OJ

OJ may refer to:

  • Orange juice
  • Official Journal of the European Union
  • Ojibwe language (ISO 639-2 code: oj)
  • The O'Jays, a 1970s soul group from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
  • Open-jaw ticket, a type of airline ticket
  • Orange Jackets, a student organization at the University of Texas at Austin
  • Order of Jamaica
  • Overland Airways (IATA airline designator: OJ)
  • CJOJ-FM, a Canadian radio station formerly branded OJ 95.5.
  • Orange Julius, a chain of fruit drink beverage stores, or the fruit drink itself.
  • People

  • O. J. Simpson (born 1947), American athlete, football player
  • O. J. Childress (born 1976), American football player
  • OJ da Juiceman (born 1981), American rapper
  • Ottis Anderson (born 1957), American football player
  • Olivier Jacque (born 1973), French motorcycle road racer
  • Oran "Juice" Jones (born 1959), American soul and R&B singer and actor
  • Orlando Jordan (born 1974), American professional wrestler
  • Omar Koroma (born 1989), Gambian footballer
  • O. J. Mayo (born 1987), American professional basketball player
  • List of Tugs characters

    Tugs, a 1988 British children's television series created by the producers of Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends, Robert D. Cardona and David Mitton, features two groups of anthropomorphized tugboat fleets: the Star Fleet and the Z-Stacks. They compete against each other in the fictional town of Bigg City Port.

    In the North American adaptation, Salty's Lighthouse, the stories were re-purposed for a younger audience. The two groups were no longer rival tug fleets, and the characters underwent various changes. Sunshine, Captain Star, and Little Ditcher were considered female. Sunshine became the sister of fellow switcher Ten Cents. British accents were changed to American accents. Some names were changed, for instance, Big Mac became Big Stack, O.J. became Otis, and Zebedee became Zeebee.

    Star Fleet

    The Star Fleet is a group who aims to work together on getting and fulfilling port contracts. It is led by Captain Star. Its symbol is a red funnel with blue and white stripes around the top. Fleet members also carry a red flag with a white star. Reporting to Captain Star are seven tugs, each of which has a numbered smoke stack. In "Regatta", Grampus the submarine becomes a member of Star Fleet. The Star Fleet tugs are modeled after the San Francisco tugs of the 1920s.

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