Misplaced Pages

Blue's Clues: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 21:02, 23 June 2009 view sourceRegentsPark (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators45,689 edits Revert to revision 298021445 dated 2009-06-23 00:01:09 by Figureskatingfan using popups← Previous edit Latest revision as of 16:24, 30 November 2024 view source Citation bot (talk | contribs)Bots5,406,220 edits Added work. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Spinixster | Category:Peabody Award–winning television programs | #UCB_Category 250/319 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{pp-semi|small=yes}}
{{infobox television |
{{short description|American children's television show}}
| bgcolor = <!--please do not put in a color. it simply makes things hard to read.-->
{{About|the original 1996 series|the video game series|Blue's Clues (video game series){{!}}''Blue's Clues'' (video game series)|the 2019 revival series|Blue's Clues & You!{{!}}''Blue's Clues & You!''}}
| show_name = Blue's Clues
{{featured article}}
| image = ]
{{Infobox television
| caption = Toys made in Blue and Periwinkle's image
| image = Blues Clues logo.svg
| format = ]
| genre = ]
| runtime = 30 minutes per episode
| creator = {{Plainlist|
| country = {{USA}}
* ]
| network = ] (1996-2008)<br/>] (1999-present)
* ]
| first_aired = September 8, 1996
* ]
| last_aired = August 6, 2006
}}
| creator = Traci Paige Johnson <br> Todd Kessler <br> Angela Santomero
| presenter = {{Plainlist|
| executive producer =
* ]
| starring = ] (1996&ndash;2002)<br>] (2002&ndash;2006)
* ]
| num_seasons = 10
* ] (UK)
| num_episodes = 140
}}
| list_episodes = List of Blue's Clues episodes
| voices = {{ubl|Traci Paige Johnson|Nick Balaban|]}}
}}
| opentheme = {{Plainlist|
'''Blue's Clues''' is an ] ] which aired on ]. It premiered on September 8, 1996,<ref name="tenyears">{{cite video | people = Jim Forbes (narrator) | title = Behind the clues: 10 years of Blue | medium = Short documentary | publisher = Nickelodeon | date = 2006-07-27 }}</ref> and ran until 2006. Versions of the show have been produced in other countries, most notably in the ].<ref name="ukhit"/> It was created by a "green team" of producers, Todd Kessler, Angela Santomero, and Traci Paige Johnson, who used concepts learned from ] and early-childhood education research to create a television show that would capture preschool children's attention and help them learn. They used the ] format in their presentation of material, as opposed to the more traditional ] format, and structured every episode the same way.
* "''Blue's Clues'' Theme" (seasons 1–4)
* "Another Blue's Clues Day" performed by ] (seasons 5–6)
}}
| endtheme = {{Plainlist|
* "So Long Song" (seasons 1–5)
* "Goodbye Song" (season 6)
}}
| composer = {{Plainlist|
* Nick Balaban
* Michael Rubin
}}
| country = United States
| language = English
| num_seasons = 6
| num_episodes = 143<ref name="nickanimation">{{cite web |title=Preschool: Blue's Clues |url=https://www.nickanimation.com/content/blues-clues/ |publisher=Nickelodeon Animation |access-date=29 December 2021 |location=Burbank, California |archive-date=29 December 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211229180302/https://www.nickanimation.com/content/blues-clues/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
| list_episodes = List of Blue's Clues episodes
| executive_producer = {{Plainlist|
* Todd Kessler
* Angela C. Santomero
* Traci Paige Johnson
* Jennifer Twomey
}}
| runtime = 21–26 minutes
| company = {{Plainlist|
* ] <small>(uncredited)</small>
* ]<br><small>(credited as ])</small>
}}
| network = ]
| first_aired = {{Start date|1996|9|8}}<ref name="nickanimation"/>
| last_aired = {{End date|2006|8|6}}<ref name="nickanimation"/>
| related = '']''<br/>'']''
}}


'''''Blue's Clues''''' is an American ] ]al ] series created by ], ], and ]. It premiered on ]'s ] block on September 8, 1996,<ref name="anderson2004-262" /> and concluded its run on August 6, 2006,<ref name="nickanimation"/> with a total of six seasons and 143 episodes. The original host of the show was ], who left in 2002 and was replaced by ] (as "Joe") for the fifth and sixth seasons. The show follows an animated blue-spotted dog named Blue as she leaves a trail of clues/paw prints for the host and the viewers to figure out her plans for the day.
The result, ''Blue's Clues,'' has been called "one of the most successful, critically acclaimed, and ground-breaking ] television series of all time".<ref name="tenyears"/> Author ] called the show "perhaps the 'stickiest'&mdash;meaning the most irresistible and involving&mdash;television show ever".<ref name="spin.com">{{cite news | last = D'Angelo | first = Joe | title = Ex-'Blue's Clues' host Steve Burns an indie rocker at heart | publisher = MTV.com | date = ] | url = http://www.spin.com/features/magazine/2004/02/me_you_dog_named_blue/ | accessdate = 2007-12-18 }}</ref> Its innovative use of research, technology, and interactive content has influenced its genre since its debut, including the "gold standard of preschool TV programs" that inspired it, ''].''<ref name="interactive">{{cite news | last = Weisman | first = Jon | title = Interactive innovator draws raves | work = Variety.com | date = ] | url = http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117947877.html?categoryid=2271&cs=1 | accessdate = 2007-11-21 }}</ref> It became the highest-rated show for preschoolers on commercial television, and received nine ] awards. Its efficacy in teaching children using the medium of television has been documented in research studies.


The producers and creators combined concepts from ] and early-childhood education with innovative animation and production techniques that helped their viewers learn, using research conducted thirty years since the debut of '']'' in the U.S. Unlike earlier preschool shows, ''Blue's Clues'' presented material in a ] format instead of a ] format, used repetition to reinforce its ], structured every episode the same way, and revolutionized the genre by inviting their viewers' involvement.
''Blue's Clues'', shown in over sixty countries,<ref>{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 61 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref> was hosted by ] and ]. A ] called '']'' premiered in 2004.


Research was part of the creative and decision-making process in the production of the show, and was integrated into all aspects and stages of the creative process. ''Blue's Clues'' was the first ] series for preschoolers in the United States and resembles a storybook in its use of primary colors and its simple ] shapes of familiar objects with varied colors and textures. Its home-based setting is familiar to American children, but has a look unlike previous children's TV shows.
==Origin==
In 1993, ] assigned a team of its own producers to create a new television program in the US for young children, using research on ] and the viewing habits of preschoolers. Their goal was to invent a children's television program that would "empower preschoolers to learn through active participation in activities that are grounded in their everyday lives, to redefine the approach to problem-solving for preschoolers in an engaging manner.<ref>http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/17/1d/35.pdf accessed 2008-03-08</ref> The producers, Todd Kessler, Angela Santomero and Traci Paige Johnson (whom Brown Johnson, executive creative director at Nickelodeon, called a "green creative team"), <ref name="tenyears"/> were influenced by '']'' but wanted to utilize research performed during the 30 years since it debuted. "We wanted to learn from '']'' and take it one step further," Angela Santomero said.<ref>{{cite book | last = Gladwell | first = Malcolm | title = The tipping point: How little things can make a big difference | publisher = Little, Brown and Company | year = 2000 | location = Boston, Mass. | pages = 111 | isbn = 0-316-34662-4}}</ref>


Upon debuting, ''Blue's Clues'' received critical acclaim. It became the highest-rated show for preschoolers on American commercial television, and was significant to ]'s growth. The show has been syndicated in 120 countries and translated into 15 languages. Regional versions of the show featuring local hosts have been produced in other countries. By 2002, ''Blue's Clues'' had received several awards for excellence in children's programming, educational software and licensing, and had been nominated for nine ].
Based on research of theorists such as Daniel Anderson of the ] (who served as a consultant for ''Blue's Clues''), the producers set out to develop a show that took advantage of children being intellectually and behaviorally active when watching television. Research since '']'' changed how attention span in young children was perceived. '']'' was developed with the understanding that children have short attention spans, so the show was designed in a ]-like format,<ref name="watchlearn">{{cite journal | last = Jaffe | first = Eric | title = Watch and learn | journal = APS Observer | volume = 18 | issue = 12 | month = December | year = 2005 | url = http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=1900 | accessdate = 2007-12-04 }}</ref> in which each episode was made up of a variety of segments.<ref>{{cite book | last = Fisch | first = Shalom M. | editor = Monroe Edwin Price | others = Roger G. Noll, Lloyd Morrisett | title = A communications cornucopia: Markle Foundation essays on information policy | year = 1998 | publisher = Brookings Institution Press | location = Washington, D.C. | isbn = 0-8157-6115-5 | pages = | chapter = The Children's Television Workshop: The experiment continues}}</ref> Until then, children's educational television programs presented their content in a one-way conversation, but ''Blue's Clues'' revolutionized the genre by inviting their viewers' involvement. Its creators believed that if children were more involved in the action of what they were viewing, they would attend to its content longer than previously expected, up to a half hour, and learn more. They also dropped the traditional magazine format for a ] format. "... The choice for ''Blue's Clues'' became to tell one story, beginning to end, camera moving left-to-right like reading a storybook, transitions from scene to scene as obvious as the turning of a page."<ref name="interactive"/> Every episode of ''Blue's Clues'' was structured in this way. Its pace was deliberate and its material was presented clearly.<ref name="tubefortots">{{cite news | last = Collins | first = James | title = Tube for tots | publisher = Time Magazine | date = ] | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,987416-1,00.html | accessdate = 2007-12-04 }}</ref> One way this was done was in the use of pauses&mdash;"long enough to give the youngest time to think, short enough for the oldest not to get bored."<ref name="interactive"/>


A live production of ''Blue's Clues'', which used many of the production innovations developed by the show's creators, toured the U.S. starting in 1999. As of 2002, over two million people had attended over 1,000 performances. A ] called '']'' premiered in 2004. A revival of the series titled '']'', hosted by ] premiered on ] on November 11, 2019. The show's extensive use of research in its development and production process inspired several research studies that have provided evidence for its effectiveness as a learning tool.
The production of ''Blue's Clues'' was upon research that showed that television could be a "powerful educational agent" because for most American children, it was an accessible medium and a "powerful cultural artifact". Since television programs tell stories through pictures, the potential for episodic learning was high. Television, using film techniques, was able to present information from multiple perspectives, in a variety of "real world" contexts (i.e., situations within the daily experiences of young children), and that television could be an effective method of scientific education for young children. The creators wanted to provide their viewers with more "authentic learning opportunities" by placing problem-solving tasks in the context of storytelling techniques, by slowly increasing the difficulty of these tasks, and by inviting their direct involvement.<ref name="bugs">{{cite conference | first = Koshi | last = Dhingra | coauthors = Alice Wilder, Alison Sherman, Karen D. Leavitt | year = 2001 | month = April | title = Science on television: Case study of the development of "Bugs" on "Blue's Clues" | conference = Annual meeting | booktitle = Change agents in science education | publisher = American Educational Research Association | location = Seattle, Washington | url = http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/17/1d/35.pdf | accessdate = 2008-03-08|format=PDF}}</ref>


