Is there any children's programming with depth? Or at least a modicum of charm?

Gravity Falls is creepy…:eek:

Thanks for the recs folks-it may be that my sister and her hubbie might not be very discriminating, just turn on a kid’s show and leave them to their own devices.

I’m not too fond of a lot of their one-off episodes (especially the earlier ones), but KND had the weirdest talent for taking the stupidest and strangest concepts and making the most compelling, complex, and interesting multi-season plots around them.

There is some older children’s programming that is surprisingly deep or that has something there that adults might like.

Obvious examples I can recall:

  1. Noozles. Old Nickelodeon cartoon about this little girl whose toys come alive. The difference here is that the “toys” are actually scientists from a parallel dimension and were sent here to warn humans that their dimension and our own were going to collide. The toy thing is just their species form of hibernation. There’s also a side-theme of civil rights because the laws in many (all?) of the inhabited areas in the other dimension treat humans like crap.

  2. Mysterious Cities of Gold. “Steampunk” type story shown on Nickelodeon in the 80’s that takes place in the 16th century amidst the Spanish quest for gold, more gold, and also maybe a little gold on the side. The natives of the Americas are actually the remnants of an advanced civilization that destroyed themselves in war. Oh, and some of the technology is still available. Olmecs with phasers and all that. Guess what the final “secret” of the City of Gold, the secret that the ancient civilization wanted to preserve and pass down to the present day, is?

Nuclear power. It’s also implied that the “weapons of the sun” that were used at the end of the catastrophic war were H-bombs, given the narrative and the fact that the sun uses nuclear fusion.

Also, MCoG is also interesting in that one of the Native characters who ends up being part of the hero team goes the entire story wearing what looks like a Native American-styled version of a girl’s dress or gown even though he is a boy. Nobody in the story thinks this is unusual in any way, which indicates that the writers or artists may have realized that gender distinctions in dress are very culture-specific and 20th (or even 19th) century Anglo standards simply would not apply in any meaningful way in this sort of story.

One Canadian show I fondly remember is Avonlea. At some level it looks like another vapid sitcom but with Victorian costumes and a vaguely-Cape Cod/New England fishing village-esque setting, but it had a surprising number of “very special episode” type stories that weren’t that cheesy. Iirc there was a plot about a girl who loved a boy and the boy ended up getting seriously injured and ended up disabled. There was a plot about immigration and cultural adaptation, and one about how society shuns those with infectious diseases.

I liked Jane and the Dragon well enough.

Not surprising, given the origin (1911, '12, '13, and '20).

Meet Special Agent OSO… the unique stuffed bear! :wink:

At 3.5 and 19 months, Lily and Michelle both like Pokoyu and Peep and the Big Wide World, and I find both shows rather charming. Both air on our digital PBS Kids channel, back to back and in the early afternoon, so they’re a perfect half-hour break for me!

Kim Possible, Between the Lions; Batman: The Animated Series.

It was the episode where they were encouraging kids to eat candy and have rotten teeth and not ever brush their teeth and the bad guy was somebody that wanted them to have clean teeth and would attack them and brush their teeth forcibly for them , that’s when they lost me because it was really gross. When they show the kids next door open their mouths with the rotten and yellow plaque incrusted teeth, I wanted to retch

Mysterious Cities of Gold
This show looks cool. I must have missed it when I was a kid.
The characters are drawn similar to Gundam. I assume it is originally a Japanese cartoon?

Yeah, my 3.5 year old son loves Pokoyu. Also the Fresh Beat Band and Team Umizoomi. I’m not sure how much depth a three year old is equipped to handle, but they’re great for him.

??? Pao is wearing a type of serape. I never once thought he was wearing girl’s clothing, anymore than I thought that the monks and friars in the early episodes were wearing women’s clothing. Anyway, the Mysterious Cities of Gold was probably the last cartoon I really got excited about as a kid and I used to run home from school to see it. I still think it had one of the best cartoon opening sequences ever.

Mysterious Cities of Gold was a Japanese/French co-production, as was Ulysses31, another underrated/underexposed show of the early 80s.

And looking this up, I find that new episodes are being aired in France as we speak (it was a very popular show in Europe). Looks like they picked up where the original series left off, flying across the Pacific in the golden condor. New trailer.

Not politically correct enough for me. Disney channel (shows like Wizards of Waverly Place) normalizes and jokes about bullying: it is the central storyline/“humour” of many if not most of their programming, and it is not condemed or corrected.

Is that what school was like for you? Is that what your kids experience now? No wonder they think it’s normal, brought up on that diet.

Does anyone here remember Pirates of Dark Water

One of my faves

Adventure Time is the best. My husband watches it with our 17 month old.

While it was on Netflix we watched all the Sesame Street episodes available and I have to say the beginning 10-15 minutes in the neighborhood was really enjoyable for me. My daughter loves Elmo, and Murray or the flying fairy school parts, which are certainly good, but for my money the Mine-itis episode from season 39 was one of the more amusing things I’ve seen in a while.

Mr. Rodger’s Neighborhood.

You could do worse.