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The Sunny Side Up Show

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Sprout morning programming block
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Sunny Side Up
Logo from 2007 to 2009
NetworkPBS Kids Sprout
Sprout (9:00 am–12:00 pm)
LaunchedSeptember 26, 2007; 18 years ago (2007-09-26)
ClosedAugust 11, 2017; 8 years ago (2017-08-11)
Country of originUnited States
Formerly known as
  • The Birthday Show
  • The Sunny Side Up Show
Format480i (SDTV) (2007–2013) (seasons 1-6)
1080i (HDTV) (2013–2017) (seasons 7-10)
Running time3 hours
Original languageEnglish

Sunny Side Up (previously known asThe Sunny Side Up Show) is a defuncttelevision programming block which premiered onSprout on September 26, 2007[1][2] and ended on August 11, 2017. Each week, a new theme was introduced,[3] including food,Halloween, animals,construction,fall, opposites, and birthdays.Sunny Side Up aired at 9:00 a.m. Eastern/8:00 a.m. Central until 12:00 p.m. Eastern/11:00 a.m. Central each weekday morning. The hosts ofSunny Side Up played games, sang songs, told stories, and showed birthday cards or artwork.

Sunny Side Up was Sprout's morning program. It was produced live every weekday, and hosted by a human host along with Chica, a chicken puppet who later gother own show. Before moving to a "city apartment" set, the show took place on a set dubbedThe Sunshine Barn and decorated with farm-themed objects. Each host was on the show for one week with each week's host being announced late in the previous week. The host introduced programs, read birthdays, led activities related to the week's theme, and read messages sent in by individual "Sproutlet" viewers through the Sprout website. There were daily activities such as "The Good Egg Awards" (renamed "The Kindness Kid Awards") celebrating viewers' accomplishments, and "Sproutlet Stories" allowed "Sproutlets" to tell different stories with different plots, characters, and settings.

The theme tune from 2007 to 2013 wasBrand New Day. From 2013 to 2015 it instead wasChica's Here.

Some episodes of the show were supposedly archived byIMDb and on-demand services since Sprout rebranded, and a few can be found onYouTube.

Origins and history

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Andrew Beecham, Sprout's senior vice president of programming, knew he wanted a live show, so executives agreed that a live show with guest appearances from Sprout characters, viewer submissions, and weekly themes would be perfect for Sprout.[4] The block first premiered on September 26, 2007, two years exact after the Sprout channel launched with Kelly Vrooman and Kevin Yamada alongside Chica the puppet chicken as the first hosts, Sean Roach joined the founding trio of presenters the following year.

On September 25, 2010, to celebrate the launch of the Sprout original seriesNoodle and Doodle, the block expanded to include Saturday and Sunday weekend morning broadcasts instead of just taking the weekend off and handing over toThe Let’s Go Show, another Sprout programming block at the time. It was around the time that the set was remodeled, now featuring a green flower-shaped clock and a red and blue crate.

For several years,The Sunny Side Up Show was taped at theComcast Center inPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania before moving to30 Rockefeller Plaza inNew York City in 2014, as Sprout was acquired byNBCUniversal the previous year, in a studio not too far fromThe Roots' wardrobe rack. Since the move to New York, Sprout started snagging celebrity guest stars to appear on the program after they appeared onThe Today Show.[5]

Segments

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2007–2015

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The block starts with the host and Chica greeting the viewers and explaining the date/weather and the day's theme.

The next segment involves birthday cards and wishes. Mr. Mailman, a mailman puppet, would send the cards to the "Sunshine Barn".

The next segment involves a different song or dance each day.

The next segment involves the hosts making a craft or cooking a recipe. Based on the app "Dress Chica", during a show that comes on at 10:00 a.m., the hosts would demonstrate the viewers’ idea of Chica's disguise. Dress Chica was created since executives wanted a game and segment that would help kids get dressed. A Dress Chica app was released by New Wave Entertainment in 2009, alongside "Sprout Player" and "Dress Like Chica."

In the Good Egg Awards, formerly part of the segment "Farm Talk," the hosts would read different awards given to viewers online.

Next, the hosts would do a dance titled the Barnyard Boogie. In 2013, the segment was replaced with a new segment titled Sproutlet Stories, where viewers online could make up three different stories: a pirate adventure, a royal adventure, and a space adventure.

In 2014, a new penultimate segment was added, titled Chica's Choice, where a five-inch spinning wheel would be spun to direct everyone to do something "fun". The next segment involves sharing the remainder birthday cards and wishes.

From 2010 to 2017, the hosts would host the Sproutlet News Report, where viewers could share what they did and how they showed care for each other, with amazing voicemails. The hosts would close the block by telling viewers to stay tuned for the Sprout Sharing Show and The Good Night Show.

