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Bug Juice

Bug Juice is a Disney Channel reality series that premiered on February 28, 1998. The series focuses around 20 kids and their experiences at summer camp. Together, the kids work hard to excel in their activities and become friends.[1] The phrase bug juice is a camping slang term for a very sweet juice drink made from powdered mixes, such as Kool-Aid, which are often served at summer camps.[2]

Bug Juice
Created byDouglas Ross
J. Rupert Thompson
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes60 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersDouglas Ross
Greg Stewart
J. Rupert Thompson
ProducerLaura Z. Thompson
Running time22 minutes
Production companyEvolution Film & Tape
Original release
NetworkDisney Channel
ReleaseFebruary 28, 1998 (1998-02-28) –
October 15, 2001 (2001-10-15)
Related

On August 4, 2017, Disney Channel announced a revival series based on the original,[3] titled Bug Juice: My Adventures at Camp, which premiered on July 16, 2018.[4]

Overview edit

Season 1 edit

The first season takes place in Waterford, Maine, at Camp Waziyatah,[5] which has been in operation since 1922. The camp is broken down into two sessions. Each session is four weeks.[6][7] Season 1 premiered on February 28, 1998.[8]

  • Camp Counselors: Peanut, Rhett Bachner (Grove 4), Morgan Will (Grove 4), Luna Hammond (Hill 4), Annie Doig (Hill 4), Gregory Weiss is the Candyman.
  • Grove 4 (Session 1): Andrew Johnson, Asa Korsen, Connor Shaw, Everett Boyle, Andy White, Hassan A. Omar, Jon Adler, Jason Wool, Malik Sollas
  • Grove 4 (Session 2): Andrew Johnson, Asa Korsen, Hassan A Omar, Jon Adler, Malik Sollas, Max Brallier, Andy Freed, Justin Simon, Patrick Milhaupt
  • Hill 4 (Session 1): Alison Harding, Caitlin Welby, Lauren Plumley, Martha, Mary Elizabeth Bradley, Megan Tarr, Sarai Abdullah Fife, LaKisha Barksdale, Jenny, Stephanie Etkin
  • Hill 4 (Session 2): Caitlin Welby, Sarai Abdullah Fife, LaKisha Barksdale, Stephanie Etkin, Annie Friedman, Cammie Delany, Sarah Ceglarski, Molly McGuinness, Anna Korsen

Season 2 edit

Season 2 takes place in Horse Shoe, North Carolina, at Camp Highlander.[9][10] The camp is broken down into three sessions. It premiered on March 5, 2000.[11]

Male counselors for Cabin 28 are Andrew Cohen and Andrew Foti. Female counselors for Cabin 6 are Amanda Peryln, Nikki K, Tiffany Lydon, and Ali Baske.

Female campers in Session A include Libby, Maryanne, Sarah, Jenny, Alex, Simana, Annette, Nikki, Samantha, and Michaela. In Session B, Annette and Samantha are joined by Hilary, Michelle, Kelly, Kim, Jennifer, Michelle, Baylor, and Jessica. In Session C, Kim, Jennifer, Baylor, and Jessica are joined by Jess, Gaby, Dalit, Danielle, Alanna, and Jasmyne.

Male campers in Session A include Steven, Kevin, Sam, Alvan, Jared, Austin, Ricky, Brendan, Alex, Chasen. In Session B, Steven, Alvan, Ricky, and Chasen are joined by Josh, Stefan, Hunter, Farb, Tyler, and Conor. In Session C, Steven, Ricky, Josh, Hunter, and Farb are joined by Michael, Marcellus, Brandon, Brendan, and Kevin.

Season 3 edit

Season three takes place in Tererro, New Mexico, at Brush Ranch Camp.[12][13][14] The camp is broken down into two four-week sessions.[15][16] The season began airing on June 3, 2001.[12]

Male campers in Rustlers include JJ (aka Shade), Lee, Alex Hurlbutt, Brendon, Josh, Bryan, Todd, Houston, Alex J., and Jordan in Session 1. Session 2 includes Jake, Aaron, Brendon, Sam, Bryan, Terrance, Will, Mike, Josh, and Carl.