== History ==
The show's creators encouraged participation with their use of repetition. At first, Nickelodeon aired the same episode daily for five days before showing the next one.<ref name="repetition">{{cite news | last = Mifflin | first = Lawrie | title = The joy of repetition, repetition, repetition | publisher = The New York Times | date = ] | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9900E4DA1F30F930A3575BC0A961958260 | accessdate = 2007-12-09 }}</ref> In field tests, the attention and comprehension of young viewers increased with each repeated viewing.<ref>{{cite book | last = Gladwell | first = Malcolm | title = The tipping point: How little things can make a big difference | publisher = Little, Brown and Company | year = 2000 | location = Boston, Mass. | pages = 125–126 | isbn = 0-316-34662-4}}</ref> Repetition was built into the structure of each episode; for example, "in an episode called 'Blue's Predictions,' the show's human host, Joe, says some variation of the word 'predict' around 15 times."<ref name="watchlearn"/>
=== Background ===
By 1990, parents, teachers and media experts had been criticizing "the lack of quality fare for children on commercial television" for many years.<ref>Osborne, p. 1</ref> Up to that point, ] was the only source for quality children's television; other broadcasters voluntarily set educational standards for their programming and "were expected to regulate themselves", but it led to little change in the quality of children's programs.<ref name="tracy-5"/><ref name="calvert-278">Calvert and Kotler, p. 278</ref> By the time ''Blue's Clues'' premiered in 1996, there was a large number of TV shows for children, but most of them were violent and designed to sell action toys and other products;<ref>Osborne, p. 2</ref> as co-creator ] put it, "a vehicle for toy-based 'commercials'{{Nbsp}}".<ref name="santomero">{{Cite news|last=Santomero|first=Angela|date=21 February 2018|title=I Admired Mr. Rogers As a Mentor from Afar – Now I'm Walking in His Sneakers.|work=USA Today|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2018/02/21/admired-mr-rogers-mentor-afar-now-im-walking-his-sneakers-column/351804002/|access-date=4 August 2021|archive-date=3 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210803032759/https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2018/02/21/admired-mr-rogers-mentor-afar-now-im-walking-his-sneakers-column/351804002/|url-status=live}}</ref> According to author Diane Tracy in her 2002 book ''Blue's Clues for Success'', "The state of children's television was pretty dismal".<ref name="tracy-5">Tracy, p. 5</ref>{{refn|group=note|Tracy's book is a business guide based on Nickelodeon and the history of ''Blue's Clues''. '']'' noted the value in Tracy's discussion of the creators' and producers' business model but found Tracy's tone "less than optimal for discerning executive readers".<ref>{{cite journal |title=Blue's Clues for Success: The 8 Secrets Behind a Phenomenal Business |journal=Publishers Weekly |date=17 May 2002 |url=http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-7931-5376-3 |access-date=3 June 2021 |archive-date=11 December 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221211173502/https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-7931-5376-3 |url-status=live }}</ref>}}


There was little incentive for producing high-quality children's television until 1990, when Congress passed the ] (CTA), which "required that networks be held accountable for the quality of children's programming or risk losing their license".<ref>{{cite book|title=Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids|last1=Swartz|first1=Mimi|date=2004|publisher=New York University Press|isbn=978-0-8147-3651-7|editor1-last=Hendershot|editor1-first=Heather|location=New York|page=114|chapter='You dumb babies!: How raising the Rugrats babies became as difficult as the real thing}}</ref> The CTA set no hourly quotas and left it to the ] (FCC) to determine compliance to the law, so little positive improvements were made.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hayes|first1=Diane Aden|date=1994|title=The Children 's Hour Revisited: The Children ' s Television Act of 1990|url=https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1016&context=fclj|journal=Federal Communications Law Journal|volume=46|issue=2|page=295|access-date=3 June 2021|archive-date=11 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511111527/https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=1016&context=fclj|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=U.S. Mandates Educational TV for Children|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/09/us/us-mandates-educational-tv-for-children.html|author=Lawrie Mifflin|newspaper=]|page=16|date=August 9, 1996|access-date=March 14, 2010|archive-date=February 18, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150218200822/http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/09/us/us-mandates-educational-tv-for-children.html|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1996, the FCC passed additional regulations, including requiring broadcasters to, in a provision called "the Three-Hour rule", air at least three hours of children's programming per week, between the hours of 07:00 to 22:00, and that they be tagged with an ] (Educational and Informational) logo so that children and their families could easily find the programs.<ref name="calvert-278"/> The cable network ], which was recognized, along with ], as a leader in the creation and production of high-quality children's programming, was not required to comply with federal regulations to provide informative or educational content, but did so anyway, before the CTA became law.<ref name="tracy-6">Tracy, p. 6</ref><ref>Calvert and Kotler, p. 283</ref><ref name="anderson2004-255">Anderson (2004), p. 255</ref>
==Development==
In the summer of 1994, Kessler, Santomero, and Johnson met at the ] studios to develop ''Blue's Clues''. At first, the character Blue was a cat and the name of the show was "Blue's Prints." Blue became a dog only because Nickelodeon was already producing a show about a cat.<ref name="tenyears"/> Kessler handled the production aspect of the show, Santomero research, and Johnson the animation and design.<ref name="repetition"/>
The creators understood that the show's look and visual design would be integral to the attachment children would have to the show.<ref>{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 95 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref> Johnson utilized simple cut-out shapes of familiar objects with a wide variety of colors and textures to resemble a storybook. She hired artist Dave Palmer to develop what was at that time a new technology&mdash;creating the animation from simple materials like fabric, paper or pipe-cleaners and then scanning them into a computer so that they could be animated without repeatedly re-drawing them like in traditional animation. The result was something that looked different from anything else on television at the time, and they were able to animate their shows in less time compared to traditional methods, eight weeks for two episodes as opposed to sixteen weeks for one.<ref name="watchlearn"/><ref>{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 94 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref> It took an average of two years for the development process, from scripting to music, of an episode to be completed.<ref name="bugs"/>


According to Heather L. Kirkorian and her fellow researchers ] and ] in 2008, since television appeared in homes beginning in the mid-20th century, critics have often expressed concern about its impact on viewers, especially children, who as Kirkorian argued, are "active media users"<ref name="kirkorian-40&quot;">Kirkorian et al., p. 40</ref> by the age of three. Researchers believed that there were links between television viewing and children's cognitive and learning skills and that what children watched may be more important than how much they watched it. She reported that up until the 1980s, researchers had only an implicit theory about how viewers watched television, and that young children were cognitively passive viewers and controlled by "salient attention-eliciting features"<ref name="kirkorian-40&quot;"/> like sound effects and fast movement. As a result, most researchers believed that television interfered with cognition and reflection and as a result, children could not learn from and process television.<ref name="kirkorian-40&quot;"/> In the early 1980s, however, new theories about how young children watch television suggested that attention in children as young as two-years old were largely guided by program content.<ref>Kirkorian et al., pp. 40–41</ref>
Another innovative aspect of the production process of ''Blue's Clues'' was the producers' use of research. By 2001, the research team consisted of Alice Wilder, Alison Sherman, Karen Leavitt, and Koshi Dhingra; Wilder was head of the show's research department and a member of the team that developed it after the premiere aired.<ref name="bugs"/> The research team field tested every episode three times before putting it on air, as compared to '']'', which tested a third of its episodes once, after they were completed.<ref>{{cite book | last = Gladwell | first = Malcolm | title = The tipping point: How little things can make a big difference | publisher = Little, Brown and Company | year = 2000 | location = Boston, Mass. | pages = 127 | isbn = 0-316-34662-4}}</ref> In their tests at preschools before the premiere, the show was "immediately successful."<ref name="tenyears"/>


=== Conception ===
Another key to the success of ''Blue's Clues'' was ]. According to Traci Paige Johnson, she was cast as Blue's voice because out of the show's crew, she sounded the most like a dog. Nick Balaban, who, along with Michael Rubin, wrote the music for the show, was cast as the voice of Mr. Salt. (Balabin reported that Mr. Salt was not originally French; he spoke with a ] accent.)<ref name="tenyears"/>
In the mid-1990s, Nickelodeon, looking to create programming for preschoolers, hired a team of three producers, Angela C. Santomero, ], and ], to create a new television program for young children.<ref>Tracy, p. 7</ref><ref name="tracy-12">Tracy, p. 12</ref> According to '']'', Kessler was the first creator to be brought on board to the project.<ref name="carter">{{cite news|last1=Carter|first1=Bill|date=21 June 2000|title=TV Notes; 'Blue's' Creator Wouldn't Stay|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/06/21/arts/tv-notes-blue-s-creator-wouldn-t-stay.html?scp=1&sq=the%20David%20E.%20Kelley%20of%20children%27s%20television%20Todd%20Kessler&st=cse|access-date=5 June 2021|archive-date=15 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191215110212/https://www.nytimes.com/2000/06/21/arts/tv-notes-blue-s-creator-wouldn-t-stay.html?scp=1&sq=the%20David%20E.%20Kelley%20of%20children%27s%20television%20Todd%20Kessler&st=cse|url-status=live}}</ref> Kessler, a freelance ] producer at the time, had previously worked on '']'', but he disliked its format and thought that it was too static and not visual enough.<ref>Gladwell, p. 110</ref> Santomero, who named ] as a major influence, worked at Nickelodeon as a researcher and Johnson was a freelance artist and animator.<ref>Tracy, pp. 13–14</ref><ref name="repetition"/> Santomero later said that they "were young, and Nickelodeon took a chance on us".<ref name="bluescluesreturns">{{Cite news|last=Onstad|first=Katrina|date=6 November 2019|title='Blue's Clues' Returns, and Silence Is Still the Star|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/06/arts/television/blues-clues-returns-nickelodeon.html|access-date=6 June 2021|archive-date=15 December 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201215022203/https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/06/arts/television/blues-clues-returns-nickelodeon.html|url-status=live}}</ref>


] of the ], who author Malcolm Gladwell called one of the "pioneering television researchers",<ref>Gladwell, p. 100</ref> was an adviser for the new show.<ref name="anderson1998-34">Anderson (1998), p. 34</ref> Nickelodeon had hired Anderson as an adviser for its ] block of preschool programs starting in 1993, although Santomero had already been getting his input about research informally. When Nickelodeon enlisted her to co-create ''Blue's Clues'', he came on in a more formal capacity.<ref name="anderson2004-241">Anderson (2004), p. 241</ref> Anderson later said that he "jumped at the chance" to serve as an advisor for Blue's Clues because "Nickelodeon was interested in providing programs that would actually benefit preschoolers rather than merely entertain them".<ref name="anderson2004-241"/> Anderson also stated that the choice to produce the show as overtly and clearly educational was a departure for Nickelodeon and for any commercial network. According to research conducted by Nickelodeon, parents of preschool aged children wanted the shows they watched to be educational.<ref name="anderson2004-255"/>
The most important casting was that of the host, the only human character in the show. After over 100 ] and months of research, the producers hired actor/performer ], who remained on ''Blue's Clues'' for seven years and was in over one hundred episodes, until he left to pursue a musical career in 2002.<ref name="tenyears"/> As Johnson said, "What made Burns a great children's host was that 'he didn't want to be a children's host ... He loved kids, but he didn't want to make a career out of it.'"<ref name="meandyou">{{cite news | last = Norris | first = Chris | title = Me and you and a dog named Blue | publisher = Spin Magazine | date = ] | url = http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1453666/20020429/steve_burns.jhtml | accessdate = 2007-12-18 }}</ref> Burns himself stated, tongue-in-cheek, "I knew I wasn't gonna be doing children's television all my life, mostly because I refused to lose my hair on a kid's TV show, and it was happenin'&mdash;fast."<ref name="tenyears"/>


