Make fun if you wish,
But Mr. Rogers helped raise me, and my kids. I loved the guy.
So long buddy.
RIP Fred Rogers
He had a TV show for kids. For many years. I watched it when I was little. But it's one of those things, that kids grow out of very quick, and then it's cool to make fun of for many years. And then, for alot of us, having kids of our own, and returning to his 'neighborhood', it brings back many memories of what was good as a child. And you then begin to appreciate him all over again.
http://pbskids.org/rogers/
After a quick search on Google, I found this outdated article. But it gives you an idea of who he was.
http://pbskids.org/rogers/
After a quick search on Google, I found this outdated article. But it gives you an idea of who he was.
By Joyce Millman
August 10, 1999 | For the past 30 years, it has been a beautiful day in the neighborhood. Fred Rogers steps up onto the porch, opens the door and beams a wide, welcoming smile, as if we light up his life. He changes from his suit jacket to his zippered cardigan sweater, from his leather slip-ons to his navy blue canvas boat shoes, and sings, "Would you be mine, could you be mine, won't you be my neighbor?"
Outside Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, there has been Vietnam and Watergate, Chernobyl and Challenger, Ethiopian famine and ethnic cleansing, Oklahoma City and Littleton, Polly Klaas and JonBenet Ramsey. But inside, there is peace and calm, familiarity and safety. Troubling feelings and fears are gently explored. Reassurance is given. "The whole idea," Fred Rogers recently told Jeff Greenfield in a CNN interview, "is to look at the television camera and present as much love as you possibly could to a person who might feel that he or she needs it."
Love. Is it that simple? Mister Rogers thinks so. Yet many children go wanting. So Rogers has dedicated his life -- not just his career -- to making children's programming with love. Consistent, patient, respectful and pleasingly repetitive, "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" is the longest-running show on PBS, celebrating its 30th anniversary this year. Rogers has resisted merchandising, razzle-dazzle, fads (though he did break dance once on the show) and technological flash (it took until 1999 for Rogers to agree to put up a "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" Web site), reasoning that children's basic needs don't change with the decades. The children of 1999, he told CNN, are "deep down, the same" as the children of 1969 (and, you can surmise, the children of 1909 and 2009): "We all long to be lovable, and capable of loving."
Fred McFeely Rogers (now you know where Mr. McFeely, the Neighborhood's Speedy Delivery man, got his name) was born on March 20, 1928, in Latrobe, Pa. He has lived in the state of his birth for most of his 71 years -- in fact, he received a "Pennsylvania Founder's Award" in June 1999 for his "lifelong contribution to the Commonwealth in the spirit of Pennsylvania's founder, William Penn." A pianist since age 9, Rogers majored in music composition at Rollins College in Florida. But after graduation, he became curious about the new medium of television and went to New York City to investigate. He worked for a couple of years as a floor manager for the NBC shows "Your Hit Parade" and "The Kate Smith Hour," but his heart wasn't in it. "I got into television because I hated it so," Rogers told CNN. "And I thought there's some way of using this fabulous instrument to nurture those who would watch and listen."
Rogers married his college sweetheart, Sara Joanne Byrd (now you know where Queen Sara from the Neighborhood of Make Believe got her name), moved back to Pittsburgh and began experimenting with "educational television." In 1954, at Pittsburgh's WQED, the nation's first public television station, Rogers developed "The Children's Corner," a prototype for "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" that was the birthplace for several of the Neighborhood's puppets. In 1963, Rogers created a 15-minute version of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" for Canadian television, then returned to Pittsburgh where, the following year, WQED launched the series as a half-hour show. In 1969, "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" began airing on PBS stations across the United States.
During the run of "The Children's Corner," Rogers began taking courses in child development; he also began attending the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. In 1962, he became an ordained minister. Rogers' interest in nurturing both psyche and soul made "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" a children's programming original. His dove-ish gentleness and concern for allaying children's fears of war and nuclear annihilation (he did a landmark series of shows from the Soviet Union in 1987) made him a hero of progressive parenting. With his nondenominational approach to children's curiosity about God, death and spirituality, Rogers was a quiet advocate of "faith" and "values" long before they became political buzzwords. And his use of puppets to mirror children's feelings about, for instance, sibling rivalry or separation anxiety ushered in a new era of emotional frankness in children's programming. When his pet goldfish died, Mister Rogers didn't just get new ones; he told his viewers -- his "television neighbors" -- what happened, and used the occasion to talk about loss and sadness.
That web site is cool - must have spent 45 mins looking at it without realising. Love the songs!!
Maybe they'll show some of his programmes over here
might be bad for the kids here tho, after seeing all the spelling mistakes on the web site eg. neighbour and colour. Don’t you use the letter ‘u’ over there? heh
LOL

Maybe they'll show some of his programmes over here

LOL



]-Atom- wrote:That web site is cool - must have spent 45 mins looking at it without realising. Love the songs!!
Maybe they'll show some of his programmes over heremight be bad for the kids here tho, after seeing all the spelling mistakes on the web site eg. neighbour and colour. Don?t you use the letter ?u? over there? heh
LOL![]()
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You might have noticed that Great Britain and America, surprisingly, are different countries in different continents.
And American English branched off after America was colonised (by many folks, including the English). The racial inequality (that is still around in America) and the still-quite-large British Empire almost ensured that English was going to be the primary language of the United States.
The difference in spelling came along in (year forgotten), when the first dictionaries came to be printed (by Webster for the United States, (name forgotten) for everyone else) - consdering the vastness of the language, and the fact that both dictionary authors only began to standardise spelling (based on their use, perception and beliefs in the language) around the same time, it is impressive that two of the world's most succesfull (let's not argue over 'succesfull' here - I can't find the word that i'd ideally use) countries evolved a language that was very much similar.