Sunday, June 1, 2014

PBS Kids- Review of My Childhood (part 1)

Hi, I'm the Whatsoever Critic. I review just about anything.

Just like I did with Playhouse Disney, I figured that I would do the same with PBS Kids. I saw this channel as a kid, but nowadays, it's changed completely. So this is PBS Kids.

Operating as a programming block since October 11, 1993, PBS Kids provided educational stuff to children, while the viewers, in return, donate to the station every once in a while to keep having the educational stuff come to their children. It seems like a good trade until later on in recent times when the programming starts to pander to the technology-loving kid demographic. So let's get started!

For part 1 of this review, I will give you the names of the shows that came out in 1993, especially the ones that were added on but had been around before PBS Kids existed. I won't go in any order or tie them in with any theme. So here they are:

Sesame Street

Now this show... the whole U.S. knows about this one. It's been around since 1969. So I'll spend little time talking about this one.

This was where I learned the alphabet and the numbers. The characters are colorful and kept their likability through each season.

In fact, this show was so popular that there were so many different versions of it in different countries.
That's enough said.

Barney and Friends

Now we're talking!
Look, I know that this may be a cheaper version of Sesame Street to you. But unlike Sesame Street, I can remember most of the songs from this show. I don't know; it just seems so memorable that way!
Just like when I talked about Sesame Street, and seeing that I did a review on two movies by Barney, I'll go ahead and spend little time talking about this one.

Barney is a dinosaur that spends time with a group of kids at their children, and teaches them lessons like being polite, being generous, having confidence in yourself, and just being a kid.
Even to this day, I wish Barney would make another comeback.

Bill Nye the Science Guy

I love this guy! He's funny and smart!
All the experiments that this guy does is super cool! He even teaches the wonders of science.
-Even though I'm an English major, I'm still fascinated by science, because of this guy.
Whenever I watch this show, I would look forward to the skits. Even though they deal with detailed information, the skits would make learning enjoyable and to help you remember some of the stuff. It was and should've been a science classroom's dream come true.

The Big Comfy Couch

Not many people remember this show, I think. But I'll give you the premise anyway.
The show is about a clown girl named Loonette-
-(pause) Are you saying this girl is a loony?

...Anyway, the girl has a doll named Molly, and they would go out and visit their clown friends in their clown town...
-Yeah, I know the premise may sound a bit silly just by saying it, but it's the truth.
Each episode focused on different themes every time you watch this show, which was fair enough, seeing that it was airing on PBS. Plus, the skits were pretty cool.

In fact, I remember the "Ten-Second Tidy,"

the Clock Rug Stretch,

the Foley Family,

and the Dust Bunnies.

I especially liked when the show concluded with the Ten-Second Tidy and the couch nap, because it showed the subtlety of the routine- how easy it was to do that. Even the end credits seemed calming enough to be enjoyable.
Anyway, I wish this show was back on the air, because it brought back so many good times.

Lamb Chop's Play Along

Now I know I've talked about this show a lot in my reviews on some of its episodes. So I won't spend much time on this one.
This was one of Shari Lewis's greatest shows ever made. I especially loved the puppets. There was Lamb Chop, Charlie Horse, and Hush Puppy. But the puppet that I liked the most was Hush Puppy.
-Why not Lamb Chop, you may ask?

Well, Lamb Chop is an okay 6-year-old lamb, but I sometimes feel that she's too into herself and full of expectations.

But with Hush Puppy, he's smart, helpful, has a good heart most of the time, and has many dreams and goals.

Charlie Horse, on the other hand, felt like the typical kid-trying-to-look-and-act-cool stereotype. With a backwards cap and baggy clothes, he can only be described as a stereotype. Plus, he even gets his own show: Charlie Horse Music Pizza.
Anyway, no matter which character you love the most, Shari Lewis was always there to teach kids songs, games, jokes, and riddles. This had to be way better than Sesame Street.

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood

Here's a classic. This show was one of the first shows that I was introduced to when I was a kid. I used to watch this all the time.
Here was an old man that would tell stories and explore things with the people that are featured on the show. The simple quiet and gentle personality that Mr. Rogers has is very unique, in a way, because it's not persistent and not rude.