Santomero, Kessler, and Johnson met in a conference room at ], which owned Nickelodeon, in New York for a month to create ''Blue's Clues''.<ref>Tracy, p. 17</ref><ref>Moll, event occurs at 2:39.</ref> According to Santomero, the creators of ''Blue's Clues'' wanted to create a children's television show that was "something very simple and graphic and slow",<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/> emphasized social and emotional skills, treated children like they were smart, and helped them feel empowered.<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/> The character Blue was originally conceived as a cat, and the name of the show was to be ''Blue Prints'', but the show's name was changed and Blue became a dog because Nickelodeon was already producing a show about a cat<ref>Moll, event occurs at 3:16.</ref> and because, as Anderson reported, children who watched the pilot, which was used for testing, "almost universally called the show ''Blue's Clues''".<ref name="anderson2004-261">Anderson (2004), p. 261</ref> Even though most children's television shows at the time were built around male characters, Blue was female and as ''The New York Times'' put it, "never wore a bow".<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/>
Burns' departure caused a resurface of the rumors that had circulated about him since 1998. As Burns said, "The rumor mill surrounding me has always been really strange."<ref name="tenyears"/> These "specious claims" included dying from a ] ], being run over by a car, and being replaced, like ] of ], by a look-alike. Some viewers claimed that "clues" regarding Burns' demise were placed within the show.<ref name="snopes">{{cite web | last = Mikkelson | first = Barbara | title = Demise or shine | publisher = Snopes.com | date = ] | url = http://www.snopes.com/radiotv/tv/bluesclues.asp | accessdate = 2008-01-30 }}</ref> Burns made an appearance on ] to dispute these rumors,<ref name="tenyears"/> and he and co-creator Angela Santomero appeared on '']'' to help parents assuage the fears of children who might have heard the rumors.<ref name="snopes"/>


Kessler handled the show's "computer-based production",<ref name="repetition" /> Santomero the research, and Johnson the design.<ref name="repetition">{{cite news |last1=Mifflin |first1=Lawrie |title=The Joy of Repetition, Repetition, Repetition |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/08/03/tv/the-joy-of-repetition-repetition-repetition.html |access-date=6 June 2021 |work=The New York Times |date=3 August 1997 |archive-date=7 March 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090307053630/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9900E4DA1F30F930A3575BC0A961958260 |url-status=live }}</ref> By 2001, the show's research team, which worked collaboratively with the show's producers and creators, consisted of director of research Alice Wilder, who joined the ''Blue's Clues'' team shortly after the show's debut, Alison Sherman, Karen Leavitt, and Koshi Dhingra.<ref>Dhingra et al., p. 2</ref><ref>Tracy, pp. 67–68</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Garcia|first=Cathy Rose A.|date=28 October 2013|title=Meet the woman behind Blue's Clues, Cha-Ching|work=ABS-CBN Corporation|location=Quezon City, Philippines|url=https://news.abs-cbn.com/business/10/28/13/meet-woman-behind-blues-clues-cha-ching|access-date=6 June 2021|archive-date=6 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210606065055/https://news.abs-cbn.com/business/10/28/13/meet-woman-behind-blues-clues-cha-ching|url-status=live}}</ref>{{refn|According to Tracy, Wilder, who had a doctorate in educational psychology, reinvented the role of research in children's television, and helped train the writers and animators to trust and use research. Wilder also developed the curriculum that guided the program's script development and implemented its formative research.<ref name="anderson2004-258"/><ref>Tracy, p. 68</ref>|group=note}} They were given $150,000 to produce a pilot, about a quarter of the budget for other Nickelodeon shows at the time, which was used in 1995 to test the show's ] elements with its potential audience.<ref>Tracy, p. 14</ref><ref name="lostpilot">{{Cite news|last=Dominguez|first=Noah|date=20 January 2021|title=Blue's Clues Co-Creator Says She Has the Lost Pilot|work=CBR.com|url=https://www.cbr.com/blues-clues-lost-pilot-angela-santomero/|access-date=4 June 2021|archive-date=14 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210214022355/https://www.cbr.com/blues-clues-lost-pilot-angela-santomero/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="carraslatimes">{{Cite news|last=Carras|first=Christi|date=10 October 2019|title=Why Nickelodeon's New 'Blue's Clues' May Feel Very, Very Familiar|work=]|url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2019-10-10/blues-clues-reboot-nickelodeon|access-date=4 June 2021|archive-date=4 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210604164634/https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/tv/story/2019-10-10/blues-clues-reboot-nickelodeon|url-status=live}}</ref> The pilot was considered lost, but in 2021, Santomero announced that she owned a copy of it, and that the pilot was filmed in 1994.<ref name="lostpilot"/><ref name="taleofthepup"/> In September 2023, the full pilot unexpectedly surfaced online, putting an end to the nearly two-decade long search for it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/blue-prints-blues-clues-pilot_20230910|title=Blue Prints Blues Clues Pilot|date=1994 |via=Internet Archive}}</ref>
Burns was replaced by ], who was subjected to the same kind of scrutiny to earn the job.<ref name="tenyears"/> "We saw Steve Burns' retirement from the show as a chance to put ''Blue's Clues'' on a new course," Johnson said.<ref> {{cite news | last = Kiesewetter | first = John | title = 'Blue's Clues' puts on new host, new shirts | publisher = The Cincinnati Enquirer | date = ] | url = http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/04/29/tem_blues_clues_puts_on.html | accessdate = 2008-01-31}}</ref>

=== Premiere and later history ===
''Blue's Clues'' premiered in the U.S. on September 8, 1996.<ref name="anderson2004-262">Anderson (2004), p. 262</ref> The premiere was the highest-rated premiere of any Nickelodeon program, and the show became crucial to the network's growth.<ref name="taleofthepup">{{Cite magazine|last=Schmelzer|first=Randi|date=6 August 2006|title=Tale of the Pup: Innovative Skein Leads Way to Preschool TV boom|magazine=Variety|url=https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/tale-of-the-pup-1200342596/|access-date=6 June 2021|archive-date=6 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210606032728/https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/tale-of-the-pup-1200342596/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="tracy-3">Tracy, p. 3</ref> Scholar Norma Pecora called ''Blue's Clues'' the "cornerstone" of Nickelodeon's educational programming.<ref name="pecora-372"/> By the end of 1997, it was the highest-rated show for preschoolers on commercial television, and was the third-highest rated show behind children's public television shows; '']'' and '']''.<ref name="tubefortots">{{Cite news|last=Collins|first=James|date=24 November 1997|title=Television: Tube for Tots|magazine=]|url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,987416,00.html|access-date=6 June 2021|archive-date=6 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210606032728/http://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,987416,00.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Within 18 months of its premiere, ''Blue's Clues'' was as well known among the parents of preschoolers as more established children's shows such as ''Sesame Street'' and ''Barney & Friends''. In 2002, Tracy reported that it was one of the highest-rated shows for preschoolers, was preschool children and their parents' favorite cable preschool program, was viewed by approximately 13.7 million viewers each week, and aired in about 60 countries.<ref name="tracy-3"/>

In 2000, after 75 episodes, with "no fanfare"<ref name="carter"/> and no announcement from Nickelodeon, co-creator and co-producer Todd Kessler left ''Blue's Clues'' and the network to pursue other projects. He told ''The New York Times'' that he had "no hard feelings" regarding his departure.<ref name="carter"/> Kessler continued to be listed as an executive producer for the run of the show and for any future spin-offs. Also in 2000, ], which was also owned by Viacom, began airing the show as part of the centerpiece of its Saturday and Sunday morning children's programming.<ref name="carter"/> In 2004, ''Blue's Clues'' stopped production, which Santomero called "devastating",<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/> although it continued to air on Nickelodeon, and a spin-off, '']'', was launched in the same year. It featured puppets, as well as the original show's second host.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Heffernan|first=Jennifer|date=26 January 2007|title=Calling Blue: And on That Farm He Had a Cellphone|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/26/arts/television/26blue.html?pagewanted=print&_r=0|access-date=5 June 2021|archive-date=14 January 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210114001036/https://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/26/arts/television/26blue.html?pagewanted=print&_r=0|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="newtricks">{{Cite magazine|last=Ingman|first=Marrit|date=2 August 2006|title=New Tricks Help Old Dog Stay on Air|magazine=Variety|url=https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/new-tricks-help-old-dog-stay-on-air-1200342597/|access-date=6 June 2021|archive-date=6 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210606061218/https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/new-tricks-help-old-dog-stay-on-air-1200342597/|url-status=live}}</ref> ''Blue's Clues'' celebrated its 10-year anniversary in 2006 with a prime time special and the release of a DVD entitled "Blue's Biggest Stories", which consisted of eight half-hour episodes spanning the show's history.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Gates|first=Anita|date=5 August 2006|title='Blue's Clues' Celebrates Its 70th Dog Year on the Air|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/05/arts/television/05gate.html|access-date=5 June 2021|archive-date=6 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210606061218/https://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/05/arts/television/05gate.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Carlozo|first=Louis R.|date=22 August 2006|title='Clues' turns 10; 'Arthur' enters new sphere|work=Chicago Tribune|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2006-08-22-0608220185-story.html|access-date=2021-06-06|archive-date=2022-06-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220606225319/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2006-08-22-0608220185-story.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

In November 2019, a reboot of ''Blue's Clues'' premiered. The show, called '']'', is hosted by ] and features many of the same characters in the original show. ], the original show's first host, serves as a writer and director on the new show; he has also made guest appearances, along with the original show's second host ], and participated in the casting of Dela Cruz.<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/><ref name="carraslatimes"/>

=== Casting ===
{{Main|List of Blue's Clues characters{{!}}List of ''Blue's Clues'' characters}}

], shown here in 2009]]

The most important casting decision was that of the host, the only human character in the show. The host's role was to empower and challenge the show's young viewers, to help increase their self-esteem, and to strongly connect with them through the television screen. The producers originally wanted a female host.<ref name="tracy-45">Tracy, p. 45</ref> After months of research and over 1,000 auditions, they hired actor/performer ] based on the strength of his audition.<ref name="tracy-45"/><ref>Moll, event occurs between 3:53–4:44</ref> Burns received the strongest and most enthusiastic response in tests with the young audience.<ref>Tracy, p. 46</ref> Johnson said what made Burns a great children's TV host was that "he didn't want to be a children's host&nbsp;... He loved kids, but he didn't want to make a career out of it".<ref name="meandyou"/> Burns decided to leave the show in the autumn of 2000, departing in January 2001.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.newson6.com/story/5e3683cb2f69d76f62098c01/steve-burns-to-leave-blues-clues | title=Steve Burns to Leave 'Blue's Clues' | access-date=2022-11-24 | archive-date=2022-11-24 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221124055810/https://www.newson6.com/story/5e3683cb2f69d76f62098c01/steve-burns-to-leave-blues-clues | url-status=live }}</ref> He was in over 100 episodes of ''Blue's Clues'' when his final episodes aired in April 2002.<ref name="newtricks" /><ref>Moll, event occurs between 7:45–10:27</ref> Burns himself stated, "I knew I wasn't gonna be doing children's television all my life, mostly because I refused to lose my hair on a kid's TV show, and it was happenin' – fast."<ref>Moll, event occurs at 8:49</ref>

