April 09, 2008

Deciphering Children's TV

When you have kids you learn kid things.

Not that your child may like certain foods or certain toys, and not that your child may want to be held a certain way.

You learn about children's entertainment.

And I'm not talking about clowns (which are banned in this household no matter how much I love our children, banned I tell you!)

Specifically, you learn to hate children's TV.

In talks with both my brother-in-law (his son - the babies' 16 month old cousin - is a huge fan of a show the babies love) and Pru, I learned that I was not alone in assessing children's TV.

The babies love a hugely popular TV programme over here called In the Night Garden. Yes, that would be the 6 month old babies. No, they don't watch TV. One evening I was cooking and Nick was up with me - he was mesmerized by In the Night Garden, and it's so highly acclaimed for being educational and good for children that I let both of them watch it. In the Night Garden is on every night at 6:25, or it was until CBeebies decided to fuck with our minds and move the timetable around, thereby making their message that "routines are good for kids" null and void as my babes wonder why the hell they can't watch In the Night Garden anymore.

Not familiar with In the Night Garden? This short clip may help.

You might want to go ahead and drop acid now, before the clip starts, as it'll probably make the whole thing make more sense.


According to this website, the show is supposed to be about:

"Filmed in a real woodland setting, In The Night Garden is a magical programme, for the under-4s, about the dreaming time between waking and sleeping. Reached by following a magical little, blue star, the Night Garden is a warm and affectionate world which is home to a comical and diverse community of toys, living happily together."


My ass.

The basis of the show, as far as my mind-numbed brain can work out, is a little chap named Iggle Piggle takes a boat across the Land of Nod, to wind up in the Night Garden. The sail of his boat becomes his little blanket. He interacts with many other character in the Night Garden, all of which have some deep-seated psychological issue.

Iggle Piggle is, inexplicably, blue and furry with an asymmetrical head.


iggle.jpg

Scary little fucker, isn't he? And he's the lead character. He communicates by squeaks, which drives Gorby nuts. He is the one for whom many rules need not apply - the others have to go to bed at the end of the show, but not Iggle Piggle. He just waves. No one is allowed to use the Night Garden phone but Iggle Piggle. Iggle Piggle thinks he's the boss of him. Iggle Piggle thinks he's the shit. What a narcissist.

The whole thing is narrated by Derek Jacobi. That'd be Sir Derek Jacobi. As in, Sir Derek Jacobi the classically trained Shakesperean actor, singing words like "Iggle Piggle Wiggle Niggle Woo". It's hard for me to get my head around, especially as Sir Derek Jacobi sings the song both off-key and off-tempo. The babies don't seem to notice, but I usually am bleeding from the eardrums. This isn't even taking into account that the narrative is accented by some birds that are colored the wrong colors and sound like musical instruments.

There's a character named Upsy Daisy in the show, too. Upsy Daisy makes me want to punch people. And before I get accused of it, no of course it's not because she appears to be a character who is black. She could be purple - in fact, it might make more sense if she was purple - and I'd still want to punch her.


Upsy Daisy


It's because Upsy Daisy only knows how to say two things: "Upsy Daisy!" and "Daisy Do!". And she says them in a voice that implies helium has been inhaled. And when she wants to dance for everyone she inflates her skirt and twirls around while everyone watches, her knickers visible to the whole damn world. This is, apparently, a modern take on pole dancing. Why use a pole when an inflatable skirt will do? Upsy Daisy also goes around kissing everyone in the Night Garden. She is, as Pru and I agreed, a perky whore. She clearly wants everyone to love her for her kisses. She is not true to herself. She is easily sidetracked. She goes up and down - one moment she's kissing Iggle Piggle, the next she's all "Upsy Daisy!" dealing with a dilemma. She is bipolar if there ever was a bipolar model.

Then there is Makka Pakka. Makka Pakka has issues. Serious, deep-set issues.


Makka Pakka.jpg


Makka Pakka is...well I don't know what the hell he is. I thought he was someone showing a disability, as the BBC is very prone to political correctness (Balamory, for example, has a Fillipina woman in a wheelchair. I'm not saying that people in wheelchairs and minorities shouldn't be shown because of course they should. It's just that you don't see a lot of people who fit that model on a remote island off the coast of Scotland). Makka Pakka pushes what I thought was a Zimmer frame/walker. Then I found out what it was - it's a cart that holds a trumpet, a sponge, a hand dryer, and a bar of soap. Makka Pakka likes to spend his time washing rocks, which is his favorite companion of all. He even sleeps with rocks. He has commitment and attachment issues - bonding with rocks shows a clear inability to relate to people. Anytime you see him, he's enjoying washing rocks. Actually, Makka Pakka enjoys washing anything and whips out his sponge and soap at any hint of a germ which is why he won't travel without his mobile washing cart.

