I do have a few bones to pick with these shows, however.
Number one on my list is Dora. In the course of her various adventures, Dora is
constantly doing something like climbing Cupcake Mountain or rowing across Chocolate
Syrup Lake. The goal of her adventures is always hot chocolate for Grandma, or
ice cream for Boots or birthday cake for Isa. Dora frequently says things like
“Mmmm, I love lollipops!”
Listen, Nick Junior, it’s hard enough to get your kids to
eat their veggies without their animated icons gallivanting around chasing
after sweets. Can’t Dora climb Broccoli Mountain and row across Applesauce
Lake? Can’t she chase down oranges to make orange juice with Papi? How about
“Mmmm, I love Brussels sprouts?!?!?”
I know the reason here – Nick Junior is free with no
commercials. But Nickelodeon for big kids is chock full of commercials for
sugary snacks and cereals. So how to get the little kids hooked early? It’s the
closest thing to product placement they have for this age group. I predict that
it’s only a matter of time before Dora is riding her Kit-Kat barge to Dorito
valley to see the great strawberry Pop-Tart monument. You heard it here first.
A few notches up the dial, Disney Junior is clearly staffed
by Calvinists. How do I know? Toodles on Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. Toodles is the
one who carries all of the tools for Mickey’s adventures. But how in the world
can Tootles possibly know in advance that today, and only today, Mickey is
going to need a whistle, a hair dryer and a ladder? Predestination, obviously. Disney is clearly trying to teach our children that their futures
are predestined and they should accept their fates. It’s another way for The Man to keep us down and it starts in
preschool. Am I the only one who thinks of these things?
Another overarching issue with both Dora and Mickey Mouse
Clubhouse is what it teaches kids about problem solving. Instead of learning
that they should run, screaming, from crocodiles, Dora is teaching my kids that
they can get past them if they can only make them giggle or build a rainbow
bridge over them. Mickey Mouse is teaching them that to solve their problems
they just need magical flying tool kits named Tootles.
At least things have come a long way in the realm of
animated storytelling. Dumbo, the Disney movie, was released in 1941. How’s
this for a story line? In this little
ditty, the main character is ostracized for a physical defect. His mother is
imprisoned for defending him and he has to live with his outcast companion.
Contemplating their troubles, they become so drunk that they hallucinate and
pass out. They are awoken by embarrassingly stereotypical minority characters
who tease Dumbo into turning his physical defect to a strength.
Uh, I’ll take giggling crocodiles any day.