A Review of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood

One of public television’s (PBS) excellent programs for preschool children is Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood.  This show replaced Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood in 2012.  Unlike the original program, which had real people and children, Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood is in animated cartoon format.  According to Wikipedia, Rogers’ program The Neighborhood of Make-Believe, which had puppets as characters, influenced Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood.  Daniel is a young tiger who attends school and has many friends, including a young cat and a young owl.  Some brief sequences of real children involved in interesting activities like feeding zoo animals and visiting museums also appear. Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood teaches kids how to handle and understand emotions like sadness and jealousy.  By having Daniel feel sad when his class’s adopted duck must return to the farm, the program tells viewers, “It’s OK to feel sad,” and reassures them that they will gradually feel better.  The creators of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood embody this message in a repeated song that youngsters can quickly memorize.  Similarly, the show portrays Daniel’s jealousy when his grandfather pays attention to…

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Case Histories on PBS’s Masterpiece Theater

I’m enjoying the episodes of Case Histories on PBS’s Masterpiece Theater. Each program covers several interlocking cases. The first episode involves mysteries surrounding the disappearance of two women and one little girl and the murder of a young woman. Private detective Jackson Brodie also broods about his own family’s unsolved mystery, the murder/drowning of his little sister when he was a boy. Brodie’s personal experience with tragedy and his brilliant insights help him to solve puzzles much faster than the Edinburgh police. This series is based on novels by Kate Atkinson. (more…)

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