-Just think of Mr. Rogers as a Bob the Tomato kind of character, if Bob was a human.
Two years after the show ended, Fred Rogers died in 2003, which had many kids who were used to seeing the man questioning his death.
-That was the reaction to the death of an icon. It was that powerful.

Years later, an animated spin-off show called Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood became the Mister Rogers' of today's world, which featured a young tiger who would have adventures with the Make-Believe characters all grown up.
Either way, this was still a good show.

And the final show that I'm going to be talking about for today is...

Reading Rainbow

This was one of my favorite TV shows! I mean, LeVar Burton is absolutely inspiring with his sophisticated personality, vivid imagination, and love for books. Each episode would revolve around a certain theme, and LeVar would show books that would go along with the theme. They also point out other books, in case the kid audience had further interest on the topic, which is a plus.
What I liked most about the show were the video field trip. They were always fascinating, because it kept you interested and wanting more.
I was surprised when the show ended in 2006, because of the technological world growing every year.

So Reading Rainbow, in 2012, launched an app that would have all the books and videos that were featured on the show, which was a really great idea.
Recently, I heard about Reading Rainbow's campaign to bring the show back with newer stories, newer video field trips, and all sorts of reading-inspired goodness, by having the Kickstarter Revival Campaign.

The campaign started on May 28, 2014; and would you know it- in under twelve hours, the campaign reached its $1 million goal. On the following day, they reached double that amount. So you see, the show was such a big hit, that we can never let it go.
I'm glad that the show wants to come back on the air, and I hope to see it make its comeback.

And that was Part 1 of my review of PBS Kids. Stay tuned for Part 2!

Whatsoever Critic
Sources:
Wikipedia
Sesame Street
Barney and Friends
Bill Nye the Science Guy
The Big Comfy Couch
Lamb Chop's Play Along
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
Reading Rainbow

Courtesy: Sesame Workshop, HIT Entertainment, Walt Disney Television, Nashville Public Television, Shari Lewis, Family Communications, Inc., and Lancit Media Productions.

Playhouse Disney- Review of My Childhood (part 1)

Hi, I'm the Whatsoever Critic. I review just about anything.

Lately I've been feeling nostalgic about the shows that I used to watch as a kid. I remember watching Playhouse Disney way before it became Disney Junior. Most of my childhood consisted of innocent learning and growing my imagination. I can't wait to share my feelings on Playhouse Disney. I don't care if this review is split into parts...
-Well, seeing that most movies are becoming two-parters nowadays...
I decided to make this one Part 1 of my review. So let's get started!

Having its start on May 8, 1997 until it was closed down on February 13, 2011, Playhouse Disney was one of my favorite channels growing up (besides PBS). It's fitting that I start by showing you the shows that started in the year 1997, and then go from year to year from there- all the way to the final number of shows that were crammed before they carried over to Disney Junior. So for Part 1, these are the shows that I saw on Playhouse Disney growing up:

Bear in the Big Blue House

I used to love this bear when I was a kid. The show itself wasn't too bad either for a Jim Henson-Muppet feel.
This show about a large bear with a good sense of smell, as well as a sense of curiosity, who has many friends that would visit him at his house, and they would have many adventures together.


Bear was voiced by Paul Andrejco, who also designed most of the characters that were on the show. The character of this beloved creature seemed okay, but now that I'm old enough to understand a lot of things, I sometimes wonder if he was being too friendly with the kid audience.

For example, every time Bear greets us by the door (which occurs in each episode), he sniffs around until he sniffs at the audience, and then he asks us about the smell that he's smelling...
-Okay, I'll admit: sometimes he gets the scent wrong, and sometimes he gets it right. There was this one time,  I remember as a kid, I had finished taking a bath. My mom turns on this show. The show just started, and I was sitting there in the living room, still drying my hair. Then I hear Bear ask the audience, "What's that smell?" He would sniff around, until he exclaims, "It's you!" And then he asked something along the lines of: "Did you just take a bath?" I remember my jaw dropping. I was like: "How did he know that?"
But who cares? I still love this Bear, and I hope Disney Junior would find it in its heart to put this show back on the air.