Female campers in Indian Creek include Eve La Fountain, Jen, Hallie, Reid, Kelly, Amanda Bustamante, Ali C., Kristen, Megan, and Ali B. in Session 1. Session 2 includes Alana, Carrie, Hallie, Alex, Kelly, Amanda Bustamante, Leela, Sarah, Megan, Ellie, and Kiersten.

Development and production edit

The series' co-creator Douglas Ross thought that summer camp would be the "perfect setting for a reality-based program geared for 9 to 12-year-olds."[17] Ross, a former camper himself, pitched the idea to the Disney Channel and the then head of programming and production Rich Ross. He was given the green light to create the series without a pilot episode. The location, Camp Waziyatah, was decided a few months before the 1997 camp season started. The producers conducted about 100 phone interviews and 60 home visits before selecting 27 campers. Four camp counselors were chosen from both the camp's existing group and 350 members of the public in response to an open call on the Internet. The first season was filmed for 56 days straight by three film crews.[17][18] The boys' and girls' cabins had all male and all female crews, led by directors Donald Bull and Laura Zucco respectively.[19][20] Over 1,000 hours was shot by two directors, two cameras, and two sound operators.[21]

On July 15, 1999, Disney ordered a second season;[22] it premiered on March 5, 2000.[11] In June 2000, production began on a third season which was announced on July 12;[15] it began airing on June 3, 2001.[12]

Episodes edit

Series overview edit

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
120February 28, 1998 (1998-02-28)1998 (1998)
220March 5, 2000 (2000-03-05)July 16, 2000 (2000-07-16)
320June 3, 2001 (2001-06-03)[12]October 15, 2001 (2001-10-15)

Season 1 (1998) edit

  1. "Camp Waziyatah" (February 28, 1998)
  2. "Getting to Know You" (February 28, 1998)
  3. "To Clique... Or Not to Clique" (March 8, 1998)
  4. "Adventure Bound: Bushwacked" (March 15, 1998)
  5. "Molecules Colliding" (March 22, 1998)
  6. "Boys-to-Men Talent Show" (March 29, 1998)
  7. "Face the Fire: Unity Campfire" (May 3, 1998)
  8. "Aftershocks" (May 3, 1998)
  9. "No Pain, No Gain" (May 3, 1998)
  10. "Nice Guys Finish First" (May 3, 1998)
  11. "Goodbye, Session One" (May 10, 1998)
  12. "Ch, Ch, Changes" (May 31, 1998)
  13. "Turn, Turn, Turn" (June 7, 1998)
  14. "When the Boys Go Away, Girls Will Play" (June 14, 1998)
  15. "We Shall Overcome" (June 21, 1998)
  16. "Tough Love" (June 28, 1998)
  17. "Flirting with Disaster: Co-Ed Canoe Trip" (June 28, 1998)
  18. "So Long, Farewell" (June 28, 1998)
  19. "Goodbye Wazi"
  20. "Waziyatah Scrapbook"

Season 2 (2000) edit

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleOriginal air date
211"Your Adventure Starts Here"March 5, 2000 (2000-03-05)
222"You Never Know Until You Try"March 5, 2000 (2000-03-05)
233"Odd Man Out"March 12, 2000 (2000-03-12)
244"You Get What You Give"March 19, 2000 (2000-03-19)
255"Brits, Frights and Videotape"March 26, 2000 (2000-03-26)
266"Old Friends and New Friends"April 2, 2000 (2000-04-02)
277"I'm Gonna Walk Those Fears Right Outta My Head"April 9, 2000 (2000-04-09)
288"First Farewells"April 23, 2000 (2000-04-23)
299"Bring On the New Recruits"April 30, 2000 (2000-04-30)
3010"The Dance of Love"May 7, 2000 (2000-05-07)
3111"Climbing Toward Acceptance"May 14, 2000 (2000-05-14)
3212"Outside Looking In"May 21, 2000 (2000-05-21)
3313"You Don't Have to Be a Star to Shine"May 28, 2000 (2000-05-28)
3414"July Goodbye"June 4, 2000 (2000-06-04)
3515"New Kids on the Bus"June 11, 2000 (2000-06-11)
3616"Discovering Your Inner Camper"June 18, 2000 (2000-06-18)
3717"Countdown Begins"June 25, 2000 (2000-06-25)
3818"War Breaks at Highlander"July 2, 2000 (2000-07-02)
3919"And the Winner Is..."July 9, 2000 (2000-07-09)
4020"Goodbye, Highlander"July 16, 2000 (2000-07-16)

