Tuesday, May 13, 2008

New version of 1970s kids' `Electric Company' to air.



Remember this show?



Raw Story:

In an updated blast from the past, PBS will air a new version of the 1970s children's series "The Electric Company."

Production on the 21st century model of the PBS show for 6- to 9-year-olds was set to begin Tuesday on the streets of New York City and in a New Jersey studio, according to producer Sesame Workshop.

The series, aimed at reducing the literacy gap between low- and middle-income families, will promote the idea that "reading is cool" with help from online and community-based activities, Sesame Workshop said in an announcement Monday.

"The literacy crisis today is as pervasive and alarming as it was in 1971 when we created the first version of `The Electric Company,'" said Scott Cameron, director of education and research for Sesame Workshop (which is the nonprofit educational organization behind "Sesame Street").
Weekly episodes of "The Electric Company" are scheduled to air nationally in January 2009 on PBS Kids.


1 comment:

airJackie said...

Finally a kids program that educates. PBS should do well as many adults learned from the Electric Company Show. Disney is lose it's young viewers. Now a smart person would have looked to this so long ago. The junk they have on TV is making the kids dumb. The ratings are low and for the kids that do what the Saturday shows it's like grown kids acting. Britney might as well be on Saturday morning as well as Paris. As a kid today how a US bill is passed and they have no idea. Some kid on the bus asked me what was the Constitution, sad so sad.