HeyButtahfly
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 5, 2007
- Messages
- 507
- Reaction score
- 205
Thank you, NMac! I also miss Bear and when I remember the gentle and playful spirit about him, I smile.
I couldn't have said it better! Disney owns all the rights now, heck it was a Disney/JHC venture to begin with, and had always had Disney Channel television rights....such is why their refusal to air it on any of their channels makes no sense.Bear is desperately missed and needed. It filled a huge niche in childrens television which has only left all that much more bigger a hole since its departure. The show's been off the air for enough years to where all Disney would have to do is air the reruns/rerelease the dvds to a whole new group of kids and their appreciative fans. Given Disney Channel's early morning children programming, it wouldn't be out of place or not fit in. 2011 may be the Year of the Muppets but i think we fans should band together to make sure that what seems more like the "red-headed stepchild" doesn't get forgotten and ignored but rather revived.
I say fans should just take to downloading. Seriously, I know thats "taboo" to say, but honestly...waiting 15-35 years for the home release of shows is baloney. Yes, downloading is what killed the anime dvd industry in America...but these companies have to learn that they can't toy with fans like that.There are just so many things you listed that actually answered themselves.
Bear was a much needed jolt, sure... but now people don't want jolt, they want (or are told to want) this anal retentive, highstrung stuff that treats the kids like they're all very slow and unintelligent, having characters wait around to answer their own questions while talking very slowly. I truly believe that Blue's Clues was one of the horsemen of the children's TV Apocalypse, and everyone who was everyone one was copying that format. EVEN Sesame Street (Journey to Ernie).
Disney's preschool line up consists of multiple shows EXACTLY like that. I'd hate to see them do a CGI Bear where he asks viewers where the red triangle is (right behind him) for 20 seconds when an artificial audience voice over shouts the answer, then congratulating the real audience for not doing anything. I've said it a million times, TV (at least as we know it in ways we know) is NOT an interactive medium. Shows like Sesame Street and Mr. Rogers, and even Bear treated the audience as just that. They'd talk to them and encourage them to participate in on screen activities, but only like they're friendly TV personalities talking directly to their audience.
As for DVD's... let's put it this way.
Disney is HORRIBLE at releasing things on DVD. Sure, when it comes to movies, they can do no wrong, but when it comes to TV shows, they have no bloody idea what they're doing at all ever ever in the history of ever. We've been lucky thus far with the Muppet Show releases (some rights hiccup is definitely at fault with the lateness of S4, so you can't even say they don't wanna do it), but they feel like they have to sell the same amount of TV DVD's as their movies. We have incomplete Disney Afternoon releases. That was the best they could do. Even with their high rated Phineas and Ferb, they can't release the show unless they cobble it into "movies." Seriously, compete season sets won't KILL you!
Think of it this way. You'd think that as Popular as Winnie the Pooh is, we would have seen better New Adventures of Winne the Pooh releases. We got like 2 3 episode singles and that was it.
Now, I'm not expecting complete series sets of Bear with a milliondy trillion special features... a series of single disk releases, even subcontracted, may just get interest in the property again. Or reruns, but as they're set in their ways with preschool programming (which is like preprepreschool now), it's not such an easy task.
I'm not saying we need new episodes (though that would be great) but just releasing what you have will go far enough.
It's a PBS thing. They have shows that last for god knows how long and then they slowly ease them out. heck, the flop bomb failure of Boohbah was on for at least 3 years of deep discount clearance toys and merchandise no one wanted before they got rid of it. It is the same longevity that kept Sesame Street on for 40 + years (as well as Mr. Rogers for 30 something), and unfortunately it kept a lot of flash in the pan garbage like Barney long after anyone even cared. Teletubbies was on for 10 years about. It was an annoying fad, and that's it.I think some sort of internal politics or *something* we're not privy too is the reason. Barney is still on the air, and I would never ever let my kid watch that insult of a show.
I'm grateful I at least have some of the dvds.
Well, it partially did... the Japanese animation studios give us such annoying red tape when it comes to licensing it to another company, and they're completely fumble thumbs when they license it themselves. They also push the new, similar, and frankly uninteresting stuff (mostly lame moe garbage) and we never get the great classics that shaped the tropes of all the dumb kiddy toy commercials that they still show. Not to mention the idiotic cultural gaps that keep us from getting GOOD kid's shows like Doraemon. So basically the downloaders have a hand in it, but its also their own dang fault (people who bought just as illegally taped off TV stuff from Korean grocers in the 80's were the same thing anyway, but they brought interest into it when no one else cared).I say fans should just take to downloading. Seriously, I know thats "taboo" to say, but honestly...waiting 15-35 years for the home release of shows is baloney. Yes, downloading is what killed the anime dvd industry in America...but these companies have to learn that they can't toy with fans like that.
Exactly. It's all about how cheap and ugly and loud they can make these things. They're all really disposable (unfortunately not Dora which has been around WAAAAY longer than it should have) and replaceable with similar looking and sounding junk. I wish more shows took the Wubzy and Mr. Men show route and actually made a SHOW first and put educational stuff intermittently into it, instead of making the entire show about pausing and looking for stuff like it's a cheap computer game.Second, it is absolutely terrible just how far down the evolutionary scale children's morning programming has fallen.
I thought it was bad with Blue's Clues, Barney and Telletubbies...but the "pause" stuff is just ridiculous.
Not to mention, wayyyyy too many shoddy cgi series. The cgi is so bad, that it would have been laughed out of a room back in 1984. Reboot had better cg in 1994 than this stuff(like that Mickey Mouse one)
Super Why's gotta be the worst of all of that. (Why don't they cancel that garbage and put Mr. Rogers or Reading Rainbow back on the air in its place?) I wish PBS could air Bear episodes. Kids who didn't get the Disney Channel when Bear originally aired could get a chance to see him.Bear was a much needed jolt, sure... but now people don't want jolt, they want (or are told to want) this anal retentive, highstrung stuff that treats the kids like they're all very slow and unintelligent, having characters wait around to answer their own questions while talking very slowly.