Call & Times

‘Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od’ receives Google’s most moving, and soothing, Doodle yet

- By MICHAEL CAVNA

With a special blend of message and music, Google has created perhaps its most moving Doodle yet.

The search engine’s homepage makes for a most welcome neighbor Friday, as the California company celebrates the 51st anniversar­y of the day that Fred Rogers strolled onto the Pittsburgh TV studio WQED and taped the first episode of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” which would make its national debut the following February and soon move into a nation’s emotional heartland ever since.

“Fred was so radical, and he was so on the forefront,” Cathy Cohen Droz, the director of special projects for Fred Rogers Production­s, says in a special “Behind the Doodle” video. “People really did not understand what he was doing.”

What he was doing, of course, was patiently teaching children through care and kindness – affirming lessons forever laced with messages of acceptance and curiosity and love.

Rogers profoundly understood the power of his medium, saying, “Through television we have a great chance to show and tell our children that they really matter.” He added, as Google notes: “We have the chance to communicat­e the fact that childhood lies at the very basis of who people are and who they become.”

For the next three decades, Rogers lovingly used television to reach and teach generation­s as children, masterfull­y speaking as a warm and beatific host who welcomed us into his TV home as he changed his shoes, donned sweaters knitted by his mother and pulled us into his cozy world of carefully paced dialogues and demonstrat­ions threaded with journeys of the imaginatio­n.

To pay tribute to the legacy of Mr. Rogers’s neighborho­od, Google has created a stop-motion animated Doodle set to the show’s theme song composed and performed by Rogers himself, “Won’t You be My Neighbor?” (which is also the title of the award-winning documentar­y about him released this summer).

Fittingly, Google notes how music was Fred Rogers’ first love; the Latrobe, Pennsylvan­ia, native studied music compositio­n at Rollins College and would go on to compose more than 200 songs and a dozen children’s operas.

So it is Rogers’s own musical voice that soothingly carries us through the nearly two-minute animation, from the trolley-tracking shot of his model neighborho­od through visual cues to some of his most memorable characters – a progressio­n of picture-pictures that frames his special connection with child viewers – all done with sculpted characters that salute the host’s passion for puppetry.

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