I know Fred Rogers passed away in 2003 but for several years thereafter PBS still ran Mr. Rogers Neighborhood, at least on weekends. I don't see it on the schedule anymore.
I know kids today want a faster moving show than in the early days of PBS, where Mr. Rogers did everything slowly, believing young children couldn't keep up with a quicker show. But has human psychology and child development changed that much? Mr. Rogers is aimed at the youngest audience, one that hasn't yet started surfing computers or watching MTV.
I believe Rogers' daughter, who was also involved as a character in the original show, is behind the animated successor, Danial Tiger's Neighborhood. So maybe she doesn't want the original competing with her program, which does air on many PBS stations on weekdays? But you'd think the original would show up at least on the 24 hour PBS Kids subchannel that many stations and cable systems have. PBS Create airs original black-and-white Julia Child cooking shows on occasion from the early days of PBS, or even NET.
Hey, I'd even like to see The Friendly Giant, which even pre-dates Mr. Rogers, on public television. Robert Homme and his puppets are all in character, and they read children's books on the show, so I don't think it would be dated, except for the slow pace.
I know kids today want a faster moving show than in the early days of PBS, where Mr. Rogers did everything slowly, believing young children couldn't keep up with a quicker show. But has human psychology and child development changed that much? Mr. Rogers is aimed at the youngest audience, one that hasn't yet started surfing computers or watching MTV.
I believe Rogers' daughter, who was also involved as a character in the original show, is behind the animated successor, Danial Tiger's Neighborhood. So maybe she doesn't want the original competing with her program, which does air on many PBS stations on weekdays? But you'd think the original would show up at least on the 24 hour PBS Kids subchannel that many stations and cable systems have. PBS Create airs original black-and-white Julia Child cooking shows on occasion from the early days of PBS, or even NET.
Hey, I'd even like to see The Friendly Giant, which even pre-dates Mr. Rogers, on public television. Robert Homme and his puppets are all in character, and they read children's books on the show, so I don't think it would be dated, except for the slow pace.