Burn wrote:william-james88 wrote:Burn wrote:-Kanrabat- wrote:But it's very confusing to them (or anyone for that matter).
Again, parenting. Cartoons are not the ideal choice for babysitting or educating. Sit with the kids, watch it with them, and if they have any questions, answer them. Parents should brainwash/indoctrinate kids into their own brand of hate themselves.
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Want to hear a funny one, Burn? My 5 year old son tells me the other day: "Dad, you like Transformers and Batman, wow that's the same things I like!"
Not surprising. They're around you, they're going to pick up your likes and dislikes and then some of their own.
It's almost like Stockholm Syndrome ...
I'm rewatching Beast Wars now for two reasons:
1. I said our 3yo wasn't old enough to watch it without an adult. By extension, that means that if our child does manage to convince me that TV time is warranted, then I have to stop whatever else I'm doing and sit down to supervise. Which I'm certain was the actual goal of demanding Beast Wars to begin with.
2. About a year ago, when fielding questions about Transformers, my wife said that the bad guys have red eyes and the good guys have blue eyes. Our toddler decided to key in on the 'good guys have blue eyes'. I tried to explain that a whole world war was fought largely on the premise that that was not true. After taking stock of eye colors of people we know, the point got across, but our child still revels in opportunities to point out things that contradict me, so when we watched Cyberverse it dredged the whole issue up again. Beast Wars will, hopefully, put the issue to rest for at least a while, since almost everyone has red eyes.
My great sadness is that it took such a short amount of time for 3yo to correct pronunciation from "Cheetoh" to "Cheetor" and to stop shouting the name every time the character appeared on screen.
Cheetoh! Cheetoh. Cheetoh. Cheetoh-Cheetoh-Cheetoh. ...Cheetoh!