After the producers conducted 1,500 auditions, Burns was replaced by actor ], who played Steve's brother Joe, introduced to the audience in articles in Nickelodeon's magazine and on its webpage and an arc of three episodes.<ref name="tracy-47">Tracy, p. 47</ref> Burns' departure generated "outlandish rumors" and was featured in a ] magazine story. Patton had never seen ''Blue's Clues'' before he auditioned for the part, and like Burns, who worked with him to help him prepare for the role, was also popular with preschool test audiences.<ref>Moll, event occurs between 9:23–9:52.</ref><ref name="kiesewetter">{{Cite news|last=Kiesewetter|first=John|date=29 April 2002|title='Blue's Clues' puts on new host, new shirts|work=Cincinnati Enquirer|url=http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/04/29/tem_blues_clues_puts_on.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130102102713/http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/04/29/tem_blues_clues_puts_on.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=2013-01-02|access-date=15 June 2021}}</ref> The producers later reported that finding someone who could match Burns' "deceptively simple performance" was difficult.<ref name="kiesewetter"/> Patton became a "household name",<ref>{{Cite news|last=Barron|first=Natania|date=25 January 2010|title=GeekDad Talks with Donovan Patton of the New Nickelodeon Show Team Umizoomi|magazine=Wired|url=https://www.wired.com/2010/01/geekdad-talks-with-donovan-patton-of-the-new-nickelodeon-show-team-umizoomi/|access-date=15 June 2021|archive-date=6 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306144128/http://www.wired.com/2010/01/geekdad-talks-with-donovan-patton-of-the-new-nickelodeon-show-team-umizoomi/|url-status=live}}</ref> although as Johnson stated, his character was named Joe because "Donovan was a little too hard on a preschooler's tongue".<ref>{{Cite news|last=Lipton|first=Michael A.|date=3 June 2002|title=Am I Blue? Absolutely|work=People|url=https://people.com/archive/am-i-blue-absolutely-vol-57-no-21/|access-date=15 June 2021|archive-date=6 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210506205135/https://people.com/archive/am-i-blue-absolutely-vol-57-no-21/|url-status=live}}</ref> According to '']'', Patton played the role more relaxed and "taller" than Burns.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Wadler|first=Joyce|date=23 May 2002|title=Public Lives; Searching for Clues in the Land of the Blue Dog|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/23/nyregion/public-lives-searching-for-clues-in-the-land-of-the-blue-dog.html|access-date=15 June 2021|archive-date=13 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191213011933/https://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/23/nyregion/public-lives-searching-for-clues-in-the-land-of-the-blue-dog.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

Even though research demonstrated that children tend to pay less attention to adult male voices, Burns and Patton were chosen as the program's hosts because they were popular with their audience.<ref name="anderson2004-258">Anderson (2004), p. 258</ref> Daniel Anderson insisted that Burns and Patton were the best actors for their roles out of the hundreds who auditioned, calling them "actors who could mime as demanded by the mixed action and animation format",<ref name="anderson2004-259">Anderson (2004), p. 259</ref> and reported that there was no evidence that children paid less attention to them than to other parts of the program.<ref>Anderson (2004), pp. 258–259</ref> He also said that Burns and Patton overcame what he called "attentional bias against men"<ref name="anderson2004-259"/> in three ways: by behaving energetically and childlike; by breaking the fourth wall and talking directly to the audience, often by looking directly into the camera and asking their audience, "Will you help?",<ref name="anderson2004-261"/> and like Fred Rogers, forming a direct relationship to the audience; and by "always doing something".<ref name="anderson2004-259"/> Anderson insisted that by forming a relationship with the audience, the actors' male voice became cues to the audience to pay attention and stated that it was the hosts' style of presentation that determined child attention.<ref name="anderson2004-259"/>

Johnson was cast as Blue's voice because, of the show's crew, she was able to sound the most like a dog. Nick Balaban, who wrote the music for the show along with ], was cast as the voice of Mr. Salt. Balaban initially used a ] accent for Mr. Salt before settling on a French accent.<ref>Moll, event occurs at 3:10</ref><ref>Moll, event occurs at 4:55</ref> Rubin also provided the voice of Mailbox.<ref name="tracy-52">Tracy, p. 52</ref>

== Format ==
In '']'', author ], who called ''Blues Clues'' the "{{Nbsp}}'stickiest'—meaning the most irresistible and involving—television show ever",<ref name="meandyou">{{Cite news|last=Norris|first=Chris|date=9 February 2004|title=Me and You and a Dog Named Blue|work=Spin|url=https://www.spin.com/2004/02/me-and-you-and-dog-named-blue/|access-date=15 June 2021|archive-date=14 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210614212948/https://www.spin.com/2004/02/me-and-you-and-dog-named-blue/|url-status=live}}</ref> described its format:


===Format===
The format of each episode of ''Blue's Clues'' is the same.
<blockquote> <blockquote>
Steve, the host, presents the audience with a puzzle involving Blue, the animated dog ... To help the audience unlock the puzzle, Blue leaves behind a series of clues, which are objects marked with one of her paw prints. In between the discovery of the clues, Steve plays a series of games&mdash;mini-puzzles&mdash;with the audience that are thematically related to the overall puzzle ... As the show unfolds, Steve and Blue move from one animated set to another, jumping through magical doorways, leading viewers on a journey of discovery, until, at the end of the story, Steve returns to the living room. There, at the climax of the show, he sits down in a comfortable chair to think&mdash;a chair known, of course, in the literal world of Blue's Clues, as the Thinking Chair. He puzzles over Blue's three clues and attempts to come up with the answer.<ref>{{cite book | last = Gladwell | first = Malcolm | title = The tipping point: How little things can make a big difference | publisher = Little, Brown and Company | year = 2000 | location = Boston, Mass. | pages = 122 | isbn = 0-316-34662-4}}</ref> Steve, the host, presents the audience with a puzzle involving Blue, the animated dog&nbsp;... To help the audience unlock the puzzle, Blue leaves behind a series of clues, which are objects marked with one of her paw prints. In between the discovery of the clues, Steve plays a series of ]—mini-puzzles—with the audience that are thematically related to the overall puzzle&nbsp;... As the show unfolds, Steve and Blue move from one animated set to another, jumping through magical doorways, leading viewers on a journey of discovery, until, at the end of the story, Steve returns to the living room. There, at the climax of the show, he sits down in a comfortable chair to think—a chair known, of course, in the literal world of ''Blue's Clues'', as the Thinking Chair. He puzzles over Blue's three clues and attempts to come up with the answer.<ref>Gladwell, p. 122</ref>
</blockquote> </blockquote>


Nickelodeon researcher ] called the structure of ''Blue's Clues'' a game that presented its viewers with increasingly challenging and developmentally appropriate problems to solve.<ref name="anderson2000-181"/> Early episodes focused on basic subjects such as colors and numbers, but later the programs focused on ], ], ], and ].<ref name="taleofthepup"/> The show's producers believed that comprehension and attention were strongly connected, so they wrote the episodes to encourage and increase their viewers' attention. They used content and production characteristics such as pacing which gave children time to respond,<ref name="watchlearn">{{cite journal |last1=Jaffe |first1=Eric |title=Watch and Learn |journal=APS Observer |date=December 2005 |volume=18 |issue=12 |url=http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/uncategorized/watch-and-learn.html |access-date=2013-03-23 |archive-date=2016-07-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160730043854/http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/uncategorized/watch-and-learn.html |url-status=live }}</ref> as well as "camera techniques, children's voices, musical cues, sound effects, clear transitions, repeatable dialogue, and visuals".<ref name="anderson2000-181"/> Participation, in the form of spoken or physical response from the audience, and the mastery of thinking skills were encouraged by the use of repetition, both within the structure of individual episodes and across multiple episodes.<ref name="watchlearn"/> The producers used a variety of formal features, which were auditory, and content features, which consisted of invitations given to the audience. The features were also in the form of both recurrent and unique formats and content. The purpose of the recurrent formats and content, which were similar in every episode, was to increase viewers' attention, comprehension, and participation during key educational lessons.<ref>Crawley et al., p. 267</ref>
==Reception and influence==

Nickelodeon originally aired the same episode daily for five days before showing the next one. The producers believed this telecast strategy empowered young children by giving them many opportunities to master the content and problems presented to them.<ref name="repetition"/><ref name="crawley-265">Crawley et al., p. 265</ref> Scholar Norma Pecora considered the broadcast strategy of airing the same episode for five consecutive days in a week "sound educational thinking",<ref name="pecora-372">Pecora, p. 37</ref> because children tend to watch the same episodes multiple times and learn from repetition, and "economically clever"<ref name="pecora-372"/> because the network could air 2.5 hours with one episode over five days.<ref>Pecora, pp. 37–38</ref>

== Episodes ==
{{Main|List of Blue's Clues episodes}}
{{:List of Blue's Clues episodes}}

== Educational goals ==
The creators and producers' mission of ''Blue's Clues'' was to "empower, challenge, and build the self-esteem of preschoolers&nbsp;... while making them laugh".<ref name="anderson2000-180">Anderson et al., p. 180</ref> According to Anderson and his colleagues, the show's ] was based on "inherent respect for preschoolers and their ability to think and learn while having fun".<ref name="anderson2000-182"/> Anderson and his colleagues stated that ''Blue's Clues'' was created with the question: What does television teach young children?<ref name="anderson2000-180"/> Kessler, Santomero, and Johnson were influenced by '']'' and by ''Sesame Street'', the first children's television program to create a detailed and comprehensive educational curriculum developed from research and use ], ], ], and research.<ref name="fisch-234">Fisch, Shalom M.; Rosemarie T. Truglio (2001). "Why Children Learn from Sesame Street". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. ''"G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street''. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 234. {{ISBN|0-8058-3395-1}}</ref> According to Anderson, it was essential that the writers and creators of ''Blue's Clues'' have background and experience in early childhood development theory and research in order to ensure that the audience understood the dialogue, game, and recurrent program elements in each episode.<ref>Anderson (Nick Nation), pp. 256–257</ref>