2015–2017

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In September 2015, as part of Sprout's new design, the setting was changed to a city apartment.

The birthday cards and wishes were still going, as well as crafts. Temporarily, the Dress Chica, Chica's Choice, Sproutlet Stories and Sproutlet News Report were removed from the block. In 2017, Chica was removed to make way for the Sprout House block.

Cast

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Hosts

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  • Carly Ciarrocchi hosted the show from June 4, 2012, replacing Liz, to August 11, 2017, when she became the host ofSprout House (the show's spiritual successor).
  • Tim Kubart hosted the show from December 30, 2013, replacing Sean and was one of the winners of the Host Hunt contest, up to August 11, 2017. Kubart is also a kindie artist and plays the tambourine forPostmodern Jukebox.
  • Chica, a chicken puppet who co-hostedSunny Side Up with Emily, Carly, Tim, and Kaitlin. Before moving to a city apartment, she lived in the "Sunshine Barn". She had a voice which resembled asqueaky toy. Her character had been part of the show from 2007 to 2017. She also made occasional appearances on bothThe Sprout Sharing Show and its successorSprout Control Room. Executives wanted the puppet co-host to be a chicken, though Beecham thought preschoolers couldn't connect well with chickens, and worked with a designer to make sure the puppet was cute enough. One of the reasons for Chica's squeaking was because her puppeteers ("Chicateers") were all associate producers who would help out in the control room on the third of a three-week cycle. Over the years, Chica has been played by the likes of Forrest Harding, Brendan Gawel (who also played Curtis E. Owl onThe Sprout Sharing Show), Edward Pokropski, Jenn Santee, Jackie Payton, Scott McClennen, Kimberly Diaz, and Matt Fornwald.
  • Kevin Yamada hosted The Show from September 26, 2007, having previously hostedThe Birthday Show, to December 25, 2009, announcing he was moving to the big city, and was replaced by Dennisha. Yamada also played Ricky Rabbit onThe Sprout Sharing Show.
  • Liz Filios hosted the show from November 1, 2010 to June 4, 2012, when she was replaced by Carly.
  • Sean Roach hosted the show from early 2008 to December 13, 2013, focusing more on his arts. Roach also hostedNoodle and Doodle, Sprout's first full-length original series.
  • One of the first two hosts (alongside Kevin),Kelly Vrooman hosted the show from September 26, 2007 to December 20, 2013, hosting the Kindest Kid special on the next two days. Vrooman also played Patty Pig onThe Sprout Sharing Show and Kelly onThe Chica Show.
  • Dennisha Pratt hosted the show from December 31, 2009, replacing Kevin, to June 13, 2014, when she and her family moved away. She was replaced by Emily.
  • Kaitlin Becker hosted the show from January 6, 2014, replacing Kelly and was one of the winners of the Host Hunt contest, up to May 19, 2017. Becker also plays Meekah in theBlippi franchise.
  • Emily Borromeo hosted the show from May 23, 2014, replacing Dennisha, to June 29, 2017.


Recurring characters

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  • Mr. Mailman was a cartoon character who used to appear onThe Birthday Show and onThe Sunny Side Up Show during Birthdays. He also appeared in a short-form series titledThe New Adventures of Mr. Mailman.
  • Rico was Chica's cousin who made occasional appearances.
  • Chica's Nana made occasional appearances, usually alongside Rico.

Guest stars

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The following is a list of television programs from which guest stars originated, and the characters from those programs which appeared on Sunny Side Up:

References

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  1. ^Gibbons, Kent (September 10, 2007)."Growth Spurt for Two-Year-Old Sprout".MultiChannel News. Archived fromthe original on September 15, 2007. RetrievedAugust 12, 2017.
  2. ^Lynch, Jason (March 22, 2016)."In Brand Refresh, Children's TV Network Drops Barney and Thomas for Original Shows".AdWeek. RetrievedAugust 12, 2017.
  3. ^"Sunny Side Up Show Web Page".Sprout Online. Archived fromthe original on March 26, 2011. RetrievedAugust 12, 2017.
  4. ^Capriotti, Diana (May 2, 2010)."Inside the Sunshine Barn: A Behind the Scenes Look at The Sunny Side Up Show".Sprout for Parents. Archived fromthe original on May 2, 2010. RetrievedApril 21, 2022.
  5. ^Steinberg, Brian (October 20, 2014)."Live, From New York: Sprout's Morning Show For Kids Wants Celebrities In Mix".Yahoo Sports. RetrievedApril 21, 2022.
  6. ^abc"Thursday, August 7th, 2008".Cynopsis.
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