Toronto Star

Kids’ classics reboot in streaming wars

In the battle for eyeballs both young and parental, services grab family faves

- MARK KENNEDY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— New technology. Same furry faces. When Apple was thinking about what kind of children’s TV programmin­g it wanted on its new streaming service, it doubled down on two multigener­ational crowd-pleasers — Snoopy and “Sesame Street.”

Apple TV Plus has carved out prominent roles for Charlie Brown’s floppy-eared beagle and for puppets from the famed Sesame Workshop in its slate of kid- and family-friendly programs. “Both Snoopy and Sesame Workshop are crown jewels of the last decades in what family entertainm­ent looks like. There’s a reason that we went proactivel­y to those two entities,” said Zack Van Amburg, who is Apple’s head of worldwide video alongside Jamie Erlicht.

The decision to use existing children’s icons as the bedrock for the fledgling platform is one shared by several other streaming services, often with one eye on looming Netflix, the world’s largest streamer with an arsenal of titles attracting kids and families.

The services are competing for kids’ eyeballs not only from each other but also from shows on YouTube and traditiona­l broadcast channels. Often the safest way forward is piggybacki­ng on establishe­d titles that parents already know from their childhood and leaning into the nostalgia.

Amazon Prime Video has rebooted “Clifford the Big Red Dog ” and has original shows featuring “Kung-Fu Panda,” “Pete the Cat,” and “Rocky and Bullwinkle.” CBS All Access has series built on the classic book “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” and the classic ’toon “Danger Mouse.”

Disney Plus is offering shorts starring Forky from “Toy Story 4” and a reboot of the Hilary Duff-led “Lizzie McGuire,” another show built around “Phineas & Ferb,” plus a new series based on Marvel Comics’ “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.” And, yes, Muppets — the unscripted series “Muppets Now.”

Netflix has embraced shows built around “Captain Underpants,” “Lost in Space,” the book “Green Eggs and Ham,” the comic book “Raising Dion” and even a youth-orientated “Fast and Furious” series.

“Our intention is to offer a lot of choice. When we think about kids or we think about a family audience, one of the things we think about is there’s no two kids that are the same and there are no two families that are the same,” said Melissa Cobb, Netflix’s vice-president of kids and family. Brian Wright, vice-president of original series at Netflix, said its creators are hoping to craft content that allows a family to have a shared experience and a shared conversati­on — wherever that family is.

“We really want to be in the space of building really appealing worlds that have something for everybody,” he said. “One thing that we talk a lot about is reflecting the world back at itself. We want to break down the barriers of who gets to be seen and represente­d.”

Apple TV Plus subscriber­s may not get as many shows as Netflix but executives are building a carefully curated list, including a dozen eight-minute “Snoopy in Space” animated shorts, as well as episodes of “The Snoopy Show,” with each instalment featuring three seven-minute cartoons starring the Peanuts crew.

They’ll also get two series from Sesame: the live-action preschool-aimed “Helpsters,” which mixes human actors and puppets, including Cody, a new puppet that loves computer coding.

And there’s “Ghostwrite­r,” a live-action fantasy series that re-imagines the Sesame Workshop’s 1992 series.

The streamer will also have the original animated series

“Here We Are” based on lauded author Oliver Jeffers’ book, the animated series “Wolfboy and the Everything Factory,” the live-action animated hybrid “Lovely Little Farm” and a pair of animated series based on children’s books “Doug Unplugged” and “Zen Shorts.” “When you look at the breadth of programmin­g, I think you’ll see a mix of establishe­d book properties, reboots of television shows, but also new properties from diverse creators,” said Tara Sorensen, Apple’s head of children’s programmin­g. “Apple as a whole believes in great storytelli­ng.” Van Amburg and Sorensen said that what makes Apple TV Plus distinctiv­e from some of the others is a commitment to education and imparting lessons. “We want to make sure parents feel good about watching these programs together as a family but also putting their kids in front of them solo,” Sorensen said.

“I think entertainm­ent in kids’ programmin­g can be purely that — it can be thoughtful and entertaini­ng,” Van Amburg said.

“But we said, ‘What if we pushed a little bit further? What if there was actually a message?’”

Still to come are plans for kids’ programmin­g from NBC’s Peacock service and HBO Max. But not everyone is watching the explosion in streaming content uncritical­ly. The Center for Digital Democracy is as wary of streaming content as YouTube videos aimed at kids.

“It’s all about getting their attention so ads can be sold,” said Jeff Chester, the centre’s executive director.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? Netflix is building new shows around “Captain Underpants,” while Apple TV Plus is going big on Snoopy and “Sesame Street” shows.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS Netflix is building new shows around “Captain Underpants,” while Apple TV Plus is going big on Snoopy and “Sesame Street” shows.
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