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  • "Reading Rainbow" ends run

    NPR

    Even if you can't remember a specific Reading Rainbow episode, chances are, the theme song is still lodged somewhere in your head:

    Butterfly in the sky, I can go twice as high,
    Take a look, it's in a book — Reading Rainbow ...

    Remember now?

    Reading Rainbow comes to the end of its 26-year run on Friday; it has won more than two-dozen Emmys, and is the third longest-running children's show in PBS history — outlasted only by Sesame Street and Mister Rogers.

    The show, which started in 1983, was hosted by actor LeVar Burton. (If you don't know Burton from Reading Rainbow, he's also famous for his role as Kunta Kinte in Roots, or as the chrome-visored Geordi La Forge on Star Trek: The Next Generation.)

    Each episode of Reading Rainbow had the same basic elements: There was a featured children's book that inspired an adventure with Burton. Then, at the end of every show, kids gave their own book reviews, always prefaced by Burton's trademark line: "But you don't have to take my word for it ..."

    "The series resonates with so many people," says John Grant, who is in charge of content at WNED Buffalo, Reading Rainbow's home station.

    The show's run is ending, Grant explains, because no one — not the station, not PBS, not the Corporation for Public Broadcasting — will put up the several hundred thousand dollars needed to renew the show's broadcast rights.

    Grant says the funding crunch is partially to blame, but the decision to end Reading Rainbow can also be traced to a shift in the philosophy of educational television programming. The change started with the Department of Education under the Bush administration, he explains, which wanted to see a much heavier focus on the basic tools of reading — like phonics and spelling.

    Grant says that PBS, CPB and the Department of Education put significant funding toward programming that would teach kids how to read — but that's not what Reading Rainbow was trying to do.

    "Reading Rainbow taught kids why to read," Grant says. "You know, the love of reading — [the show] encouraged kids to pick up a book and to read."

    Linda Simensky, vice president for children's programming at PBS, says that when Reading Rainbow was developed in the early 1980s, it was an era when the question was: "How do we get kids to read books?"

    Since then, she explains, research has shown that teaching the mechanics of reading should be the network's priority.

    "We've been able to identify the earliest steps that we need to take," Simensky says. "Now we know what we need to do first. Even just from five years ago, I think we all know so much more about how to use television to teach."

    Research has directed programming toward phonics and reading fundamentals as the front line of the literacy fight. Reading Rainbow occupied a more luxurious space — the show operated on the assumption that kids already had basic reading skills and instead focused on fostering a love of books.

    Simensky calls Reading Rainbow's 26-year run miraculous — and says that its end is bittersweet.

    Reading Rainbow's impending absence leaves many open questions about today's literacy challenges, and what television's role should be in addressing them.

    "But" — as Burton would have told his young readers — "you don't have to take my word for it."



    I remember the theme song, to this very day.
    Today, you are the waves of the Pacific, pushing ever eastward. You are the sequoias rising from the Sierra Nevada, defiant and enduring.

  • #2
    LeVar freaks me out without his visor
    Monkey!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      I do not remember the theme song, I was too old too watch it when it started.

      ACK!
      Don't try to confuse the issue with half-truths and gorilla dust!

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      • #4
        noooooooo
        "

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        • #5
          Never heard of it.
          I do remember that he did some type of children's show, but never what it was called.

          I guess I'm the wrong age.
          It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
          RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

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          • #6
            It was agreat show for its purpose, but I have to concur that the purposes is dated and lower priority to teaching the how of reading.
            Gaius Mucius Scaevola Sinistra
            Japher: "crap, did I just post in this thread?"
            "Bloody hell, Lefty.....number one in my list of persons I have no intention of annoying, ever." Bugs ****ing Bunny
            From a 6th grader who readily adpated to internet culture: "Pay attention now, because your opinions suck"

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            • #7
              The show sucked.
              "The DPRK is still in a state of war with the U.S. It's called a black out." - Che explaining why orbital nightime pictures of NK show few lights. Seriously.

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              • #8
                You sucked!

                Actually, the only reason I watched it was because it was on before The Great Space Coaster... which gave me nightmares, confused the hell out of me because they kept slipping into spanish, and helped develop my second personality which is really a talking flute... man, PBS fvcked me up!

                'cept for Bob Ross... Bob Ross Rules.
                Monkey!!!

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                • #9
                  I was of the Sesame Street/ Electric Company generation.
                  I'm consitently stupid- Japher
                  I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned

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                  • #10
                    Reading Rainbow was ****ing awesome.

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                    • #11
                      HT is right.

                      This sucks.
                      "My nation is the world, and my religion is to do good." --Thomas Paine
                      "The subject of onanism is inexhaustable." --Sigmund Freud

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                      • #12
                        beats the hell out of Barney
                        Unbelievable!

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                        • #13
                          I enjoyed that show as a child
                          The Wizard of AAHZ

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                          • #14
                            Where the **** is LeVar Burton's stimulus money?
                            KH FOR OWNER!
                            ASHER FOR CEO!!
                            GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

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                            • #15
                              Reading Rainbow was ****ING AWESOME!

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