Like ''Sesame Street'', ] was an important part of the development of each episode of ''Blue's Clues,'' which was included in the show's production budgets.<ref name="anderson2004-241"/><ref name="anderson2004-258"/><ref name="anderson2000-182">Anderson et al., p. 182</ref> "We wanted to learn from ''Sesame Street'' and take it one step further", Santomero said.<ref>Gladwell, p. 111</ref> The producers and creators used formative research, which the producers called their "secret sauce",<ref>Tracy, p. 67</ref> during all aspects of the program's creative and decision-making process'','' and Nickelodeon provided the funding to support it.<ref name="anderson2000-180"/><ref>Tracy, pp. 66, 70</ref> In addition to a curriculum that emphasized reasoning skills relevant to preschoolers' everyday lives, the producers wanted to include audience participation, called by '']'' its "call and response style",<ref name="taleofthepup"/> that encouraged problem solving, mastery of the information presented, positive reinforcement, and ] messages.<ref name="anderson2004-261"/><ref name="anderson2000-180"/> They believed that a strong sense of self-esteem, which they sought to develop in their viewers, was linked to independent thinking and thinking skills.<ref>Sandler, Kevin S. "'A Kid's Gotta Do What a Kid's Gotta Do:' Branding the Nickelodeon Experience." In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). ''Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids''. New York: New York University Press, p. 53. {{ISBN|978-0-8147-3651-7}}.</ref><ref>Sandler (Nick Nation), p. 53</ref> Anderson stated, "Age-appropriate pacing and explicit directions give children an opportunity to have a voice".<ref name="anderson2000-181">Anderson et al. (2000), p. 181</ref> Anderson and his colleagues compared audience participation on the program with hands-on practice provided by a caregiver.<ref name="anderson2000-181"/> The show's producers believed, despite the viewpoints of past researchers, that children were intellectually active while watching television.<ref>Anderson (2004), p. 242</ref>

''Sesame Street'' tested a third of its episodes,<ref>Gladwell, p. 127</ref> but the ''Blue's Clues'' research team field tested every episode three times with children aged between two and six in a variety of preschool environments such as ] programs, public schools, and private day care centers, in order to ascertain their abilities, interests, and knowledge, to ensure the mission and philosophy of the program, and to ensure balanced demographic groups. There were three phases of testing: content evaluation, video evaluations, and content analysis.<ref name="anderson2000-182"/> In their tests of the pilot, conducted throughout the New York City area with over 100 children aged from three to seven, they found that as the pilot progressed, children's attention was captured and sustained, and they became excited and actively participated, standing to get closer to the television and speaking to the host.<ref>Tracy, pp. 21–23</ref> The producers and researchers also consulted outside advisers, who were chosen based on their expertise and the needs of each script. As Anderson stated, the formative research team served "as a liaison between the feedback provided by the preschoolers and outside advisers and the production team, including writers, talent, producers, directors, element artists, and animators".<ref name="anderson2000-182"/>

{{Quote box
|width = 30em
|border = 1px
|align = right
|bgcolor = #c6dbf7
|fontsize = 85%
|title_bg =
|title_fnt =
|title =
|quote = When I believed we had the best show on television that could educate preschoolers and positively impact their lives, I was relentless. I wanted so much to give kids a television show that celebrates how smart they are, because I truly believe they are brilliant. I also wanted to create a show that would help pre-schoolers feel good about themselves".
|salign = right
|source = ''Blue's Clues'' co-creator and producer Angela Santomero<ref>Tracy, p. 16</ref>
}}

''Blue's Clues'' was designed and produced on the assumption that since children are cognitively active when they watch television, a television program could be an effective method of scientific education for young children by telling stories through pictures and by modeling behavior and learning.<ref name="anderson1998-34"/><ref name="tracy-40">Tracy, p. 40</ref> These learning opportunities included the use of ] in the form of mantras and songs, and what Tracy called "metacognitive wrap-up"<ref name="tracy-40"/> at the end of each episode, in which the lessons were summarized and rehearsed. The producers wanted to foster their audience's sense of empowerment by eliciting their assistance for the show's host and by encouraging their identification with the character Blue, who served as a stand-in for the typical preschooler.<ref>Tracy, pp. 21–22</ref>

The thinking games presented in each episode used what Anderson called "a layered approach"<ref name="anderson2004-257">Anderson (2004), p. 257</ref> that took the varying capabilities of the audience into account. Santomero said that they used scaffolding and that layering was inherent in the script and design of each game. They purposely presented the problem presented in increasing levels of difficulty, to prevent children from feeling frustrated and to master concepts, experience success, and feel empowered to attempt to solve more challenging concepts presented to them. The producers' goal was that all viewers understood the problem, even if they did not know how to solve it. As a result, the child was temporary frustrated by not knowing the answer because after giving them time to come up with it, child voice-overs provided the answers for them, so that they learned the correct answers, even if they were unable to come up with them.<ref name="anderson2004-257"/><ref name="crawley-265">Crawley et al., p. 265</ref> If the child was able to come up with the answers, however, they felt "part of a larger, knowing, child audience"<ref name="anderson2004-257"/> when their answers were confirmed by the voice-overs.<ref name="anderson2004-257"/> The child voice-overs also helped viewers maintain high levels of attention during critical educational portions of the episode and modelled the audience involvement encouraged by the program.<ref name="anderson2004-258"/><ref name="crawley-265"/> The audience was told how they could help problem-solve by the host explaining how, by the child voice-overs modeling verbal participation, and by giving them enough time to respond. According to Johnson, the slow pace of the program was challenging for television directors used to the fast pace of television production and for parents, who praised the pace but expressed concerns that their children would find it boring.<ref name="anderson2004-261"/>

''Sesame Street'' reflected the prevailing view that preschoolers had short attention spans; it featured a magazine-like format consisting of varied segments.<ref name="watchlearn"/><ref name="fisch-234"/> Based on research conducted over the 30 years since the launch of ''Sesame Street'' by theorists like Anderson, the producers of ''Blue's Clues'' wanted to develop a show that took advantage of children's intellectual and behavioral activity when watching television. Previous children's television programs presented their content with little input from their viewers, but ''Blue's Clues'' was one of the first children's shows to actively invite its viewers' involvement. Its creators believed that if children were more involved in what they were viewing, they would attend to its content longer than previously expected—for up to a half hour—and learn more. They also dropped the magazine format for a more traditional ] format. As ''Variety'' magazine stated, "The choice for ''Blue's Clues'' became to tell one story, beginning to end, camera moving left-to-right like reading a storybook, transitions from scene to scene as obvious as the turning of a page".<ref name="taleofthepup"/> Every episode of ''Blue's Clues'' was structured in this way.<ref name="taleofthepup"/>

The pace of ''Blue's Clues'' was deliberate, and its material was presented clearly.<ref name="tubefortots"/> Similar to ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'',<ref name="tracy-18">Tracy, p. 18</ref> this was done was in the use of pauses that were "long enough to give the youngest time to think, short enough for the oldest not to get bored".<ref name="taleofthepup"/> The length of the pauses, which was estimated from formative research, gave children enough time to process the information and solve the problem. After pausing, child voice-overs provided the answers so that they were given to children who had not come up with the solution and helped encourage viewer participation. Researcher Alisha M. Crawley and her colleagues stated that although earlier programs sometimes invited overt audience participation, ''Blue's Clues'' was "unique in making overt involvement a systematic research-based design element".<ref name="crawley-265"/> ''Blue's Clues'' also differed from ''Sesame Street'' by not using cultural references or humor aimed at adults, as this could confuse preschoolers but, instead, made the show literal, which the producers felt would better hold the children's attention.<ref>Tracy, p. 19</ref> The structure of each episode was repetitive, designed to provide preschoolers with comfort and predictability.<ref name="tracy-40"/> Repetition of the same skills used in different contexts or games within and across episodes encouraged the mastery of thinking skills and the approach to content within an episode was consistent with learning theory that emphasized situated cognition and provided all viewers, no matter their age or abilities, with repeated opportunities to try to solve the problems presented.<ref name="anderson2004-258"/><ref>Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 180–181</ref>

Since preschoolers tend to have difficulty understanding transitions, especially when they involve active inferences about time, space, and characters' perspective, the program's producers minimized transitions that required inference so that their viewers' intellectual resources could be devoted to understanding the episode's content. They accomplished this goal by limiting the number of settings during an episode and with the transitions occurring only between them and signaled by dialogue and enough time and information necessary to process them. The primary settings in ''Blue's Clues'' were the host's house and backyard, and transitions between them were usually done continuously, without the use of ]. If transitions were accompanied by cuts, it was done by the host moving to and through a door and continuing as he entered the front or backyard. The biggest transition in ''Blue's Clues'' occurred when the host "skidooed" and jumped into a picture or book, done in a magical way with plenty of warning that it was coming, and began and ended in the new environment. Anderson reported that children clearly understood and enjoyed the skidoo transition.<ref>Anderson (2004), pp. 259–260</ref> Santomero reported that the skidoo transition was inspired by the use of the trolley in ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'', which also served as a transition device.<ref name="santomero"/>

== Production ==
The producers and writers of ''Blue's Clues'' used content and television production techniques such as camera techniques, the use of children's voices, musical cues, sound effects, repeatable dialogue, and visuals in order to encourage and increase comprehension and attention.<ref name="anderson2000-181"/> ''Blue's Clues'' was set in the home—the environment that was most familiar and secure for preschoolers—and looked like no other children's television show.<ref name="tracy-18"/> The theme and topic of each episode, which was in development, from idea development to final production, for approximately one year, was chosen by the research team. Writers created a goal sheet, which identified their objectives based on the show's curriculum and audience needs.<ref name="dhingra-5">Dhingra et al., p. 5</ref><ref name="tracy8284"/> According to show researcher Koshi Dhingra and her colleagues, the integration of writing and researching ''Blue's Clues'' was unique and involved "an extremely collaborative process".<ref name="dhingra-5"/> Script drafts, once developed and approved by the show's creators and research team, were tested at public and private schools, day care centers, preschools, and Head Start programs by three researchers, who would narrate the story in the form of a storybook and take notes about the children's responses. The writers and creators revised the scripts based on this feedback. A rough video, in which the host performed from the revised script in front of a blue screen with no animation, was filmed and retested. The script was revised based on the audiences' responses, tested a third time with animation and music added, and incorporated into future productions.<ref name="tracy8284">Tracy, pp. 82–84</ref>

According to Dhingra and her colleagues, the researchers represented the preschool viewer. After coming up with an idea for an episode, the writers met with Alice Wilder, head of the research department for ''Blue's Clues'', to discuss their idea. The research department and writers then discussed if the topic and approach to the topic was appropriate for preschoolers, and if they accepted it, the content of the episode was further developed. They would often bring in outside consultants who were experts in the subject matter and the processes in teaching it to preschoolers. Wilder considered the researchers experts in how the concepts they wanted to present would translate to the medium of television rather than in a classroom or museum, but they considered preschoolers, who evaluated each script from their perspective, to be their " true experts".<ref name="Dhingra et al., pp. 6–7">Dhingra et al., pp. 6–7</ref> The writer took the information they gathered from the research department, preschoolers, and experts and wrote a treatment, or detailed outline of the script, which included goals for the entire episode and for each game.<ref>Dhingra, pp. 6–7</ref> The writers, Wilder, and the research team had a treatment meeting, which Dhingra and her colleagues described as "an organized creative brainstorm",<ref>Dhingra et al., p. 7</ref> which was rooted in the philosophy and mission of the show, the art of good storytelling, and the point of view of their viewers. The goal of the treatment meeting was to give the writers everything they needed to create a workable second draft of the episode script, and to ensure that it fit the needs of their viewers.<ref name="Dhingra et al., pp. 6–7"/>

