Free Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Shows

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Description Disney’s Mickey Mouse Clubhouse is the first Mickey Mouse series created specifically for preschoolers. The show introduces a whole new generation of preschoolers to Mickey and his lovable band of friends, and is the first TV series starring the “Sensational Six”: Mickey, Minnie, Pluto, Goofy, Daisy, and Donald. In each episode, Mickey and his pals go on a fun, interactive adventure that is guided by a specific curriculum designed to introduce problem-solving and early math skills to preschoolers.

Name Description Time Price 1 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Daisy Bo Peep Daisy Duck has lost Bo Peep's sheep and doesn't know where to find them. Mickey hatches a plan to locate the wandering animals using Toodles.

24:00 $2.99 2 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video A Surprise for Minnie Mickey needs help to make and deliver a Valentine's Day card to Minnie. 24:00 $2.99 3 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Goofy's Bird Goofy finds a lost baby bird and Mickey helps him bring it back home to his mommy in the forest. 24:05 $2.99 4 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Donald's Big Balloon Race Mickey helps Donald fly in the Big Balloon Race so he can win a Big Blue Ribbon. 24:05 $2.99 5 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Mickey Goes Fishing Goofy drops off his kitten, Mr. Pettibone, at the Clubhouse for the day. Pettibone only eats Big Red Gooey fish so Mickey and Pluto head to the pond in search of lunch for kitty. 24:00 $2.99 6 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Donald and the Beanstalk Donald trades his favorite pet, Boo Boo Chicken, for five magic beans.

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When he starts missing the chicken, Mickey and Goofy set off to the Big Barn in the Clouds to fetch the chicken from the Giant. 24:00 $2.99 7 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Minnie's Birthday Mickey and friends need help throwing a surprise party for Minnie. 24:00 $2.99 8 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Donald and the Frog Prince Donald gets turned into a frog when he drinks Professor Von Drake's new potion.

The only way to turn him back into a duck is with a kiss from Princess Daisy, who's locked away in the distant Tallest Tower. 24:00 $2.99 9 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Goofy's Mars When Goofy crash lands on Mars, it's up to Mickey and friends to save him. 24:00 $2.99 10 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Mickey-Go-Seek During a game of Hide-and-Seek, Mickey needs help to find Donald, who's never been found during a game of Hide-and-Seek before. 24:00 $2.99 11 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Daisy's Dance Daisy wants to enter the Talent Show but suddenly comes down with a bad case of stage fright. Mickey and friends help her rehearse and get to the show in time to wow the crowd. 24:09 $2.99 12 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Pluto's Ball Mickey and the gang get Pluto's favorite Super-Duper Bouncy Ball back when it bounces away.

Free Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Shows

24:05 $2.99 13 TV-Y Closed Captioning Video Mickey's Treasure Hunt Mickey finds a note with riddle-like directions to a treasure hidden somewhere in the Clubhouse. 24:01 $2.99 13 Episodes.

The wondrous thing about the wonderful world of Disney is that at the moment it seems easier to see news shows featuring Michael D. Eisner on television than Mickey Mouse. Mickey Mouse's most recent series, 'House of Mouse,' ended in 2003. There is an entire generation of preschool viewers who know the Disney mascot as a decorative fillip on sports bottles, baby bibs and car floor mats.

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For them, the mouse is the thing that directs the cursor on their computers. 'Mickey Mouse Clubhouse,' a new series for preschool children that begins tonight on the Disney Channel, seeks to restore the primacy of the network's most famous character. In a sense, Mickey has been demoted: the cartoon creature, who in his heyday chatted with Leopold Stokowski in 'Fantasia' and was a hero of World War II (the password for Allied troops on D-Day was 'Mickey Mouse'), is now teaching toddlers to count and identify shapes in a Sesame Streetish half-hour program that the network describes as 'learning-focused.' For much of his television career, the mouse was more a master of ceremonies than a comic lead. Now he has been whittled down to a Mister Rogers role — kindly and didactic.

Even on the Disney Channel, the morning programming can be bewildering for adults — a hectic firestorm of pop music and primary colors, from 'The Wiggles,' an Australian group of zany men who sing and dress like the Village People, to the Down Under accents of 'The Koala Brothers.' (Why can't cartoon characters speak properly, like Donald Duck?) Children don't care, but parents and grandparents who were raised on the various incarnations of 'The Mickey Mouse Club' and 'The Wonderful World of Disney' on Sunday nights, finally have someone they know and trust on the set when they wander away to do laundry or pour a stiff drink. Meeska, Mooska, mommy will be right back. Mickey Mouse and friends are together again for the series 'Mickey Mouse Clubhouse,' which has its premiere on Friday on the Disney Channel. Credit Disney Channel It is the first time on television the mouse and his friends Goofy, Minnie, Pluto, Donald Duck and Daisy Duck have been illustrated by computer-generated graphics that plump out the characters, something between 3-D and bas-relief. But Mickey has been returned to the form he had in the 1940's — he has a tail and once again wears the little red pants with big buttons. On 'House of Mouse,' Mickey and his friends were given a modern makeover: Mickey had no tail and wore suits, and Minnie and Daisy's hair bows were shrunk to the size of barrettes.

Daisy even got a ponytail. Now, they all look like their old selves, only more so: Minnie's shoes look as big as baguettes. The stories are simple and aimed at children between the ages of 2 and 5.

Free Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Shows For Kids

In the premiere episode, Daisy has lost the sheep she was watching for Bo Peep (for some reason, ever since 'Toy Story,' Bo Peep has become the careless slacker of the nursery-rhyme crowd). Mickey and his friends enlist the help of viewers to find the missing sheep, which are hiding in almost plain view. Future episodes will include retellings of classic fairy tales, and old characters will pop in, including Professor Von Drake and Mickey's nemesis, Pete the Cat, though without his cigar.

There is music on 'Mickey Mouse Playhouse' but not too much: a new introductory theme song that spells out the letters of Mickey Mouse, but with a slight Caribbean lilt, and a finale, 'Hot Dog!,' both of them written and performed by the pop group They Might Be Giants. During the instructional part of the show, there is a restful quiet that is mostly found only on public television programs. Over the last few decades, pop tunes have replaced the alphabet as a television teaching tool: it's not surprising that 'American Idol' on Fox and the Disney Channel movie 'High School Musical' are so successful: television is one vast audition hall, and every viewer (and child actor) wants to be a pop star. Mickey's show is also light on sardonic pop-culture allusions, which is also remarkable in an era where every cartoon carries a double entendre.

Even series tailored for preschool children, like 'Rolie Polie Olie,' a Disney cartoon about cute little robots, includes an Elvis impersonator. Children don't automatically choose the lowest common denominator.

One of the top-rated shows for preschool-age children is 'Wonder Pets,' on Nickelodeon, a series about classroom pets — a guinea pig, a duckling and a turtle — who turn into superheroes when the children go home, sing opera and travel the world rescuing animals in distress. Disney Channel's highest-rated series in the 2-to-5 age group is 'Little Einsteins,' which casually drops references to Antonin Dvorak. 'Mickey Mouse Clubhouse' is simpler, and sometimes less is more. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Disney Channel, tonight at 7:30, Eastern and Pacific times; 6:30, Central time, and tomorrow at 9 a.m, Eastern and Pacific times; 8 a.m., Central time. Directed by Robert LaDuca and Sherie E. Pollack; Bobs Gannaway, executive produer; Leslie Valdes, producer/story editor. Produced by Walt Disney Television Animation.