Skip to content
Category

2006 Canadian television series endings

page 1
Martin Mystery
French-Canadian animated television series
Mona the Vampire
animated television series
Missing
Canadian-American crime drama television series
Jacob Two-Two
Canadian 2003 children's animated TV series
Strange Days at Blake Holsey High
television series
Bali
animated television series
Dark Oracle
television series
Dragon Booster
Canadian animated television series
Zero Hour
2004-2006 TV series about disasters
Romeo!
Romeo! is a teen sitcom that aired on Nickelodeon from September 13, 2003, to July 23, 2006, totaling 53 episodes in three seasons. The filming was done in Vancouver, British Columbia, while the show takes place in Seattle, Washington. The show stars Louisiana-based rapper Romeo as a fictionalized version of himself, known as "Ro".
X-DuckX
X-DuckX (French: Canards extrêmes) is an animated television series, lasting 78 episodes, created by Jan Van Rijsselberge, directed by François Reczulski, and produced in 2001 by Alphanim, France 3 and Tooncan Productions, Inc. (season 2).
The Collector
Canadian television series
Get Ed
animated television series
Time Warp Trio
animated television series
Poko
Canadian animated television series
15/Love
15/Love is a Canadian television drama series that revolved around the lives of aspiring young tennis players at the fictional Cascadia Tennis Academy. The show was created by Karen Troubetzkoy and Derek Schreyer. 15/Love premiered on YTV on September 6, 2004, concluding on October 16, 2006, having aired 54 episodes over 3 seasons. The series was filmed in Saint-Césaire, Quebec.
Jane and the Dragon
television series
Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island
American animated television series
The Red Green Show
Canadian television series
Darcy's Wild Life
television series
Nanalan'
Nanalan' is a Canadian children's television series created by Jamie Shannon and Jason Hopley. It began in 1998 as a series of three-minute shorts originally broadcast on YTV; it later ran for two seasons of full-length (21 minutes) episodes that were first broadcast by CBC. The series chronicles the small-scale adventures and discoveries of a three-year-old puppet girl named Mona in her grandmother Nana's backyard. The title is a contraction of the phrase "Nana Land," referring to the setting.