Teletubbies

Teletubbies is a British preschool show and dance group that aired from 1997 to 2001, created by Anne Wood and Andrew Davenport. In 2015, it was revived for four seasons, but was quietly cancelled in 2018. However, a new Teletubbies series will premiere on Netflix in November 2022.

Plot
The program takes place in a grassy, floral landscape populated by rabbits with bird calls audible in the background. The main shelter of the four Teletubbies is an earth house known as the "Tubbytronic Superdome" implanted in the ground and accessed through a hole at the top or an especially large semicircular door at the dome's foot. The Teletubbies co-exist with a number of strange contraptions such as the Voice Trumpets and the group's anthropomorphic blue vacuum cleaner ("Noo-Noo"). The show's colourful psychedelic setting was designed specifically to appeal to the attention spans of infants and unlock different sections of the mind while also educating young children of transitions that can be expected in life.

Bad Qualities

 * 1) Unlike most other preschool shows from that era, Teletubbies has barely any educational value. While it does try to show kids cooperative play, wonder, and simple joys, it mostly turns down to the Teletubbies just doing random things, that are either stupid, annoying, unfunny and/or boring.
 * 2) *Other preschool shows, especially Boohbah and Baby Einstein, also suffer from this issue.
 * 3) While most of the side characters and the narrator speak proper English (or other languages depending on the dub), the Teletubbies just babble nonsense, which can get more annoying and stupid than charming, not to mention it could negatively affect children with them making the inability not to talk properly.
 * 4) The show can get uncannily disturbing for younger viewers. Examples include the faces of the Teletubbies, the puppet that appears in one episode, the Baby Sun screaming, the CGI effects used on the Animal Parade, the Magic Tree, the Ships and the Dancing Bear, and the infamous sketch featuring a cut-out bear and a cut-out lion chasing each other, which resulted in any episode containing the sketch getting banned in the UK and internationally. Granted, the sketch was edited later on, but still.
 * 5) The side characters aren't any better either:
 * 6) * The Baby Sun that appears throughout the episodes, along with the opening and closing. She does nothing but laugh.
 * 7) * The Bunnies in the background do nothing at all.
 * 8) * Noo-Noo (the sentient vacuum cleaner) is just there to clean up the Teletubbies' messes and serves no other purpose.
 * 9) * The characters with their own sketches are also pretty bland.
 * 10) The show's humor is also unfunny, annoying and cringe-worthy, even inappropriate, such as one scene where Laa-Laa blows a toter to Tinky-Winky's butt, and then Tinky-Winky does it to Dipsy, which if you think about it, is inappropriate for children. Other than that, the program mostly plays it too safe like Baby Einstein, who is no better than this show.
 * 11) Most of the special effects are poorly made such as the Dancing Bear that appears in one episode, the Animal Parade, the Magic Tree, and the Ships as well that are obviously cheap CGI effects.
 * 12) The music, such as the theme song, can get insufferable and tiresome. Not helping is that a.) the intro is two and a half minutes long, and b.) when the original title appears, an extremely loud balloon squealing sound effect is heard, which can be too much to handle for some viewers. While this thankfully doesn't happen in the 2015 revival, the theme song there isn't much better.
 * 13) The show can often show kids bad morals:
 * 14) * Wasting food
 * 15) * Annoying each other
 * 16) * Making big messes
 * 17) * Acting immature
 * 18) * Not speaking properly
 * 19) The TV Events serve no purpose at all. And what's worse is that they play the same segments twice with no differences whatsoever (though this thankfully doesn't happen on PBS and/or BBC VHS releases). The PBS VHS releases feature two TV Events per tape while the BBC VHS releases feature three per tape.
 * 20) *When it comes to the jazz band segment, the weirdest part of the singer is that, while he does sing in English (languages vary depending on the dub), it sounds pretty phoned-in and it's hard to even understand what he's singing.
 * 21) The new characters introduced in the 2015 revival, the Tiddlytubbies, feel more like an excuse to sell more toys and merchandise.
 * 22) Bland-to-irritating voice acting and dialogue, especially from Tinky-Winky, Dipsy, Laa-Laa, and Po.
 * 23) The American dub doesn't make the show's original run less insufferable, and what makes it more pointless is that they leave the Teletubbies' original British voices intact.
 * 24) Quantity Over Quality: Despite it's mixed-to-negative feedback, the first *365* episodes were aired in less than four years, which is rushed and too much for some people.
 * 25) * The series doesn't have a single good or decent episode, due to its various issues listed above and the fact that the episodes all play out the same, which can get not only boring, but also annoying.
 * 26) Overall, the program may be seen as creepy and known to hypnotize children. They also treat their young viewers poorly like they're dumb by doing all the things said here in this article.
 * 27) Overuse of stock footage, like the Tubby Bye-Bye sequence that is used at the end of most episodes, the TV Event sequences, and the Baby Sun laughing.

