Lavender Lollipops! It's Daizy's best adventure. Join Wubbzy's best friend Daizy in 6 spunky and fun-filled episodes…plus one bonus episode for extra fairy tale fun!
Watch Daizy as she moves in next door to Wubbzy, grows her own flower-shaped house from a seed, opens a pet salon, battles leaf-blower windstorms, and becomes Wubbzys sidekick flower power. Share in the kooky adventures of Wuzzleburg as Daizy, Wubbzy and friends learn the positive values of honesty, tolerance, fairness and co-operation.
Special Features
- Bonus episode: Once Upon a Wubbzy
- Coloring & Activity Sheets (DVD-Rom)
- Music Video
Awards for the Wow Wow Wubbzy series
- Annie Awards 2007 – Nominated for Best Animated Television Production
- Daytime Emmy Awards 2008 – Won Individual Achievement in Animation
Review for the TV series
"Any parent will tell you that finding appropriate children’s programming can be a challenge. Some shows (like “SpongeBob SquarePants”) are visually stimulating but offer no educational value. Others (like the Baby Einstein series) have plenty of educational elements but really don’t have much meat to them. Still others (like “Yo Gabba Gabba”) are just too darn weird to swallow.
One of the cute and clever shows that my kids have found is “Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!” It’s the story of a gerbil-type creature (which, like the title character from the cartoon “Chowder,” is of a species not precisely identified) who pals around with his friends in the town of Wuzzleburg. Widget is a pink rabbit who is always fixing things. Walden is a brainy creature who has a wide knowledge of science and art.
Each episode (of which two make an installment on television) features Wubbzy or his friends getting into some sort of scrape. They work together to solve their problems and differences, often learning a lesson by the end…Like many preschool shows, “Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!” presents problem solving in a very safe and nice way. The conflicts are very understandable to young children, and the characters are never in any real danger. Usually the friends are able to resolve their differences and solve their problems easily and with a lesson. However, the lessons aren’t rammed down the kids throats but are rather presented logically within the show.I’ve enjoyed “Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!” on television, and my kids have warmed up to it. 7mpictures.com