⭐ ImagiNation - The Golden Age of Toronto Kids' TV | Retro Ontario Archive ⭐
Sep 30, 2025•Channel
AI Analysis
Data from YouTube Data API v3•Updated Just now
Video Overview
Video Details
Published8 months ago
Duration1:08
Video IDaEl4GCBUqyg
Languageen
CategoryEducation
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views1.1K
Likes85
Comments15
Engagement Rate8.84%
Likes per 100 views7.52
Comments per 1K views13.26
Video Tags
Description
The incredible true story of how a motley crew of Toronto folk quietly revolutionized the medium of children’s television with minimal budgets and maximum imagination.
AVAILABLE OCTOBER 14!
https://imagination.retrontario.com/
A nostalgic look back at fifty years of children's television from the beloved — Polka Dot Door, Mr. Dressup, Today’s Special — to the bizarre — Kiddo the Clown, Coming Up Rosie, Maniac Mansion.
From the time CBC sputtered onto screens in 1952, children’s television has been at the centre of Canada’s cultural output. The country’s first television host was an ornery puppet named Chichimus, who set the stage for future Toronto-based puppeteers, producers, directors, and actors to make children’s television their own. With the studios of CBC, TVOntario, CFTO, and eventually YTV all located in Toronto, the city’s televisual output was staggering and fed by the imagination and hard work of the local talent.
Featuring over one hundred children’s programs broadcast between 1950 and 2000, ImagiNation is a memory-filled trip for anyone who spent their weekdays after school or Saturday mornings staring at the idiot box. The story of each Toronto-produced series is covered — from inception through production to broadcast — along with the tales of local stations and the people who made it all happen.
Retrontario’s primary mission is the preservation, research and exhibition of rare videotape recordings (1970s to 1990s) recorded off of any and all Ontario (and surrounding area) TV channels; footage which would likely be lost if not sought out and preserved digitally. We also hope to create an ongoing oral history of this content through comments left below the videos. Please add to this evolving history, if you know more information pertaining to the clips, fondly remember them or have a modern thought all comments are welcome! For more information on how to help in our mission please visit us at: http://www.retrontario.com