Season 3 (2001) edit

  1. "Welcome to Brush Ranch Camp" (June 3, 2001)
  2. "It's Bedtime"
  3. "Sorry"
  4. "JJ's Revenge"
  5. "Let's Eat"
  6. "Choices and Consequences"
  7. "Bad Thing"
  8. "It's Hot"
  9. "Let's Read"
  10. "No More Bug Juice"
  11. "DJ Shade Saves the Dance"
  12. "It's Rock N' Roll Time"
  13. "Saves The Princess"
  14. "I Give Up"
  15. "Airplanes"
  16. "Singing"
  17. "Valentines Day
  18. "Monkey See Monkey Do"
  19. "Gettin' Dirty"
  20. "End of Brush Ranch" (October 15, 2001)

Broadcast edit

The show premiered on Disney Channel in 1998, and ran for three seasons ending in 2001. Bug Juice was subsequently pulled from the schedule and was not aired again until the summer of 2004, during which episodes from the first season ran nightly in chronological order. The last episode of Bug Juice aired August 20, 2004, and it has not been shown since.

During the summer of 2006, Disney began posting mini episodes on its website, encouraging viewers of the Disney Channel to log on and view 5-minute short clips from episodes of the first season.

Bug Juice was also broadcast in the UK on Channel 4's The Bigger Breakfast.

Revival edit

On August 4, 2017, Disney Channel announced that they would revive the series. The first season of the revival will take place at Camp Waziyatah, the same location of the first season of the original series.[3] The new series, given the title Bug Juice: My Adventures at Camp, premiered on July 16, 2018.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Dawson, Diana (March 1, 1998). "'Bug Juice' looks at camp life". Austin American-Statesman. p. 7. Retrieved January 3, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  2. ^ Rosenburg, Howard (March 7, 1998). "Disney documentary series looks in on teens at camp". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 38. Retrieved March 1, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.  
  3. ^ a b Evans, Greg (August 4, 2017). "Disney Channel Goes Back To Camp With New 'Bug Juice'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 4, 2017.
  4. ^ a b Pena, Jessica (April 24, 2018). "Raven's Home, Tangled, BUNK'D, Big Hero 6 The Series: Disney Reveals Summer Programming". TV Series Finale. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  5. ^ "'Bug Juice' takes up-close look at summer camp". The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier. March 8, 1998. p. F6. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  6. ^ "Goodbye, Session One". Bug Juice. Season 1. Episode 11. Disney Channel. The way the summer works, it's broken up into two four-week sessions. Some kids can go to both sessions, stay out eight weeks, some kids just come for the first half.
  7. ^ "Dates & Rates". Camp Waziyatah. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  8. ^ "Disney reveals camp experience". Springfield News-Leader. February 28, 1998. p. 14B. Retrieved January 16, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ "Children's Highlights". The Free Lance-Star. March 5, 2000. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
  10. ^ Cabral, Elena (April 8, 2000). "Hollywood student bitten by acting Bug". Miami Herald. p. 3B. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ a b Liebenson, Donald (February 27, 2000). "Wednesday Is a Great Day to Start Hamming It Up". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  12. ^ a b c d . Amarillo Globe-News. Associated Press. June 11, 2001. Archived from the original on August 16, 2016. Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  13. ^ Chavez, Barbara (June 10, 2001). "Disney Works Magic at N.M. Camp". Albuquerque Journal. pp. A1, A8. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  14. ^ Spreier, Jeanne (July 7, 2001). "Campy humor of teen series works just fine". South Florida Sun Sentinel. p. 4D. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  15. ^ a b . Business Wire. July 12, 2000. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  16. ^ "Tulsa teen to appear on Disney reality show". Tulsa World. June 1, 2001. p. D3. Retrieved January 3, 2024.
  17. ^ a b Ellin, Harlene (March 1, 1998). "Disney Drops In On Camp For Teens". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  18. ^ Davis, Pamela (March 23, 1998). "You may crave s'more". Tampa Bay Times. p. 3D. Retrieved January 2, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.  
  19. ^ Graeber, Laurel (March 1, 1998). "Tomorrowland Was Never Like This". The New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2015.
  20. ^ Mason, M.S. (February 27, 1998). "'Bug Juice' Gives Taste of Summer Camp". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
  21. ^ "'Bug Juice' real world of kids in summer camp". Great Falls Tribune. March 23, 1998. p. 11. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  22. ^ . Business Wire. July 16, 1999. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 3, 2015.

