Surfnshannon Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Sorry - I have to ask...as I thought he was a boy and now I'm hearing conflicting information. A mother has to know these things....
Sivy Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 blue is a girl http://www.bluesclues.net/friend1.html
Surfnshannon Posted February 9, 2004 Author Posted February 9, 2004 So why is she blue with a pink girlfriend....I'm so confused!
Crow_Nest Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Me too, i always though that blue was a boy. and that pink puppy is a his gf. If you are asking this question... Does that mean your son is watching it? Oh and Astro (if you read this). Spam post +1
leXX Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Yes, Blue is a girl. I thought she was a boy at first too, until I heard Kevin say "she". My kids love that show.
txa1265 Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 My older son (7) had the stomach bug this weekend and so both boys got extra TV time (younger is almost 6) and watched Dora and Blues Clues for the first time in ages ... they really enjoyed it. We went to see 'Blues Clues Live' 2 times ... Blue is a she. Even under the costume it was a she Mike
IG-64 Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Wow, A show that actually didn't follow the color-coded steriotype, amasing. Buuut, this concludes in the fasion of the woman power crase lately. Come on, girls, were all the same, there is no "supirior sex" although that sounds like a stupid guy thing to say, IMO it is true.
Reaper Girl Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 I still think its kinda weird. I always thought Blue was a girl... ...sick day, nothing was on...i swear... bo bo BO! STTCT Why do you need to know, besides the mother bit? ...Nightmarish incident #667: Cross-dressing your kids on Halloween by accident...(Note: the grim reaper is fair game for all genders...)
Surfnshannon Posted February 9, 2004 Author Posted February 9, 2004 Well a site I was reading...had posters talking about that Blues Live thing and refering to blue as a "she" and I got all confused. I've watched the show with the baby - he likes anything with bright colors and music - DH thinks its the stupidest thing and can't believe that guy is doing that job. I'm like "Its' for the children!"... Anyways..that's why I wanted to know...it never dawned on me she wasn't a he!
IG-64 Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Whatever you do, do not expose your child to teletubbies some bad crap in that show... not to mention it cycles everything untill it reaches 30 minutes
leXX Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Teletubies is based on psychological studies of young children, and is actually a great show for kids. The reason it repeats everything is because studies have shown that the more children see the same thing, the more they learn. Just because you find it stupid, doesn't mean it isn't educational. Kids love it. Teletubies had my daughter counting to five at ten months old.
IG-64 Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Originally posted by leXX Teletubies is based on psychological studies of young children, and is actually a great show for kids. The reason it repeats everything is because studies have shown that the more children see the same thing, the more they learn. Just because you find it stupid, doesn't mean it isn't educational. Kids love it. Teletubies had my daughter counting to five at ten months old. Heh, scientific child stimulation seriously, though, I could make teletubbies on a small budget.
leXX Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 If you are going to try and argue your point, at least do it properly. Is "Heh" the best you can come up with? My daughter grew up watching Teletubies and her spelling and grammar are better than yours at six years old.
Pie™ Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 And now for the real question; Is Steve or Kevin or whatever his/her/its name is a guy? When i lived in the US my sister used to watch it, left big scars in my head
Tyrion Posted February 9, 2004 Posted February 9, 2004 Originally posted by leXX If you are going to try and argue your point, at least do it properly. Is "Heh" the best you can come up with? My daughter grew up watching Teletubies and her spelling and grammar are better than yours at six years old. W3|| W3||??? 11111oonneonne t1m3 1 w@tch3d MTV OMG OMG OMG @nD 1t m@d3 m3 sUp3r sm@rt!!! 1111oneoneone. But er IG..personally, I'd be scared if someone your age actually liked Tellytubbies..the reason it repeats basic knowledge is because little kids(and I mean little..<2) dont have the mental capacity to fully understand everything on the first pass.
Datheus Posted February 10, 2004 Posted February 10, 2004 Originally posted by IG-64 seriously, though, I could make teletubbies on a small budget. They're kids, man. Their brains are still mushy. Who in their right mind would spend big bucks on a TV show? Though, if you ask me, all we should let children watch are reruns of Steven Segal movies on TBS. (Tweleve posts to go..)
Guest Jed Posted February 10, 2004 Posted February 10, 2004 Datheus, the last thing we need is a nation full of kids that can kick our asses. Wait, we already do have that. SWISH! </tryingtoactlikeobi>
Reaper Girl Posted February 10, 2004 Posted February 10, 2004 Originally posted by leXX My daughter grew up watching Teletubies and her spelling and grammar are better than yours at six years old. True. I watched Barney and Sesame St. and the like as a poppet and I could count to a hundred by 4. While I watched, however, my mother banged her head on the wall in the next room... ...i still wanted to watch "BatMan" instead...*sulks*
DarkLord60 Posted February 10, 2004 Posted February 10, 2004 Originally posted by Orca Wail While I watched, however, my mother banged her head on the wall in the next room... Wow bugged your mom that much huh?
Nerd_Annhilator Posted February 10, 2004 Posted February 10, 2004 Wow, I was ultimatly illiterate before the age of...well, before grade two, which was really sad.(mind you, I *could* read, just not really well, at all) Also, I pretty much decided that I never wanted to do any work, so my teacher (in grade one) was rather worried about me. My father, when he was in school, got to skip grade one because he could already read.
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