With broadcast networks, cable channels, and streaming platforms all offering children’s programming, the sheer number of kids’ television shows available today is staggering. While each series aims ...
The death of producer Sid Krofft on April 10 revived memories of a very different era in kids’ TV when producers and networks ...
Kids these days. They will never know the anticipation and thrill of sitting in front of the television, waiting for a beloved show to begin. Before digital recording devices allowed one to watch an ...
Maybe it's just the nostalgia talking, but millennials almost undoubtedly grew up with some of the best shows on TV. Babies born between 1981 and 1996 helped pioneer the rise of Nickelodeon and Disney ...
With the debut this week of new series Phoebe & Jay, the children’s programming division of PBS waves goodbye to an era where it could count on federal assistance for both programming and research.
PBS programming has housed some of the most iconic kids’ shows out there—from Sesame Street to Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood to ...
"Carl the Collector" is a PBS Kids show where the main character has autism. Maryland Public Television recently won an Emmy for its role in the production of the show.
Kids' television creator Sid Krofft, who along with his brother Marty created some of the most memorable and weirdest children's programming of the late 1960s, '70s and early '80s, has died at age 96.
HENDERSON, Tenn. — The children’s show “Makin’ Music” premiered at the Dryden Auditorium at Freed-Hardeman University. More ...