Makka Pakka makes my case of OCD look like a cake walk.

My favorite characters are the Tombliboos. They don't talk either, except to say the word "tombliboo", which they say a lot in a squeaky voice that Shirley Temple would envy. They appear to be three of the same...species...who live together in a hedge. They move as fast as Charlie Chaplin does in the old films. They are bright and colorful and weird and I want to pull on those little round things on the tops of their heads and see if I can make them say a sound other than "tombliboo".


Tombliboos.jpg


They also all take off their pants and hang them on a washing line before going into the house, for reasons I can't comprehend. Are they incontinent? Are they naturalists? Are we going about it the wrong way by taking off our shoes before going into our house, should we instead take off our trousers? Once inside the Tombliboos go to bed, where they kiss each other a lot and curl up and sleep together.

Naughty, naughty tombliboos.

Characters on In the Night Garden ride around in the Ninky Nonk (I always, always worry I'm going to slip up saying that one) which is a train with lights that Angus says frighten him. And Angus is into lights. It's a hard one for me to reconcile.


ninky nonk.jpg


I've only ever seen Iggle Piggle and Upsy Daisy in the Ninky Nonk. The Night Garden is clearly s a very elitist society. The shame.

You can also travel by floating green Pinky Ponk. When it flies it makes fart noises. I'm thinking they may want to investigate alternate fuel options. When you fly in the Pinky Ponk, you can drink Pinky Ponk Juice, which makes everyone happy. Angus and I are usually sitting there with glazed eyes, thinking about drinking our Pinky Ponk Juice, too.

The Pinky Ponk is, in essence, a giant floating bar, enabling all of the Night Garden characters' neurosis.

Finally there are the Ponty Pines.


Pontypines.jpg


You can see them on that YouTube clip I have above - they're two families of tiny blue and red people. Only you never see the blue people. I thought it was becaues the BBC was blueist and against blue people. I've since figured out the truth - it's not that the BBC is blueist. The blue Ponty Pines are agoraphobic. You see them in the closing dance scene, but other than that I think they use the handle of a broom to push their empty milk bottles outside their door and beg their postman to go away, spending hours online talking to other agoraphobics. Their neighbors, the red Ponty Pines, are a family of 10 - Ma and Pa Ponty Pine, who dress in a way that clearly implies they are immigrants to the Night Garden, perhaps serving up traditional casserole dishes and piping in satellite TV from their Mother Land, plus 8 children who look to be the same age. The Ponty Pine children are clearly octuplets, which Ma and Pa Ponty Pine conceived using fertility drugs. They all share one bedroom, because Ma Ponty Pine carried all 8 children to term and then their sponsorship deal with Oprah ran dry, forcing them to relocate to sub-standard semi-detached housing.

This show is what the babies love.

They sit there, mesmerized, as we watch stories of the characters.

I make up my own stories to go along, because you do what you can.

-H.

PS-of course In the Night Garden is very sweet and educational - all about sharing and friendship and consideration. There's not an evil bone in those bodies. But you do go a bit mad watching episode after episode, and giving each character their own psychological condition just ups the adult fun element.

Posted by: Everydaystranger at 07:19 AM | Comments (33) | Add Comment
Post contains 1635 words, total size 10 kb.

1 OMG...that is awesome. And strange! heh

Posted by: justdawn at April 09, 2008 07:11 AM (NCAog)

2 You are effing hilarious! Amy discovered In the Night Garden when we were in the UK in January. She stayed the night with friends whilst we went to the wedding and the next day she kept saying something which made NO sense to me, I later learned she was trying to say iggle piggle. A couple of days later we stayed with friends and the only way they can get their one year old to eat dinner is to let her watch a dancing, singing Iggle Piggle and his blankie which was apparently the most popular toy last Christmas and as rare as those blue Pinky Ponks! Anyway, we don't get it here so no fun make up stories for me! An aside, Amy calls her shows her "hos" which cracks me up!

Posted by: Super Sarah at April 09, 2008 07:34 AM (d7dEB)

3 This programme is like a religion for children! I hope the building work is cracking along at a fine pace and that you are feeling better. Abs x

Posted by: abs at April 09, 2008 09:35 AM (4bc3P)

4 what. the. fuck. seriously, that's all i've got. although I think that clip convinced me that I need to go back to bed. and sleep for a few years.

Posted by: April at April 09, 2008 10:23 AM (428Y9)

5 Is it bad that at first glance I thought that the mobile cleaning cart was actually some kind of bong? I thought so.

Posted by: Veronica at April 09, 2008 11:12 AM (zd/6k)

6 It all sounds almost as bizarre as the Teletubbies used to be. Give me Spngebob Squarepants or the Rugrats any day.

Posted by: ~Easy at April 09, 2008 11:12 AM (XD24A)

7 Blake was so enthralled by that clip, that we are desperately searching to see if it is available here in Texas on BBC. And, it's not. Fuck. There goes my hope of showering alone. EVER.