External links edit

  • Camp Waziyatah - Location for Season One
  • Bug Juice at IMDb  
  • An Oral History of ‘Bug Juice’ at Vice

juice, other, uses, juice, disambiguation, disney, channel, reality, series, that, premiered, february, 1998, series, focuses, around, kids, their, experiences, summer, camp, together, kids, work, hard, excel, their, activities, become, friends, phrase, juice,. For other uses see Bug juice disambiguation Bug Juice is a Disney Channel reality series that premiered on February 28 1998 The series focuses around 20 kids and their experiences at summer camp Together the kids work hard to excel in their activities and become friends 1 The phrase bug juice is a camping slang term for a very sweet juice drink made from powdered mixes such as Kool Aid which are often served at summer camps 2 Bug JuiceCreated byDouglas RossJ Rupert ThompsonCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons3No of episodes60 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersDouglas RossGreg StewartJ Rupert ThompsonProducerLaura Z ThompsonRunning time22 minutesProduction companyEvolution Film amp TapeOriginal releaseNetworkDisney ChannelReleaseFebruary 28 1998 1998 02 28 October 15 2001 2001 10 15 RelatedBug Juice My Adventures at Camp 2018 On August 4 2017 Disney Channel announced a revival series based on the original 3 titled Bug Juice My Adventures at Camp which premiered on July 16 2018 4 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Season 1 1 2 Season 2 1 3 Season 3 2 Development and production 3 Episodes 3 1 Series overview 3 2 Season 1 1998 3 3 Season 2 2000 3 4 Season 3 2001 4 Broadcast 5 Revival 6 References 7 External linksOverview editSeason 1 edit The first season takes place in Waterford Maine at Camp Waziyatah 5 which has been in operation since 1922 The camp is broken down into two sessions Each session is four weeks 6 7 Season 1 premiered on February 28 1998 8 Camp Counselors Peanut Rhett Bachner Grove 4 Morgan Will Grove 4 Luna Hammond Hill 4 Annie Doig Hill 4 Gregory Weiss is the Candyman Grove 4 Session 1 Andrew Johnson Asa Korsen Connor Shaw Everett Boyle Andy White Hassan A Omar Jon Adler Jason Wool Malik Sollas Grove 4 Session 2 Andrew Johnson Asa Korsen Hassan A Omar Jon Adler Malik Sollas Max Brallier Andy Freed Justin Simon Patrick Milhaupt Hill 4 Session 1 Alison Harding Caitlin Welby Lauren Plumley Martha Mary Elizabeth Bradley Megan Tarr Sarai Abdullah Fife LaKisha Barksdale Jenny Stephanie Etkin Hill 4 Session 2 Caitlin Welby Sarai Abdullah Fife LaKisha Barksdale Stephanie Etkin Annie Friedman Cammie Delany Sarah Ceglarski Molly McGuinness Anna Korsen Season 2 edit Season 2 takes place in Horse Shoe North Carolina at Camp Highlander 9 10 The camp is broken down into three sessions It premiered on March 5 2000 11 Male counselors for Cabin 28 are Andrew Cohen and Andrew Foti Female counselors for Cabin 6 are Amanda Peryln Nikki K Tiffany Lydon and Ali Baske Female campers in Session A include Libby Maryanne Sarah Jenny Alex Simana Annette Nikki Samantha and Michaela In Session B Annette and Samantha are joined by Hilary Michelle Kelly Kim Jennifer Michelle Baylor and Jessica In Session C Kim Jennifer Baylor and Jessica are joined by Jess Gaby Dalit Danielle Alanna and Jasmyne Male campers in Session A include Steven Kevin Sam Alvan Jared Austin Ricky Brendan Alex Chasen In Session B Steven Alvan Ricky and Chasen are joined by Josh Stefan Hunter Farb Tyler and Conor In Session C Steven Ricky Josh Hunter and Farb are joined by Michael Marcellus Brandon Brendan and Kevin Season 3 edit Season three takes place in Tererro New Mexico at Brush Ranch Camp 12 13 14 The camp is broken down into two four week sessions 15 16 The season began airing on June 3 2001 12 Male campers in Rustlers include JJ aka Shade Lee Alex Hurlbutt Brendon Josh Bryan Todd Houston Alex J and Jordan in Session 1 Session 2 includes Jake Aaron Brendon Sam Bryan Terrance Will Mike Josh and Carl Female campers in Indian Creek include Eve La Fountain Jen Hallie Reid Kelly Amanda Bustamante Ali C Kristen Megan and Ali B in Session 