Good Qualities

 * 1) The sets for the home of the Teletubbies look creative and well done.
 * 2) The show does at least try to show kids about cooperative play.
 * 3) While the Teletubbies babble, most of the other characters (including the Narrator) at least speak proper English (languages vary depending on the dub).
 * 4) The "eh-oh" line can make for unintentional comedy (depending on your point of view).
 * 5) The show can be colorful.

Reception
Despite the programme's popularity, the show garnered mixed-to-negative reviews from critics and several adult viewers, though it did gain a cult following with college students, select older generations, and the nostalgic community.

Common Sense Media's Emily Ashby found that "while the show's examples of cooperative play, wonder, and simple joys are gentle and pleasing, the creatures can still be a little grating to parents watching along." Caryn James of The New York Times stated in her review that the episodes "offer a genuinely appealing combination: cute and slightly surreal."

Upon the show's release, some critics feared that the characters' use of babbling in place of complete sentences would negatively affect young viewers' ability to communicate. The Daily Mirror reported in 1997 that many parents objected to its "goo-goo style" and "said the show was a bad influence on their children." Marina Krcmar, a professor of communication at the Wake Forest University, told interviewers in 2007 that "toddlers learn more from an adult speaker than they do from a programme such as Teletubbies." However, Paul McCann of The Independent defended this aspect of the show, stating that "Teletubbies upsets those who automatically assume that progressive and creative learning is trendy nonsense. Those who believe that education should be strictly disciplined and functional, even when you're 18 months old. Thankfully Teletubbies isn't for them. It's for kids."

It's so hated that Phantomstrider refused to talk about it and put the entire show in Dishonorable Mentions in "Top Ten Worst PBS Kids Episodes."

On IMDB, the original run has a 3.7/10, while the revival has a 4.8/10.

Tinky Winky Controversy
In 1999, a controversy was made on the character Tinky Winky, as he was believed to be a gay (homosexual) role model for kids, due to the fact that he carried a feminine-looking handbag, and the fact that he was purple (the Gay Pride colour), with his antenna being shaped like a triangle (the Gay Pride symbol).

Ken Viselman of Itsy-Bitsy Entertainment (the company that licensed the show to the US) responded, saying "he is not gay, he is not straight, he is just a character in a children's series."

The Lion and the Bear Controversy
In April 1997, an episode called See-Saw had a sketch featuring a cutout bear and a cutout lion chasing each other. The sketch was panned for its disturbing imagery and upsetting music and voice work. Thus, any episode containing the sequence was pulled from airing internationally.

In 2000, however, an edited version of the sketch was made with toned down voice acting and music, along with several shots being struck off.

Comments
Can you add the Spongebob Squarepants spinoffs (Kamp Koral: SpongeBob's Under Years and The Patrick Star Show) to this wiki?

-- Noddy the Beast 17:38, 12 May 2022 (UTC)

This page is kinda sus

-- LiangXian002 (talk) 02:45, 25 May 2022 (UTC)

So, like, Marco Grouch literally sources IMDB for reception so one show can go on a wiki, example: if the Teletubbies reboot has 4.7/10 and the original show has 3.5/10, that means the reboot is better. Bruh!

-- 16:53, 31 May 2022 (UTC)

This page isn't sus. It's clear and well written

-- Tim Delzer (talk) 20:46, 9 July 2022 (UTC)

I still feel like "Brum" and "Rosie & Jim" should have gotten the popularity that Teletubbies had instead.

-- 09:10, 31 August 2022 (UTC)

Boohbah

-- 22:21, 6 September 2022 (UTC)

Boohbah

-- 22:21, 6 September 2022 (UTC)