The researchers brought in experts, if needed, and then, at the second draft stage, interviewed preschoolers. Preschooler testing was conducted in three rounds: the concept test, and video test, and content analysis.<ref>Dhingra et al., p. 8</ref> The producers and creators of the show, during their interviews of preschoolers, created a rough version of the episode, with the host and preliminary animations and backgrounds, and showed it to preschoolers to gain further feedback and was designed to assess their reactions to the content and visuals.<ref>Dhingra et al., p. 12</ref> According to Dhingra and her colleagues, the greatest strengths of the development of all episodes of ''Blue's Clues'' were the high levels of collaboration between all departments involved in the creation of the show, the clearly defined strategies they used to effectively include their preschool viewers in the development process, and their use of the mission, philosophy, and structure of the program to create and develop each episode.<ref>Dhingra et al., p. 16</ref>

Most of the show's production was done in-house, rather than by outside companies as was customary for children's TV shows at the time.<ref name="tracy-103">Tracy, p. 103</ref> ''Blue's Clues'' was filmed in a studio in ], New York.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.southcoasttoday.com/article/19980615/News/306159930|title=Success of 'Blue's Clues' is no mystery|date=June 15, 1998|first=Frazier|last=Moore|publisher=]|access-date=November 12, 2020|archive-date=May 12, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210512014039/https://www.southcoasttoday.com/article/19980615/News/306159930|url-status=live}}</ref> The show's creators understood that the look and visual design of the show would be integral to children's attachment with it.<ref>Tracy, p. 95</ref> Johnson expanded on the "cut-out" style she had created during her college years. ''Blue's Clues'' was the first animated series for preschoolers that utilized simple cut-out construction paper shapes of familiar objects with a wide variety of colors and textures, resembling a storybook.<ref name="Tracy, p. 41">Tracy, p. 41</ref> Johnson also used primary colors and organized each room of the home setting into groups. The green-striped shirt worn by the show's original host, Steve, was inspired by ] ].<ref name="Tracy, p. 41"/> The goals were to make the show look natural and simplistic; as Tracy put it, "freshly cut and glued together with a vivid array of textures, colors, and shadows"<ref>Tracy, pp. 42―43</ref> similar to picture book illustrations. The program's design was influenced by an understanding of the cognitive, emotional, and social capabilities of preschoolers. For example, the purpose of the notebook in ''Blue's Clues'', which was used to record the clues presented throughout an episode, was to teach preschoolers how to overcome their poorly developed memory skills by using external ] aids and lists.<ref>Anderson (2004), p. 256</ref> The music, produced by composer Michael Rubin and pianist Nick Balaban, was simple, had a natural sound, and exposed children to a wide variety of genres and instruments.<ref name="tracy-51">Tracy, p. 51</ref> Rubin and Balaban used Anderson's research about the importance of using auditory cues to increase children's attention and inserted auditory signatures to encourage the audience to pay attention to the episodes "at critical junctures for learning".<ref name="anderson2004-258"/> According to Tracy, the music empowered children and gave the show "a sense of playfulness, a sense of joy, and a sense of the fantastic".<ref name="tracy-51"/> Rubin and Balaban encouraged the musicians who performed for the show to improvise.<ref>Tracy, pp. 50–52</ref>

The host performed each episode in front of a "]", with animation added later.<ref name="tracy-45"/> The show's digital design department combined high-tech and low-tech methods by creating and photographing three-dimensional objects, then cutting them out and placing them into the background, which made the objects look more real and added perspective and depth.<ref name="tracy-103"/><ref>Tracy, p. 43</ref> Johnson hired artist Dave Palmer and production company Big Pink to create the animation, which was at that time a new technology, from simple materials like fabric, paper, or pipe-cleaners, and scan them into a ] computer so that they could be animated using inexpensive computer software such as ], Ultimatte, ], and ].<ref>Tracy, p. 100</ref>{{refn|] was surprised that their products were being used in the production of a children's television show. According to Tracy, "Not even the developers of the software knew it could be used to create character animation on the scale ''Blue's Clues'' was using it",<ref name="tracy-106">Tracy, p. 106</ref> Adobe later requested that the show's animators join their client development group, and made several changes and improvements to their software as a result.<ref name="tracy-106"/>|group=note}} instead of being repeatedly redrawn as in traditional animation. Johnson credited Kessler with the idea of using the Macintosh.<ref name="carter"/> The result was something that looked different from anything else on television at the time, and the producers were able to animate two episodes in eight weeks, as compared to the sixteen weeks necessary to create a single episode by traditional methods.<ref name="tracy-94">Tracy, p. 94</ref> Their process looked like traditional cut-out animation, but was faster, more flexible, and less expensive, and it allowed them to make changes based on feedback from test audiences.<ref>Tracy, p. 101</ref> Unlike traditional animation environments, which tended to be highly structured, the animators were given information about the characters and goals of the scenes they would animate, and then given the freedom to work out the timing and look of each scene themselves, as long as their creations were true to the characters and to the story.<ref>Tracy, p. 105</ref> By 1999, the show's animation department consisted of Palmer, twenty animators, eleven digital designers, and five art directors and model makers. By 2002, Nickelodeon had built a "state-of-the-art"<ref>Tracy, p. 109</ref> $6 million digital animation studio that housed 140 people, including 70 animators.<ref>Tracy, p. 107</ref>

== Reception ==
Ratings for ''Blue's Clues'' were high during its first season, and it was Nickelodeon's most popular preschool program.<ref name="anderson2-35">Anderson, p. 35</ref> It has been described as the first commercial television show for preschoolers that was both educational and profitable.<ref name="tracy-35">Tracy, p. 35</ref> Its creators met regularly with businesses that developed ''Blue's Clues'' merchandise and products to ensure toys that were educational and met "the same high&nbsp;... standards as the show".<ref name="tracy-35"/> Products, like the show, were heavily tested prior to marketing.<ref>Tracy, p. 156</ref>{{refn|In order to keep the integrity of the ''Blue's Clues'' brand intact, a branding guide "bible" called ''Blue's Clues 101'' was created that explained the show and provided examples of products that both correctly and incorrectly reflected it.<ref>Tracy, p. 155</ref>|group=note}} ''Blue's Clues'' had sold almost 40 million units of its 45 ] and ] titles by 1998<ref name="skeinhelps">{{Cite news|date=2 August 2006|title=Skein Helps Nick Dig up Disc Bones|page=A3|work=Variety|url=https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/skein-helps-nick-dig-up-disc-bones-1200342602/|access-date=29 December 2021|archive-date=8 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211208075449/https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/skein-helps-nick-dig-up-disc-bones-1200342602/|url-status=live}}</ref> and generated over $1 billion in product licensing in 2000.<ref name="tracy-3"/> More than ten million ''Blue's Clues'' books were in print by 2001 and over three million copies of six CD-ROM titles based on the show had been sold.<ref name="taleofthepup"/> Seven ''Blue's Clues'' titles sold at least 1 million copies each.<ref name="skeinhelps"/> The show's first ] production was '']'' (2000), featuring ] and ]; it received mostly positive reviews and has sold over 3 million copies since 2006.<ref name="skeinhelps"/><ref>{{Cite news|last=Goodall|first=Gloria|date=29 September 2000|title='Blue's Clues' Movie, a Video Treat|work=Christian Science Monitor|url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2000/0929/p18s2.html|access-date=29 December 2021|archive-date=4 December 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221204055156/https://www.csmonitor.com/2000/0929/p18s2.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The launch of ''Blue's Clues'' products at ]'s flagship store in New York City was the most successful product launch in the store's history and was attended by over 7,000 people.<ref name="tracy-5"/> Steve Burns' final episode in 2002 was viewed by 1.9 million preschoolers and received a 47 percent share of the overall audience.<ref name="newtricks"/> By 2002, ''Blue's Clues'' had received several awards for children's programming, educational software, and licensing.<ref>Tracy, p. 4</ref> It won eight consecutive Emmys between 1998 and 2005 and won a ] in 2001.<ref name="carraslatimes" /><ref>{{Cite web|date=2001|title=Blue's Clues|url=https://peabodyawards.com/award-profile/blues-clues/|url-status=live|access-date=29 December 2021|website=The Peabody Awards|language=en-US|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006145547/http://www.peabodyawards.com/award-profile/blues-clues |archive-date=2014-10-06 }}</ref>

], shown here in 1990, appeared in the popular ''Blue's Clues'' VHS ''Blue's Big Musical Movie''. It was his final film role prior to his death four years later, in 2004.]]

Starting in 1999, a live production of ''Blue's Clues'' toured the U.S. to positive reviews.<ref name="tracy-53">Tracy, p. 53</ref> As of 2002, over 2 million people had attended over 1,000 performances.<ref name="tracy-53"/> The creators of the TV show were involved in all aspects of the live show, aiming to translate the bond between the TV show's audience and its cast to the stage.<ref name="tracy-55"/> The creators chose Jonathan Hochwald as the live show's producer, Gip Hoppe as its director, and Dave Gallo as its set designer. Neither Hoppe nor Gallo had any previous experience in children's theater.<ref name="tracy-53"/> Nick Balaban and Michael Rubin, who wrote the music for the TV show, composed the live show's soundtrack.<ref name="tracy-55">Tracy, p. 55</ref><ref>Tracy, p. 54</ref> The producers were concerned with children's response to the host, who was played by Tom Mizer (a different actor than the host of the TV show), but his young audience enthusiastically accepted and embraced him.<ref>Tracy, p. 56</ref> Actors were encouraged to improvise and respond to the audience, which resulted in changes throughout the show's run. The show's script included humor that both children and their parents could enjoy.<ref>Tracy, pp. 56–57</ref>

Regional versions of the show, featuring native hosts, have been produced in other countries. ] hosted the United Kingdom version and the show became part of pop culture in South Korea.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The One Show: Kevin Duala|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/profiles/5DTr0qKGWk6Z2wXdr8lyXtD/kevin-duala|url-status=live|access-date=29 December 2021|website=BBC|language=en-GB|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180426002736/http://www.bbc.co.uk:80/programmes/profiles/5DTr0qKGWk6Z2wXdr8lyXtD/kevin-duala |archive-date=2018-04-26 }}</ref><ref>Tracy, pp. 59–60</ref> In total, ''Blue's Clues'' was syndicated in 120 countries, and was translated into 15 languages.<ref name="taleofthepup"/> In 2000, it became one of the first preschool shows to incorporate ] into its content, with between five and ten signs used consistently in each episode.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Lee|first=Felicia R.|date=22 April 2000|title=A Children's Adventure in a Deaf World|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/22/arts/a-children-s-adventure-in-a-deaf-world.html?n=Top%2FReference%2FTimes+Topics%2FSubjects%2FS%2FSign+Language|access-date=29 December 2021|archive-date=17 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221017083618/https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/22/arts/a-children-s-adventure-in-a-deaf-world.html?n=Top%2FReference%2FTimes+Topics%2FSubjects%2FS%2FSign+Language|url-status=live}}</ref> ''Blue's Clues'' won an award from the Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness (GLAD) for promoting deaf awareness in the media.<ref>Tracy, p. 58</ref>