Posted by: Andria at April 09, 2008 12:10 PM (Oo4k1)

8 That show is similar to Teletubbies, it seems, which also makes you want to drop acid. The two things that the Mini will watch is Baby Signing Time and Sesame Street, and not even the whole thing, just Elmo's world, although, he's starting to tire of both of those, and I'm desperately searching for a replacement. He really isn't interested.

Posted by: statia at April 09, 2008 12:15 PM (5IjqH)

9 A message board I read is currently aflame as a result of the re-timing of INTG....not sure my two think it is that fabulous to make a fuss about. Oh - Penny Pocket from Balamory is a half-Greek Geordie not Philipina - so a different demographic being honoured there by the Beeb!

Posted by: Betty M at April 09, 2008 12:25 PM (q0m9f)

10 It's fascinating what will interest kids isn't it? It was that flippin Pookeroo and Barney when my kids were little, then along came the Teletubbies and Caillou. Caillou made me want to slash my wrists and if I could have I would have hunted Barney down and used him for a rug. It's just starting for you - aren't you lucky?

Posted by: lostdawill at April 09, 2008 12:27 PM (ldVrC)

11 Eeep! Thanks Betty. I goggled Penny from Balamory but only came up with info that she's Fillipina. Duly corrected. Although I'm still not sure there are a lot of half-Greek Geordies on Mull, but it's a step closer than the Phillipines, anyway.

Posted by: Helen at April 09, 2008 12:29 PM (dgQ5L)

12 And I thought Barney was bad. I guess it could always be worse. I haven't seen "In the Night Garden", but it might be rivaled by "Teletubbies". I couldn't stand that show.

Posted by: Solomon at April 09, 2008 12:35 PM (x+GoF)

13 I'm 27 and this is mandatory viewing these days. I just love the changes in perspective that seem to have no impact on little ones but creeps the hell out of me! Should be available on the BBC iPlayer for those outside of BBC programming catchment: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/search/?q=night+garden&go=Find+Programmes

Posted by: Rob at April 09, 2008 12:46 PM (Kx3de)

14 omg, that makes my brain come out of my ears. But I love your comments :-) Good luck with the construction. Btw that was a part of my son's childtime addiction: Construction sites. His first English word was "caterpillar" :-) Lily

Posted by: Lily at April 09, 2008 01:45 PM (Qgh4R)

15 How incredibly hilarious. My son is almost 16 months and they just started airing INTG in Canada a few weeks ago. I'm not sure I understand the "educational benefits" of it at all - in fact, I worry that it may cause internal bleeding in parents, but he loves it! That and Backyardigans, which I don't mind one bit. Oh - and the blue Pontypines are called Wattingers, no?

Posted by: Tamara at April 09, 2008 01:50 PM (OuyAg)

16 My brain can't handle this. Too strange.

Posted by: Jen at April 09, 2008 02:09 PM (FYm8s)

17 I will not let my kids watch any show that I can't stand myself. This is one show they'd never be able to watch!

Posted by: Jen (aaron-n-jen.com) at April 09, 2008 02:11 PM (CPwj/)

18 Hmmm.... We just started letting Bridget watch TV and the only thing so far she's expressed interest in is Sesame Street. And I honestly find myself entertained by it. I'm not sure if that's a pat on the back for PBS or an admission of a serious character flaw of mine.

Posted by: donna at April 09, 2008 02:21 PM (Yg10E)

19 Unhhhhh... uh... that clip was less than three minutes long, but already I've got drool coming out of the corner of my mouth. I cannot believe that any adult can sit through more than five minutes of that. You are a sturdier woman than I, my dear, that's for sure. And hilarious to boot.

Posted by: Kath at April 09, 2008 02:53 PM (AeYx3)

20 Ok I couldn't watch the clip here at work but I looked at all the photos. It does seem like a crazy spin-off from the Teletubbies. My 3 year old loved the Teletubbies - he would watch it at grandma's as she had it on demand. I thought it was ok-ish and I liked the kid segments but it drove me nuts as to why they had to immediately repeat the SAME EXACT THING twice in a row. We seem to be Disney fans in our house Peter *loves* Mickey House as he calls it. He never got into the wiggles or, thank God, the Higleytown Heroes. Now there is a show I cannot watch at all. I just hate how stupid the kids are all the time. Little Einstiens get close for me too - actually for them I feel sort of sad as they seem to be the only people in the world and have to befriend baby animals that are really stupid all the time. We love Curious George because it is just so goofy with its logic sometimes - Peter sits and watches that like he's hypnotized. But as another reader stated Caillou (or however you spell that) is just awful. Once again another really stupid kid that does nothing right and everyone says 'oh that's ok'. Actually we watch a lot of Pixar movies in our house. Cars, Toy Story, a Bugs life, Nemo (oh God, don't get me started on Nemo. EVERY SINGLE NIGHT FOR TWO MONTHS.) So that's my kids entertainment update. Thanks for the laugh! Jennifer

Posted by: Jennifer at April 09, 2008 03:26 PM (6JvP5)

21 I think that Makka Pakka dude is a giany vegetable. He looks an awful lot like that parsnip guy from Bob the Builder.... Really, I can't wait until they're big enough for Blue's Clues and Sesame Street. At least those you'll be able to watch without losing your mind!

