TV Chat
Related: About this forum50 years ago, The Electric Company used comedy to boost kids' reading skills
When The Electric Company debuted in October, 1971, television hadn't seen anything quite like it. Psychedelic graphics, wildly creative animation, mod outfits, over-the-top characters and sketch comedy all functioned to serve the same goal: teaching kids to read.
Brought to you by the Children's Television Workshop (CTW) the same producers behind Sesame Street, which debuted in 1969 The Electric Company won two Emmys, aired on more than 250 public TV stations and became a teaching tool in thousands of classrooms nationwide.
The show's cast included Academy Award winner Rita Moreno, Bill Cosby and a then unknown Morgan Freeman. Guest stars included Mel Brooks, Zero Mostel, Gene Wilder and Joan Rivers. The teen pop band Short Circus (get it?) included future star Irene Cara. The comedy writers were among the best in the business, and later went on to work on hit TV shows including MASH and Everybody Loves Raymond.
So, with all that going for it, why did The Electric Company run out of juice? The answer shines a light on the fate of many a public media endeavor where making money is as important as the mission statement.
https://www.npr.org/2021/10/25/1048365940/50-years-ago-the-electric-company-used-comedy-to-boost-kids-reading-skills
___________________________________________________________________________________
My kids, even the ASD one, adored this show. My only complaint was that it came on and revved them up after Mr. Rogers calmed them down.
agingdem
(8,541 posts)please forgive me if I don't".. and my favorite...the Corsican Twins
Jilly_in_VA
(11,148 posts)wrote some of the songs for TEC, which isn't mentioned in the article. "Vincent the Vegetable Vampire" was my kids' favorite.
TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)Some day some one will figure out how we went from saving the world to destroying it in two generations.
GPV
(73,089 posts)Ka-Dinh Oy
(11,686 posts)I was lucky I did not have siblings who liked it so I would be forced to watch it. Yeah, my brother couldn't stand it either.
JustAnotherGen
(33,866 posts)demigoddess
(6,675 posts)one son read at a 2nd grade level in kindergarten. Wish they would rerun those episodes for the kids today, with no school. Also parents read to your kids. let them look over your shoulder while you read.
Beartracks
(13,620 posts)... until now that perhaps Sesame Street and The Electric Company might have had something to do with that. I've just always assumed we were naturally gifted!
=============