I’m over at my brother Matt’s house at least once a week for dinner, and while I’m there, I spend a good amount of time with my nephew Travis. Travis is 18 months old now, and for the last few months has been picking up his first words. Once he gets home, the television gets turned on to the Sprout network, and usually stays on that channel until he is put to sleep. He reacts to the different characters he sees there, too, although he can’t say any of their names yet. Since I’m usually there during the evening hours, we’re watching the Goodnight Show, with Nina and Star. I’ve gotten to know them and the cartoons they introduce fairly well.
The show kicks off at 6 with Nina singing the intro song, and after a few minutes talking with Star about the show’s theme for the night, the Berenstain Bears start off the cartoon lineup. That sets the pattern of animated shows with Nina and Star segments between. Sometimes Travis will stand in front of the TV set mesmerized with Nina and Star, and sometimes he would try to touch Star. I do remember at one time thinking the TV was a kind of electronic window where the people on the other end could see and hear me. I don’t remember thinking that I could touch people on the other end or somehow cross over through the screen into their world. But I eventually figured out that the communication was one way, and that the people on the other end couldn’t see me. I even remember Mr. Rogers saying that he couldn’t see me when he was on the screen, but by that time I got it. It’s a concept Travis will soon understand as well. Today, not only are there images on television, but there is also the internet, something that didn’t exist until I was an adult. I don’t know how Travis sees it when someone pulls up an image on YouTube for him. I wonder if he thinks that the images on the computer can see him and talk with him, especially now, when webcams and Skype have made interactive visual communication commonplace. Small children may have a hard time telling the difference between a taped and live image.
The next segment to come on is the birthday messages with guests from the Sunny Side Up Show, which features a puppet chicken named Chica paired with one of several co-hosts. It seems like it’s usually Liz, and sometimes Sean. After Chica and another Nina and Star segment comes Thomas and Friends. Thomas has recently been retooled and re-animated. Previously, the setting was like a model railroad show, with voices added to the stationary figures. I’m guessing that is how the Reverend Wilbert Awdry wrote the first Thomas books, by playing with a model railroad and creating stories based on what he saw and imagined. But now the stationary faces and figurines have been replaced with real animation. Thomas and the other engines talk, with their lips now moving and showing different facial expressions. Sir Topham Hat and the other people in the show are animated that way as well. Their faces and body parts now move. Other than that, it’s still generally the same, but different from the days when Ringo and George Carlin narrated the series.
Next is Angelina Ballerina, which has also recently had an animation makeover, now using 3D animation instead of the old pen-and-ink drawings. After Angelina is more Nina and Star. At the top of the 7 o’clock hour comes Poppy Cat, which is fairly new to Sprout, or at least to me. Each Poppy Cat episode is centered around an adventure that the cat and her friends go on. It starts with Poppy’s owner, a small girl, reading Poppy a story she has written, and an imaginary world is created where Poppy and her friends go on an adventure. Poppy’s friends include a mouse and owl, which are of course natural enemies to cats. But in the cartoon realm, there are no rules, so Poppy and her friends can live happily in the better world that the small girl creates.
After Poppy Cat comes Nina’s Sand Drawings followed by Nina’s Little Fables. To be honest, I don’t pay a whole lot attention to those features. I just remember Nina would make finger drawings in the sand, and then the fables would show the dark shadowy figures of the animals she would talk about. After that came Caillou. It seems that is the favorite of a lot of the children. Caillou just likes to let his imagination run away with whatever he sees. I could relate to that, because I had all those kinds of fantasies, too. In some ways, I’m still like that, an adult Caillou. Around there, I Iose track of the order of shows. I’m not familiar with what plays on the Goodnight Show after 8, when Travis goes to bed. Right around 8 the Pajanimals come on, a show which Matt’s wife Christie loves, but doesn’t always get to see, as Travis is usually being fed or is being put to sleep at that time. During the feeding and the rocking, my brother puts on the Weather Channel local forecast station, and puts Travis to sleep to the smooth jazz music that is always playing. I think sometime during the 8 o’clock hour, Driver Dan’s Story Train comes on. Driver Dan is a soft-spoken lion, who drives an odd-looking road train with rubber tires, with cars for each of his animal friends that he takes along. After he meets his friends and takes a ride, the story comes. He pulls a book from one of the cars on his train, and pulls out a car full of pillows for all his animal friends to sit on while he reads. Also sometime during that hour, Kipper the Dog comes on, which formerly held the 7 o’clock slot that Poppy Cat now occupies. Kipper is a gentlemanly brown dog with an English accent whose main friends are Tiger, another dog, and two pigs.
All during the time the Sprout channel is going, Travis is alternately watching or playing with one of his many toys. Other things distract him too. He loves to play in his ball pit, he loves going head first into one of his blankets, or a pillow or something else that is soft. He’ll walk into the other rooms and into the kitchen, where Matt usually is either cooking or cleaning. I make myself useful right there, to play with and keep an eye on Travis while Matt is busy with his work in the kitchen. Travis also loves to play with the broom, and once he sees it, he is walking around the house with it. He also loves to have someone read him a book, but when he comes to me, I usually don’t get to read much. He is constantly turning the pages before I could read them, and his child attention span being what it is, he is usually up and moving around before long, to the next object that gets his attention.
I usually stay in a different room while Travis is being fed his milk and put to sleep. Sometimes I’ll stay around the kitchen, sometimes I’ll go into the guest room where the laptop usually is, and spend some time on the computer, as if I don’t already spend enough time online right here at home. Once Travis is put in bed, Matt and I usually go outside, and he smokes his nightly cigar. Matt quit smoking cigarettes several years ago, but he still feels a need to have some kind of tobacco habit. I remember whenever he quit smoking for a while, he would start dipping Kodiak. Now, I don’t think he takes in any other tobacco aside from his cigar.
I usually take off a few minutes after we go back in, and Matt puts on either a science show or the Military Channel. On certain nights during the peak of the season, Christie watches Dancing with the Stars or Glee, or other shows similar to those, although she hasn’t done that lately. She has been falling asleep with Travis on the chair as she puts him to sleep, and is not really awake to watch any of her favorite shows. Maybe she wakes up a little later and watches her shows after I leave, but I’m usually gone by then. I’m usually home in about 10 or 15 minutes. Since this isn’t my everyday pattern, I don’t repeat it the next morning. But I have done this enough that I know the routine, and sometime within the next week I’ll go through the pattern again.