Posted by: caltechgirl at April 09, 2008 03:29 PM (IfXtw)

22 Wow. That makes "Big Big World" look tame. As this is my second trip to Kid TV and I have done my time with Barney, TMMT (the original) and Pokemon. This time, I've done Baby TV (which is too slow for most 6 month olds, seriously) and Noggin (which after the same 12 shows run repeatedly over and over and over will cause seizures in anyone over 13 years of age) but I'm very grateful for them both. I am comforted by the continuing appearance of Sesame Street and we all love "Word World." So you know, it's not ALL bad. Either that or I've just given up. Heh.

Posted by: Margi at April 09, 2008 04:27 PM (zfeQt)

23 Wow, I just showed that clip to Abby and she sat transfixed for the whole 2 and a half minutes. That is really... something.

Posted by: Elizabeth at April 09, 2008 05:28 PM (icBch)

24 Tamara pointed out what I was going to say - the blue family are the Wattingers, which has been my new favourite word since I learned what they were called a few weeks ago. Also, if you are such a Night Garden purist, may I ask why there is no mention of the hahoos? Or as P says, "Haoooos". C'mon now. Also, if you have Sky there are a couple of good, sort of generic, baby channels - Baby TV (623) and BabyFirst (624). P much prefers Baby TV, but who knows which N&N would like!

Posted by: MsPrufrock at April 09, 2008 06:56 PM (1NDGw)

25 [sitting in a corner, fingering his lips and making strange noises] Wow. After that one I had to go find some obnoxious music to listen to, and go find some Youtube videos of the Muppets to clear the dreck out of my head.

Posted by: diamond dave at April 09, 2008 07:19 PM (Cj9I0)

26 There's something I really don't get with kids TV. Why are the characters that creepy? Why does the whole thing seem to be drug-induced? Like the Teletubbies. That's weird man.

Posted by: Zhu at April 09, 2008 09:53 PM (pE20h)

27 I didn't think it was possible to go downhill from Barney, but along came the Wiggles. Then, because that wasn't horrrible enough, the Teletubies. Surely that was rock bottom. The absolute depth of todler entertainment and parental misery. But apprently I was wrong. They made it worse again. I shudder to think where they might go next.

Posted by: Stephen Macklin at April 10, 2008 01:20 AM (R7LgM)

28 This show is 20 kinds of disturbing. This is why we stick to shoving Free to Be You and Me down their throats.

Posted by: Mel at April 10, 2008 02:10 AM (veSRV)

29 So at this point I have pretty much vowed not to have my kids watch television as babies or toddlers. Not too hard; I don't watch television myself (fell out of the habit in college and gained an internet addiction instead.) The television is a device for watching DVDs and the occasional sports event. My dirty little secret is that it's not the anti-TV forces, or their research into the effects of TV on developing brains that made me make this decision. The secret is that it is programs like this that make me go "oh HELL no" because I don't want to see this, therefore the kids won't really know it exists if I don't show it to them, right? No TV for them equals no brain-melty for me. We'll see how long this works out in actual practice. The one thing I know for sure about child-rearing is that once you have a kid, all bets are off.

Posted by: B. Durbin at April 10, 2008 02:25 AM (tie24)

30 Seriously.Going.To.Have.Nightmares.Tonight.

Posted by: Kristine at April 10, 2008 02:34 AM (8SRDh)

31 I've told Adam for years that if somewhat wanted to make a seriously disturbing movie, forget psychos with chainsaws or vendettas to score-look no further then children's television.

Posted by: Teresa at April 11, 2008 03:47 PM (CE0ea)

32 I found this page when I typed 'Makka Pakka OCD' into Google! Just beacuse I wanted to know if I was the only one who had noticed! Turns out that it's mentioned on quite a few websites! What really confuses me about 'In the Night Garden' is that one minute the little Ninky-Nonk scuttles past them and barely comes up to Igglepiggle's knee, then the next minute he and Upsydaisy have shrunk... or the Ninky-Nonk's grown... and they're inside it! Trippy!

Posted by: Ryme Intrinseca at April 12, 2008 05:09 PM (7IRxy)

33 Seriously. WTF????

Posted by: Lauren at April 14, 2008 03:24 PM (iUfJz)

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