Edutainment Show: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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=== Other examples: ===
=== Other examples: ===


* [[Three Two One Contact]]
* [[3-2-1 Contact]]
* [[Three Two One Penguins (Animation)|321 Penguins]]
* [[Three Two One Penguins (Animation)|321 Penguins]]
* [[Adventures From the Book of Virtues (Animation)|Adventures From the Book of Virtues]]
* [[Adventures From the Book of Virtues (Animation)|Adventures From the Book of Virtues]]
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* [[Dinosaur Train (Animation)|Dinosaur Train]]
* [[Dinosaur Train (Animation)|Dinosaur Train]]
* [[Doc McStuffins (Animation)|Doc McStuffins]]
* [[Doc McStuffins (Animation)|Doc McStuffins]]
* [[Doctor Who (TV)|Doctor Who]]: As odd as it seems in retrospect, this show started out as edutainment. The show was originally meant to alternate between stories set in the past that would teach kids history, and those set in the future, or on other planets, that would teach science (hence the first two companions being a history teacher and a science teacher). Then the Daleks showed up, became massively popular, and changed the emphasis of the show to scary monsters rather than education.
* [[Doctor Who]]: As odd as it seems in retrospect, this show started out as edutainment. The show was originally meant to alternate between stories set in the past that would teach kids history, and those set in the future, or on other planets, that would teach science (hence the first two companions being a history teacher and a science teacher). Then the Daleks showed up, became massively popular, and changed the emphasis of the show to scary monsters rather than education.
** Some of the stories from the first two seasons of the original series illustrate what ''Doctor Who'' was intended to be — chiefly most of the historical stories (e.g. "Marco Polo," in which our heroes meet Marco Polo in the Pamirs and travel all the way to Peking with him).
** Some of the stories from the first two seasons of the original series illustrate what ''Doctor Who'' was intended to be — chiefly most of the historical stories (e.g. "Marco Polo," in which our heroes meet Marco Polo in the Pamirs and travel all the way to Peking with him).
** Verity Lambert fought to get the Dalek story on TV by playing the edutainment card. According to modern accounts, she told her boss, Sydney Newman, that the story could teach us that we must curb our more belligerent tendencies, with the barren, radioactive wasteland of Skaro as their logical conclusion.
** Verity Lambert fought to get the Dalek story on TV by playing the edutainment card. According to modern accounts, she told her boss, Sydney Newman, that the story could teach us that we must curb our more belligerent tendencies, with the barren, radioactive wasteland of Skaro as their logical conclusion.
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[[Category:index]]
[[Category:index]]
[[Category:Edutainment Show]]
[[Category:Edutainment Show]]
[[Category:Trope]]

Revision as of 21:10, 25 January 2014

"Well, Itchy & Scratchy are gone, but here's a cartoon that tries to make learning fun! ...Sorry about this kids, but stay tuned; we've got some real good toy commercials coming right up, I swear".
Krusty the Clown, The Simpsons

As the trope's title implies, the Edutainment Show combines educational content with entertainment. As such, most shows in this genre are aimed at children; of course, some more mature fare may fit this definition, such as Myth Busters. Cooking Shows, Science Shows, Nature Shows, and other TV Documentary formats (especially Docu Drama programs) may also count, if they are entertaining enough. Additionally, the definition has become somewhat blurred - these days networks often pass children's programs in particular as "edutainment," when their only actual educational content is pro-social themes, such as "work together as a team", "Reading Is Cool Aesop" or "be a good friend to others."

Many Edutainment Shows appear on PBS, the most famous example being Sesame Street. Nickelodeon also has had quite a few in their "Nick Jr" block, such as Blues Clues and Dora the Explorer, as do specialized fact-oriented cable networks as The Learning Channel, Noggin, the many Discovery channels, the History Channel, and Animal Planet.

In the United States, since 1990, networks are required to have 3 hours of educational material a week; the tag "E/I" (for "Educational/Informative") was created to denote such shows (though in the case of stations carrying Saved By the Bell, the rules are susceptible to Loophole Abuse if An Aesop is fit into the show in just the right way, and they can count as E/I). Now you know what the And Knowing Is Half the Battle is referring to.

For the Video Game counterpart see Edutainment Game.


Other examples:


 Statler: Say, Waldorf, do you think this show counts as edutainment?

Waldorf: Don't see why not. After all, it encourages people to quit watching and read books!

Together: Doh-ho-ho-ho-ho-ho!