooklyn’s Kings Theatre for four (!) matinee shows that start at 11 a.m.
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‘Warped’ Bluey T-shirt removed from online stores for spreading Palestinian ‘hateful agenda’
The Australian reports.The organization said on their website that all profits would go “supporting Palestine”.The BBC, who owns the global commercial rights to Bluey, said the T-shirt was a “counterfeit product”.It was taken down on Monday afternoon.A leading civil rights group fighting anti-Semitism claimed the print “exploited a much-loved Australian children’s icon” for a “warped … cause”.Chair of the Anti-Defamation Commission Dvir Abramovich said the product was “weaponising” kids to spread a “hateful agenda”.“These agents of division are corrupting our children’s hearts and minds and are exploiting a much-loved Australian children’s icon that represents kindness, fun and innocence, for their warped, ugly cause,” he said.It is not the first time Bluey has been dragged into the Israel Palestine conflict.Last week an award-winning Aussie writer penned a strong take on the most popular episode of children’s television program Bluey.In a new poem shared to Instagram, titled Bluey in the genocide, Muslim novelist Omar Sakr referred to ‘Cricket’, an episode in the show’s third season that centers around the Queensland family of cartoon dogs playing the backyard sport.A post shared by Omar Sakr (@omarsakrpoet)According to Sakr, the episode’s central theme of “sportsmanship” wasn’t the only takeaway for some viewers.“We watch the cricket episode, All laconic drawls and summer Games, a dedicated pup learning To play while his father is away,” his poem reads.“His name is Rusty, he’s a star At bat.
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