== Cultural influence and impact ==
The extensive use of research in the development and production process of ''Blue's Clues'' inspired several studies that provided evidence for its effectiveness as a learning tool.<ref>Gladwell, pp. 125–126</ref> As Anderson and his colleagues reported, ''Blue's Clues'' had "a beneficial cognitive and social impact" the longer younger children watched it, which increased steadily over time, and that its benefits to cognitive development are both durable and cumulative.<ref name="anderson2000-192">Anderson et al. (2000), p. 192</ref> They also believed that the research conducted on the program demonstrated that when children's television programs were based on information gained from child development concepts, had a systematic curriculum, and were designed with "a research-based understanding of how children use and understand television, it can be a powerful and positive influence".<ref>Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 192–193</ref> As they stated, "it appears that the program is not only doing well, but it is also doing good”.<ref name="anderson2000-192"/> In 2004, Anderson said that ''Blue's Clues'' "raised the bar"<ref>Anderson (2004), p. 244</ref> for educational television; he and '']'' reported that audience participation became an important part of other educational preschool TV programs such as '']'' and ''Sesame Street''.<ref name="anderson2004-255"/><ref name=":0">{{Cite magazine|last=Weisman|first=Jon|date=2 August 2006|title=Interactive innovator draws raves|magazine=Variety|url=https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/interactive-innovator-draws-raves-1200342600/|access-date=28 July 2021|archive-date=22 August 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210822215722/https://variety.com/2006/scene/features/interactive-innovator-draws-raves-1200342600/|url-status=live}}</ref> Anderson also reported that after ''Blue's Clues'', all of Nickelodeon's educational programming included the use of formative research.<ref name="anderson2004-258"/>

In 2019, shortly after the premiere of ''Blue's Clues & You'', ''the New York Times'' called ''Blue's Clues'' "something of a throwback: a leisurely paced, unflashy show with the educational bona fides of its public TV predecessors ''Mr. Rogers'' and ''Sesame Street"''. It also stated that ''Blue's Clues'' paved the way for shows like ''Dora the Explorer''.<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/> The program was the first children's cable show built entirely around direct address, the first to invite preschoolers to play along with the characters with games and "mini-mysteries",<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/> and the first to include built-in silences designed for child participation. As ''The New York Times'' stated, "The show was interactive before interactivity became mundane".<ref name="bluescluesreturns"/>

Based on anecdotal evidence that preschoolers enjoyed repeated viewings of the programs they watched on television, including Anderson's own experience with his four-year-old daughter, who asked to watch a tape of the pilot of ''Blue's Clues'' 17 times, the producers decided to repeat each episode daily for a week. Despite no published evidence that repeated viewings resulted in increased comprehension, especially for younger viewers, and would reinforce the problem-solving skills taught in each episode, and because they did not have enough money to produce a full season of episodes, Nickelodeon agreed to their broadcast strategy, and they were the first network to experiment with the approach. In the summer of 1996, before the premiere of ''Blue's Clues'', Santomero, Anderson, and Wilder conducted a study, funded by Nickelodeon, about the effect of repeated viewings of the pilot episode on its viewers and their ability to learn the curriculum content contained in the episode.<ref name="anderson2004-262"/><ref name="taleofthepup"/><ref name="anderson2000-1822">Anderson et al. (2000), p. 182</ref><ref>Gladwell, p. 125</ref>

Anderson reported that the results of the study were "clear, striking, and to us, very interesting".<ref name="anderson2004-262"/> They found that except for the five-year-old boys they tested, audience participation greatly increased with repetition, especially for the problem-solving portions of an episode, as did their comprehension and problem solving.<ref name="anderson2000-1822"/><ref name="anderson2004-263">Anderson (2004), p. 263</ref><ref>Crawley et al. (1999), p. 637</ref><ref name="crawley-278">Crawley, et al., p. 278</ref> Anderson stated, "As children learned how to solve the problems they would shout out the answers, talk to Steve, point to the screen, jump up with excitement, and so on".<ref name="anderson2004-263"/> After five viewings, children had also become skilled at solving similar problems that had not been presented in the episode. Anderson reported that the repetition broadcast strategy worked during the program's first year. Nickelodeon used the same strategy for its premiere of ''Dora the Explorer'' in 2000, and Nielsen ratings for both programs indicated no change in audience size during the time the repetitions aired.<ref name="anderson2004-263"/><ref name="anderson2000-184">Anderson et al. (2000), p. 184</ref> The study also demonstrated that watching ''Blue's Clues'' changed how children watch television and that their problem-solving skills and interaction would transfer to other programs they watched.<ref>Anderson (2004), p. 264</ref>

In 1999, Anderson and a team of researchers, some of which were his colleagues at Nickelodeon, studied how episode repetition affected comprehension, audience participation, and visual attention. The researchers tested whether repeated viewings of the show resulted in mastery over the material presented, or whether viewers would habituate to what they watched or become bored.<ref>Anderson et al., p. 183</ref> The study demonstrated that for the first few repetitions, children pay close attention to the educational content because it was more cognitively demanding. The researchers concluded that audience participation was lower because children were devoting more of their cognitive resources to understanding and solving the problem presented in the episode. When they mastered the problems, which the researchers suspected happened the third time the children viewed the episode, they paid the same amount of attention to the educational content as to the entertainment content, which was less demanding. Audience participation, however, increased because their cognitive resources were freed up and because they knew the answers to the questions asked by the host and other characters. Anderson and his colleagues believed that their study proved that episode repetition appeared to foster their viewers' empowerment, as demonstrated in the viewers' enthusiastic efforts to help solve problems the host and other characters posed.<ref name="anderson2000-184"/>

The study also demonstrated that experienced viewers (those familiar with the program) looked less at the screen than inexperienced viewers. All children looked at educational content more than at entertainment content. Experienced viewers looked at content unique to the program, but inexperienced viewers did not distinguish between the two types of content, since for them, all content was new. Experienced viewers interacted with the program more and showed better comprehension of the content than inexperienced viewers, especially when they were exposed to content that was repeated across episodes.<ref>Anderson et al. (2000), p. 185</ref><ref name="crawley-2792">Crawley et al., p. 279</ref> As Anderson and his colleagues put it, "These results further support the notion that when content is new and challenging, preschoolers pay greater attention, but when it is in a recurrent format and therefore readily mastered, they interact more".<ref>Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 185–186</ref> In other words, "Interaction in ''Blue's Clues'' to some extent thus reflects mastery".<ref name="anderson2000-186">Anderson et al. (2000), p. 186</ref> ] of the show's first season, when the same episode was shown daily, were flat over the five-day period, which indicated to Anderson that young children did not tire of its repetition or of its complexity over time.<ref name="anderson2-35"/> According to Crawley and her colleagues, the producers' repeat broadcast strategy had no negative effectives of the program's ratings and appeared to be a success.<ref>Crawley et al. (1999), p. 636</ref>

In 2000, another team of researchers, including Anderson, Crawley, and other Nickelodeon colleagues, studied if watching ''Blue's Clues'' changed the way children watch television and if they learned "an interactive style of television viewing”,<ref name="anderson2000-186"/> meaning that they were more interactive with an episode from a different series than viewers who did not have experience watching ''Blue’s Clues''. They compared experienced and unexperienced viewers as they watched an episode of '']'', a “curriculum-based magazine format”<ref name="anderson2000-186"/> series that aired on ], directed towards approximately the same audience as ''Blue’s Clues''. They found that although experienced ''Blue's Clues'' viewers paid less overall attention to ''Big Bag'' than inexperienced viewers, their patterns of attention across ''Big Bag'' were identical to their attention to an episode of Blue's Clues. They also demonstrated that viewers had the same amount of comprehension in both programs, but ''Blue's Clues'' viewers interacted more with ''Big Bag'' than inexperienced viewers. When the content of ''Big Bag'' was new and challenging, ''Blue's Clues'' viewers paid more attention, and when it was familiar, either from previous viewings or in a format they recognized, they interacted with it more. In short, Anderson and his colleagues found that "interaction in ''Blue's Clues'' to some extent reflects mastery"<ref name="anderson2000-186"/> and felt that their study demonstrated that watching ''Blue's Clues'' changed how young children watch television.<ref name="anderson2000-186"/> Researcher Shalom M. Fisch, however, stated that although the show attempted to be "participatory", it could not truly be so, because unlike interactive computer games, the viewers' responses could not change or influence what occurred on-screen.<ref>Fisch, Shalom M. (2004). ''Children's Learning from Educational Television:'' Sesame Street ''and Beyond''. Mahwah, New Jersey.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, p. 199. {{ISBN|0-8058-3936-4}}</ref>], shown here in 2009, appeared in several ''Blue's Clues'' episodes introducing American Sign Language to its young viewers.]]

In 2002, Crawley, Anderson, and their colleagues conducted another study on the effects of ''Blue's Clues'', this time researching whether more experienced viewers mastered the content and cognitive challenges faster and easier than first-time viewers. They surmised that experienced viewers would comprehend and interact more with the recurring and familiar segments of the show designed to aid comprehension, but they found that familiarity with the structure of an individual episode did not provide experienced viewers with an advantage over the inexperienced viewers. Crawley and Anderson also studied whether experienced viewers of ''Blue's Clues'' interacted more with other children's TV shows and whether the viewing behaviors they learned from ''Blue's Clues'' could be transferred to other shows.<ref>Crawley et al., pp. 266–268</ref><ref>Crawley et al., pp. 274–275</ref> They found that although experienced viewers of ''Blue's Clues'' interacted with an episode of another series, they did not spend more time watching it than viewers unfamiliar with the show. The researchers stated, "It is apparent that, although preschoolers learn to enthusiastically engage in overt audience participation, they do not, by and large, have a metacognitive understanding of why they do so."<ref name="crawley-278"/>

The 2002 studies demonstrated that experience with watching one TV series affects how children watch other programs, especially in the way they interact with them.<ref name="crawley-278"/> They also showed that since children are selective in the material they attend to and that their interaction increases with comprehension and mastery, children tend to pay more attention to novel information and interact more with material they have seen before and mastered. According to Crawley and her colleagues, ''Blue's Clues'' demonstrated that television could empower and influence children's long-term motivation for and a love of learning. As they stated, "One need only to watch children watch ''Blue’s Clues'' to realize that they respond to it with enormous enthusiasm".<ref name="crawley-2792">Crawley et al., p. 279</ref>