1 Session 2 includes Alana Carrie Hallie Alex Kelly Amanda Bustamante Leela Sarah Megan Ellie and Kiersten Development and production editThe series co creator Douglas Ross thought that summer camp would be the perfect setting for a reality based program geared for 9 to 12 year olds 17 Ross a former camper himself pitched the idea to the Disney Channel and the then head of programming and production Rich Ross He was given the green light to create the series without a pilot episode The location Camp Waziyatah was decided a few months before the 1997 camp season started The producers conducted about 100 phone interviews and 60 home visits before selecting 27 campers Four camp counselors were chosen from both the camp s existing group and 350 members of the public in response to an open call on the Internet The first season was filmed for 56 days straight by three film crews 17 18 The boys and girls cabins had all male and all female crews led by directors Donald Bull and Laura Zucco respectively 19 20 Over 1 000 hours was shot by two directors two cameras and two sound operators 21 On July 15 1999 Disney ordered a second season 22 it premiered on March 5 2000 11 In June 2000 production began on a third season which was announced on July 12 15 it began airing on June 3 2001 12 Episodes editSeries overview edit SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired120February 28 1998 1998 02 28 1998 1998 220March 5 2000 2000 03 05 July 16 2000 2000 07 16 320June 3 2001 2001 06 03 12 October 15 2001 2001 10 15 Season 1 1998 edit Camp Waziyatah February 28 1998 Getting to Know You February 28 1998 To Clique Or Not to Clique March 8 1998 Adventure Bound Bushwacked March 15 1998 Molecules Colliding March 22 1998 Boys to Men Talent Show March 29 1998 Face the Fire Unity Campfire May 3 1998 Aftershocks May 3 1998 No Pain No Gain May 3 1998 Nice Guys Finish First May 3 1998 Goodbye Session One May 10 1998 Ch Ch Changes May 31 1998 Turn Turn Turn June 7 1998 When the Boys Go Away Girls Will Play June 14 1998 We Shall Overcome June 21 1998 Tough Love June 28 1998 Flirting with Disaster Co Ed Canoe Trip June 28 1998 So Long Farewell June 28 1998 Goodbye Wazi Waziyatah Scrapbook Season 2 2000 edit No overallNo inseasonTitleOriginal air date211 Your Adventure Starts Here March 5 2000 2000 03 05 222 You Never Know Until You Try March 5 2000 2000 03 05 233 Odd Man Out March 12 2000 2000 03 12 244 You Get What You Give March 19 2000 2000 03 19 255 Brits Frights and Videotape March 26 2000 2000 03 26 266 Old Friends and New Friends April 2 2000 2000 04 02 277 I m Gonna Walk Those Fears Right Outta My Head April 9 2000 2000 04 09 288 First Farewells April 23 2000 2000 04 23 299 Bring On the New Recruits April 30 2000 2000 04 30 3010 The Dance of Love May 7 2000 2000 05 07 3111 Climbing Toward Acceptance May 14 2000 2000 05 14 3212 Outside Looking In May 21 2000 2000 05 21 3313 You Don t Have to Be a Star to Shine May 28 2000 2000 05 28 3414 July Goodbye June 4 2000 2000 06 04 3515 New Kids on the Bus June 11 2000 2000 06 11 3616 Discovering Your Inner Camper June 18 2000 2000 06 18 3717 Countdown Begins June 25 2000 2000 06 25 3818 War Breaks at Highlander July 2 2000 2000 07 02 3919 And the Winner Is July 9 2000 2000 07 09 4020 Goodbye Highlander July 16 2000 2000 07 16 Season 3 2001 edit Welcome to Brush Ranch Camp June 3 2001 It s Bedtime Sorry JJ s Revenge Let s Eat Choices and Consequences Bad Thing It s Hot Let s Read No More Bug Juice DJ Shade Saves the Dance It s Rock N Roll Time Saves The Princess I Give Up Airplanes Singing Valentines Day Monkey See Monkey Do Gettin Dirty End of Brush Ranch October 15 2001 Broadcast editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message The show premiered on Disney Channel in 1998 and ran for three seasons ending in 2001 Bug Juice was subsequently pulled from the schedule and was not aired again until the summer of 2004 during which episodes from the first season ran nightly in chronological order The last episode of Bug Juice aired August 20 2004 and it has not been shown since During the summer of 