Pages
▼
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Blast You, Max and Ruby!
My children had an unfortunate affair with Max and Ruby for a few weeks there. I think they're over it now, thank goodness, but not before learning several bad behaviors.
This is from its wiki page:
"The episodes present stories about Max, a rambunctious and determined three-year-old bunny, and his big sister, Ruby, a patient, goal-oriented, sometimes restrictive seven-year-old bunny. The show presents an uplifting message for its audience by showing Max and Ruby playing together and exercising respect and love in resolving their conflicts."
There's nothing uplifting to me about a seven year old and a three year old on their own. You'd think Grandma Bunny would be a bit more involved, but no. A seven year old and a three year old catch the public bus to see her. Oh, okay. That's kind of a lot to expect, I think.
And Max is three? I had no idea until just now. Because most neurotypical three year olds are saying more than one word at a time, wouldn't you say? If my kids point at one more thing and demand it over and over only using a one-word name for it, I might see red.
And Max is a saint to hang out with boring Ruby all the time. At the same time, he's not really a good kid, per se.
We got the Christmas DVD for Christmas. In the Santa episode, he refuses to go to sleep and he sees Santa.
Are you kidding me, Nick Jr.? Because what I need on the night before Christmas is a television show telling my kids that if they ignore the going to sleep part of Christmas Eve, they'll actually meet Santa. Awesome.
The next episode is even worse for us. My kids have trouble eating. They don't like to do it. They don't like to try new things, and getting them to take a bite of something is quite the task, all on its own. So someone needs to clue me in on why having Max hate eggs (which he's never tried), is a good idea.
The episode goes like this: Ruby makes Max an egg. Max doesn't want the egg. He wants the strawberries. Ruby says not until after you eat your egg. Max breaks his one-word streak to say "Bad Egg!" throughout this episode. He hides the egg, he throws his spoon, he drops the egg on the chair. Ruby is ever-patient and never loses her temper. Never reprimands him for his bad behavior either.
Then Ruby finally does the I'm-going-to-show-you-how-delicious-this-is tactic, and takes a bite of the egg. Then she does it again, and Max plays into it "egging her on" as it were. She eats the whole egg, and he still gets the strawberries.
So my kids have learned that if they don't want to try something they can hide it, throw things and just generally be obstinate until the adult (because, yes, they think Ruby is an adult) eats it for them and then they get a treat.
Great. Really?
I've seen another one where he wants a popsicle and Ruby says no and he spends the episode making a huge mess to get to the popsicle. At the end, he's slurping away happily, everything is destroyed and they're all like, oh, Max, hahaha.
That's just not how I want my house to run. No more Max and Ruby for us. It's an annoying show and the only thing it teaches is how to get what you want by being bad (or figuratively die trying.) No thanks.
___
If you like this blog, please vote for it here at Babble's Top 100 Blogs list. It would mean the world to me.
I can't STAND Max & Ruby. Maya also started doing the one-word demanding after watching a few episodes. She'd point and say "OUTSIDE!" or "CANDY!" or some bullshit. NOT a fan.
ReplyDeleteYeah... I'm already aware that I have a lot of terrible TV to vet in the near future. I'm sort of hoping I can leave my little one parked on The Simpsons - at least that's an evil I know well with only a limited dose of body negging. *sigh*
ReplyDeleteOh, and failing that - I've got a looot of old 80s stuff on DVD. Even if it's pinktastic Jem, at least there is a legit girl power message... and no currently manufactured toy tie-in. >__>
ReplyDeletethanks loving your post.
ReplyDeleteHappy Independence Day 2018 Quotes About India