Reading Rainbow: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Everything's Better with Rainbows]]: Well, it would've been pretty lame to have a show just called ''Reading'', wouldn't it?
* [[Everything's Better with Rainbows]]: Well, it would've been pretty lame to have a show just called ''Reading'', wouldn't it?
* [[Excited Kids' Show Host]]: LeVar is Type 3 (informative, rarely condescending, not wacky/zany, speaks to children like adults).
* [[Excited Kids' Show Host]]: LeVar is Type 3 (informative, rarely condescending, not wacky/zany, speaks to children like adults).
* [[Executive Meddling]] / [[Screwed by the Network]]: An inevitability for any PBS show, considering the lack of funding and constant disagreement about how to secure appropriate revenue streams.
** The cast learned the show had been cancelled just before the night they would accept their 26th Emmy award. Levar Burton was the one who made the announcement during the acceptance speech. He could barely mask the rage and the disappointment in his voice.
* [[Losing Your Head]]: A pair of floating heads startle LeVar in one episode.
* [[Losing Your Head]]: A pair of floating heads startle LeVar in one episode.
* [[Long Runners]]: Spent 26 years on the air before budget cuts killed it in 2009.
* [[Long Runners]]: Spent 26 years on the air before budget cuts killed it in 2009.

Revision as of 13:34, 10 March 2015

"Take a look, it's in a book..."
I think reading is part of the birthright of the human being.
LeVar Burton, actor and children's literacy advocate.

American children's Edutainment Show that aired on PBS from 1983-2009, and whose goal was simple — encourage children to read. It was hosted by co-creator LeVar Burton (yes, that LeVar Burton). In 2014, they launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise one million dollars to fund the show, and reached it in less than a day. By day 2, they had raised over 2.5 million USD -- but don't take my word for it!

Each episode featured a children's story, usually narrated by a celebrity, that focused on a specific theme (i.e., the importance of teamwork or learning about dinosaurs). The show would explore the theme further through various segments, live-action and animated. The last segment of the show would feature children providing recommendations of other books to look for at the library, preceded by LeVar saying "But you don't have to take my word for it." Every show ended with "I'll/We'll see you next time."

This show was part of PBS' "triple crown" of children's programming in The Eighties and The Nineties, along with Sesame Street and Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. It would be difficult indeed to find an American of a certain age who didn't watch this program at least occasionally, if not regularly. It's in the same Dude, Not Funny category as Rogers — rarely parodied (but if it is, it's always the positive kind), and insulting it will cause swift and nasty responses.

Rainbow won a Peabody Award and 26 Emmys, and ended its run as the third longest-running children's program in PBS history (behind the aforementioned Sesame Street and Mister Rogers' Neighborhood).

Tropes used in Reading Rainbow include:

We'll see you next time.