The Prince Who Turns into a Frog
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The Prince Who Turns into a Frog
Summary
The Prince Who Turns into a Frog is a television program[1]. It ranks in the top 7% of television_program entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (103 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's instance of is recorded as television program[3].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's genre is mandopop[4].
- A cast member of The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was Ming Dow[5].
- A cast member of The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was Sam Wang[6].
- A cast member of The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was Joyce Chao[7].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was performed by 183 Club[8].
- The original language of The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was Standard Chinese[9].
- The original language of The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was Standard Taiwanese Mandarin[10].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was distributed by video on demand[11].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's original broadcaster is recorded as TTV Main Channel[12].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's country of origin is recorded as Taiwan[13].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog began on +2005-06-05T00:00:00Z[14].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog ended on +2005-10-16T00:00:00Z[15].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's distributed by is recorded as Netflix[16].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's distributed by is recorded as Taiwan Television[17].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's distributed by is recorded as Sanlih E-Television[18].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's official website is recorded as http://www.ttv.com.tw/drama/2005/wawawa/index.htm[19].
- The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's number of episodes is recorded as {'amount': '+30'}[20].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Among the performers on The Prince Who Turns into a Frog was 183 Club[8]. Cast members include Ming Dow[5], Sam Wang[6], and Joyce Chao[7].
Publication
Original languages include Standard Chinese[9] and Standard Taiwanese Mandarin[10]. The Prince Who Turns into a Frog's genre is mandopop[4]. It was distributed by video on demand[11].
Why It Matters
The Prince Who Turns into a Frog ranks in the top 7% of television_program entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (103 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]