Also in 1997 came show that seems forgettable nowadays. I'm not sureif it was because of the show's budget or not, but it had no redeeming value. I'm talking about Spot the Dog.

Granted, I was okay with this show as a kid. I just find it so forgettable, because nobody really talks about it like it was something worthy of a Twitter following.
Anyway, it's about a little dog that goes on many adventures (either with friends or by himself).

The first thing that you'll notice with these characters is that their lips don't move whenever they speak. It's like another Thomas the Tank Engine-like show where the budget was too low (or something) to not think having the lips move. 
As for the stories, they were okay. I still remember the characters going to an amusement park; I still remember the picnic that got rained on; and I still remember Spot sniffing around in search of a smell until he finds a cake waiting for him at home (Spoiler Alert if you haven't seen the show).
Now that I'm looking deeper into this show, I remember something about this being based on the children's book series by Eric Hill.


Well, if you like the books, then you can check out the show if you haven't seen it, or if you don't remember it.

And for the last two shows that I'm going to show you for today, the word is that they were "acquired programming," meaning that they also aired in other channels (I think). So, first, let's dive right into The Little Mermaid series.

Since Disney felt that the original movie was such a big hit, they decided to continue Ariel's adventures, where they're basically saying: "See what happened before Ariel met her prince Eric."

-Well, the third movie would contradict that...
If you haven't guessed the premise yet: Ariel is her teen self, going on adventures with Flounder and Sebastian, and doing one of two things:

1. causing trouble (in a naive way, mainly)

2. making the situation worse (in a naive way)
-Kinda like King Julien's character in Penguins of Madagascar.
This show had to have been the start of Disney movies getting their spin-off shows like Aladdin and Timon and Pumbaa. But unlike Aladdin, The Little Mermaid was never restricted by the environment that the original movie had already given it. I remember Ariel naiively unleashing a bunch of dinosaur that one episode. I remember Ariel rescuing Spot the whale from some kind of harbor that one time.

I remember Ariel going to a Las Vegas-like underwater city with a group of mermaid once...
-Do any of those episodes ring a bell?
Plus, I also remember so many characters (besides the obvious ones that were from the movie).

I remember Urchin,
the lobster duo,

Spot,

the Evil Manta, and...

the sign-language girl... 
-Okay, I don't know most of the character. I just know what they look like.
Anyway, this show was decent to an extent. Plus, it still had Jodi Benson as Ariel, which was awesome.

However, I have to acknowledge the show that grabbed my attention the most: The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.

For the premise, most of the adventures that the characters have take place in the Hundred Acre Wood. However, they sometimes go to Christopher Robin's house. And, there was this one episode where they went to the movies as a group.
-Remember all of that?
Anyway, the show had the same characters as the original Winnie the Pooh stories.

There was Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore, Rabbit, Kanga, Roo...
-(me giggling on that last part)
...Gopher, Owl, and Christopher Robin.
As for the side characters, there were a few episodes where you got to see Christopher Robin's mom and babysitter, but they didn't show their faces. In fact, most of the adults on this show didn't have a face.
-It's like in most of the Tom and Jerry cartoons...
Well, it doesn't matter. You can learn timeless lessons from most of the episodes,

like being honest,


being yourself,

have a little imagination, and... don't get in trouble with the law(?)
Yeah, I'm not sure if anyone else remembers this one or not, but there was one episode where Christopher Robin and the characters had flooded a house. The next thing you know, the police are called in, the characters are interrogated, and the episode ends with Christopher Robin's mugshot.
-Unless this was only in their imagination(?)

Well, it was still a great show, and something else that Disney Junior should consider adding to their time slot.

So this was Part 1 of reviewing Playhouse Disney. Be sure to stay tuned for Part 2!


Whatsoever Critic
Sources:
Wikipedia
Bear in the Big Blue House
Spot the Dog
The Little Mermaid (series)
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh

Courtesy: The Jim Henson Company, Buena Vista Home Video, and Walt Disney Television Animation.