2006 Disney began posting mini episodes on its website encouraging viewers of the Disney Channel to log on and view 5 minute short clips from episodes of the first season Bug Juice was also broadcast in the UK on Channel 4 s The Bigger Breakfast Revival editMain article Bug Juice My Adventures at Camp On August 4 2017 Disney Channel announced that they would revive the series The first season of the revival will take place at Camp Waziyatah the same location of the first season of the original series 3 The new series given the title Bug Juice My Adventures at Camp premiered on July 16 2018 4 References edit Dawson Diana March 1 1998 Bug Juice looks at camp life Austin American Statesman p 7 Retrieved January 3 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp Rosenburg Howard March 7 1998 Disney documentary series looks in on teens at camp St Louis Post Dispatch p 38 Retrieved March 1 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Evans Greg August 4 2017 Disney Channel Goes Back To Camp With New Bug Juice Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 4 2017 a b Pena Jessica April 24 2018 Raven s Home Tangled BUNK D Big Hero 6 The Series Disney Reveals Summer Programming TV Series Finale Retrieved May 9 2018 Bug Juice takes up close look at summer camp The Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier March 8 1998 p F6 Retrieved January 2 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp Goodbye Session One Bug Juice Season 1 Episode 11 Disney Channel The way the summer works it s broken up into two four week sessions Some kids can go to both sessions stay out eight weeks some kids just come for the first half Dates amp Rates Camp Waziyatah Retrieved March 27 2017 Disney reveals camp experience Springfield News Leader February 28 1998 p 14B Retrieved January 16 2017 via Newspapers com nbsp Children s Highlights The Free Lance Star March 5 2000 Retrieved June 28 2016 Cabral Elena April 8 2000 Hollywood student bitten by acting Bug Miami Herald p 3B Retrieved January 2 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Liebenson Donald February 27 2000 Wednesday Is a Great Day to Start Hamming It Up Chicago Tribune Retrieved September 13 2016 a b c d Reality TV show spotlights N M summer camp for kids Amarillo Globe News Associated Press June 11 2001 Archived from the original on August 16 2016 Retrieved February 17 2019 Chavez Barbara June 10 2001 Disney Works Magic at N M Camp Albuquerque Journal pp A1 A8 Retrieved January 2 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp Spreier Jeanne July 7 2001 Campy humor of teen series works just fine South Florida Sun Sentinel p 4D Retrieved January 2 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Disney Channel Brews Up a Third Season of Bug Juice Business Wire July 12 2000 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 3 2015 Tulsa teen to appear on Disney reality show Tulsa World June 1 2001 p D3 Retrieved January 3 2024 a b Ellin Harlene March 1 1998 Disney Drops In On Camp For Teens Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 3 2015 Davis Pamela March 23 1998 You may crave s more Tampa Bay Times p 3D Retrieved January 2 2024 via Newspapers com nbsp Graeber Laurel March 1 1998 Tomorrowland Was Never Like This The New York Times Retrieved March 3 2015 Mason M S February 27 1998 Bug Juice Gives Taste of Summer Camp The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved June 28 2016 Bug Juice real world of kids in summer camp Great Falls Tribune March 23 1998 p 11 Retrieved April 8 2024 Back by Popular Demand Disney Channel Orders Second Seasons of Reality Series Bug Juice and Z Games Also Goes to the Big Top with New Reality Series Circus Kids Business Wire July 16 1999 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 3 2015 External links editCamp Waziyatah Location for Season One Bug Juice at IMDb nbsp An Oral History of Bug Juice at Vice Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bug Juice amp oldid 1223774080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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