Erin Ryan and her colleagues performed a 2009 study on the effect of the use of ] (ASL) in ''Blue's Clues'' episodes. They analyzed 16 episodes over two weeks for the content and frequency of the signs used and found a high incidence of ASL use by various characters, but that it was inconsistent, especially in the connection between English words and their corresponding signs. The purpose of signed communication and its connection with ASL and the Deaf community was also not clearly explained. The researchers speculated that hearing children with no previous ASL exposure would become familiar with ASL and with deaf people by these episodes, thus reducing the stigma attached to deafness and hard of hearing individuals. Based on other research about the positive effects of teaching ASL to hearing children, the researchers also speculated that it could lead to an increase of vocabulary skills and IQ, as well as improve interpersonal communication. They surmised that deaf children would feel more included and less isolated and have more opportunities to view positive models of ASL and deaf people.<ref name="ryan-17">Ryan et al., p. 17</ref><ref name="ryan-20">Ryan et al., p. 20</ref>
''Blue's Clues'' premiered on September 8, 1996.<ref name="tenyears"/> It was a "smash hit," largely due to the intensive and extensive research its producers employed.<ref name="interactive"/> Within eighteen months of its premiere, "virtually 100% of preschoolers' parents knew about ''Blue's Clues''", an awareness comparable to "top-tier" shows like the 30-year old ''].''<ref>{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 3 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref> It became the highest-rated show for preschoolers on commercial television;<ref name="tubefortots"/> by 2002; 13.7 million viewers tuned in each week. In 2000, the show had generated over $1 billion in licensing products. It has received numerous awards for excellence in children's programming, educational software, and licensing, and has received nine ] nominations. More than ten million ''Blue's Clues'' books were in print by 2001, and over three million copies of six CD-ROM titles based on the show were sold.<ref>{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 3–4 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref>


Georgene L. Troseth and her colleagues at ] studied how toddlers used information gained from prerecorded video and from interactions with a person through closed-circuit video, and found that two-year-old children did not learn as much from prerecorded videos because the videos lacked social cues and personal references.<ref>Troseth et al., p. 786</ref> Two-year-olds who viewed a video with instructions about how to find a toy in an adjoining room from a non-interactive researcher did not use the information, even though they smiled and responded to questions. Troseth speculated that their research had implications for interactive educational shows like ''Blue's Clues'', which although was "on the right track"<ref name="troseth-796">Troseth et al., p. 796</ref> because the host invited interaction with the show's viewers, did not provide children with the social cues to solve real-world problems. Troseth stated that repetition, repeated exposure, and familiarity with the show's host may increase children's ability to learn facts and to use strategies they learn from ''Blue's Clues'' to solve new problems. Her research suggested that ''Blue's Clues'' engaged young children and elicited their active participation because they mimicked social interaction.<ref name="troseth-796"/>
Much of the credit for the success of ''Blue's Clues'' can be given to ], the show's original host. Burns became "a superstar" among his audience and their parents, but unknown to everyone else,<ref name="spin.com"/> and enjoyed what he called "micro-celebrity, about as small a celebrity as you can be."<ref name="athome"/> As the '']'' reported, he "developed an avid following among both preteen girls and mothers. The former send torrents of e-mail; the latter scrutinize the show with an intensity that might make even ], the red ], blush."<ref name="athome">{{cite news | last = Iovine | first Julie V. = | title = At home with&mdash;Steven Burns; A few clues in Brooklyn | publisher = The New York Times | date = ] | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9905E4D71E3DF93BA25752C1A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all | accessdate = 2007-12-11}}</ref> In 2000, ] included Burns in their annual list of America's most eligible bachelors.<ref name="questions">{{cite news | title = Questions and answers: Steve Burns | publisher = Newsweek | date = ] | url = http://www.newsweek.com/id/85284/page/1 | accessdate = 2009-01-12}}</ref> Burns was "very involved" with the ] of ''Blue's Clues'' from the beginning, first becoming a creative consultant and by 2000, a producer.<ref name="questions"/>


== 2019 revival ==
''Blue's Clues'' allowed other countries outside of the U.S. to produce their own versions of the show. It was a run-away hit in the U.K., and has become part of ] in ]. The "dubbed" American version is shown in over sixty countries.<ref name="ukhit">{{cite book | last = Tracy | first = Diane | title = Blue's Clues for success: The 8 secrets behind a phenomenal business | publisher = Kaplan Publishing | year = 2002 | location = New York, New York | pages = 59–60 | isbn = 079315376X }}</ref> It was also one of the first preschool shows to incorporate ] into its content. Approximately seven signs were used consistently in each episode.<ref>{{cite news | last = Lee | first = Felicia R.| title = A children's adventure in a Deaf world | publisher = The New York Times | date = ] | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9403E0DE1630F931A15757C0A9669C8B63&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/S/Sign%20Language | accessdate = 2007-12-14}}</ref>
{{Main|Blue's Clues & You!{{!}}''Blue's Clues & You!''}}
On March 6, 2018, Nickelodeon announced a revival of the series, with a new host and 20 new episodes. An open casting call for the show's new host occurred in April, and production began in the summer of 2018.<ref name="butler">{{cite news|last1=Butler|first1=Karen|date=10 March 2018|title=Nickelodeon is Bringing Back 'Blue's Clues' with a New Host|work=UPI|url=https://www.upi.com/Nickelodeon-is-bringing-back-Blues-Clues-with-a-new-host/6621520708265/|access-date=29 December 2021|archive-date=14 November 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181114053035/https://www.upi.com/Nickelodeon-is-bringing-back-Blues-Clues-with-a-new-host/6621520708265/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="revive">{{cite news|last1=Boucher|first1=Ashley|date=6 March 2018|title=Nickelodeon to revive 'Blue's Clues' with 20 new episodes|work=San Francisco Chronicle|url=https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/the-wrap/article/Nickelodeon-to-Revive-Blue-s-Clues-12732748.php|access-date=29 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180612141526/https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/the-wrap/article/Nickelodeon-to-Revive-Blue-s-Clues-12732748.php|archive-date=12 June 2018}}</ref> On September 13, 2018, it was announced that the show would be titled ''Blue's Clues & You!'', and ] would be the host of the revival.<ref>{{cite web|last=Petski|first=Denise|date=13 September 2018|title=Nickelodeon's 'Blue's Clues' Reboot Gets New Host & New Title|url=https://deadline.com/2018/09/nickelodeons-blues-clues-reboot-gets-new-host-new-title-1202463576/|url-status=live|access-date=29 December 2021|publisher=Deadline|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180913164801/https://deadline.com/2018/09/nickelodeons-blues-clues-reboot-gets-new-host-new-title-1202463576/ |archive-date=2018-09-13 }}</ref> The show premiered on November 11, 2019.<ref>{{cite web|last=Petski|first=Denise|date=14 February 2019|title='SpongeBob' Spinoffs, 'All That' & 'Are You Smarter Than 5th Grader?' Revivals & More On Nickelodeon's 2019 Content Slate|url=https://deadline.com/2019/02/spongebob-spinoffs-all-that-are-you-smarter-than-5th-grader-revivals-nickelodeon-2019-content-slate-1202557532/|url-status=live|access-date=29 December 2021|website=Deadline|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190214194933/https://deadline.com/2019/02/spongebob-spinoffs-all-that-are-you-smarter-than-5th-grader-revivals-nickelodeon-2019-content-slate-1202557532/ |archive-date=2019-02-14 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Pedersen|first=Erik|date=26 August 2019|title='Blue's Clues & You' Teaser & Premiere Date: Ex-Hosts Return For First Episode|url=https://deadline.com/video/blues-clues-and-you-trailer-premiere-date-nickelodeon-ex-hosts-return-for-first-episode/|url-status=live|access-date=29 December 2021|website=Deadline|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190827173923/https://deadline.com/video/blues-clues-and-you-trailer-premiere-date-nickelodeon-ex-hosts-return-for-first-episode/ |archive-date=2019-08-27 }}</ref>


== Notes ==
The show's extensive use of research in its development and production process inspired several research projects that have provided evidence for its efficacy as a learning tool. In 2000, four studies, funded by ] and the ], researched the impact of ''Blue's Clues'' on its young viewers. When repeated viewings of the same episode were tested, children showed increased material comprehension, especially in their use of problem-solving strategies. The show improved children's flexible thinking&mdash;solving ], creative thinking, and ] and verbal skills. Regular viewers tended to interact with other TV programs more than other children.<ref>{{cite journal | last = Anderson | first = Daniel R. | title = Researching Blue's Clues: Viewing behavior and impact | journal = Media Psychology | volume = 2 | issue = 2 | pages = 179&ndash;194 | year = 2000 | accessdate = 2007-12-12 | doi = 10.1207/S1532785XMEP0202_4 }}</ref> A two-year ] of the impact of viewing ''Blue's Clues'' was conducted; its result was that viewers of the show were more proficient in flexible thinking than their non-watching peers.<ref> {{Citation | last = Bryant | first = J. Alison | last2 = Bryant | first2 = Lisa | last3 = McCollum | first3 = James F. | last4 = Love | first4 = Curtis C. | contribution = Curriculum-based preschool television programming and the American family: Historical development, impact of public policy, and social and educational effects | year = 2001 | title = Television and the American Family | editor-last = Bryant | editor-first = Jennings | editor2-last = Bryant | editor2-first = J. Alison | place = Mahwah, N.J. | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Associates | isbn = 0-8058-3421-4}}</ref> There is no evidence that watching ''Blue's Clues'' improves children's expressive vocabulary. In one of the few real criticisms of ''Blue's Clues'', researcher Shalom M. Fisch stated that although the show attempted to be "participatory", it could not truly be so (unlike interactive games) because the viewers' responses could not change or influence what was occurring onscreen.<ref>{{cite book | last = Fisch | first = Shalom M. | title = Children's learning from educational television: ''Sesame Street'' and beyond | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Associates | year = 2004 | location = Mahwah, N.J. | isbn = 0-8058-3936-4}}</ref>
{{Reflist|group=note}}


==See also== == References ==
=== Citations ===
* ]
{{Reflist|refs=
* ]
}}
* '']'', by ] – contains an analysis of ''Blue's Clues''


==References== === Sources ===
* Anderson, Daniel R. (1998). "Educational Television is not an Oxymoron". ''The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science'' '''557''' (1): 24–38. ]
{{reflist|2}}
* Anderson, Daniel R. (2004). "Watching Children Watch Television and the Creation of ''Blue's Clues''". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). ''Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids''. New York: New York University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-8147-3651-7}}.
* Anderson, Daniel R.; Jennings Bryant; Alice Wilder; Angela Santomero; Marsha Williams; Alisha M. Crawley. (2000). "Researching Blue's Clues: Viewing Behavior and Impact". ''Media Psychology'' '''2''' (2): 179–194. ]
* Calvert, Sandra L and Kotler, Jennifer A. (2003). . {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170808075821/http://cdmc.georgetown.edu/wp-content/uploads/lessons_from_childrens_television2.pdf |date=August 8, 2017 }}. ''Applied Developmental Psychology''. '''24''' (3), pp.&nbsp;275–335. ]. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
* Crawley, Alisha M.;Daniel R. Anderson; Angela Santomero; Alice Wilder; Marsha Williams; Marie K. Evans; Jennings Bryant (June 2002). "Do Children Learn How to Watch Television? The Impact of Extensive Experience With Blue's Clues on Preschool Children's Television Viewing Behavior". ''Journal of Communication'' '''52''' (2): 264–280. ]
* Dhingra, Koshi; Alice Wilder; Alison Sherman; Karen D. Leavitt (April 2001). "Science on Television: Case Study of the Development of "Bugs" on "Blue's Clues" (PDF). ''Change Agents in Science Education''. Annual meeting. Seattle, Washington: American Educational Research Association, pp.&nbsp;1–18
* Gladwell, Malcolm (2000). ''The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference''. New York: Little, Brown, and Company. {{ISBN|0-316-31696-2}}
* Kirkorian, Heather L.; Ellen A. Wartella; Daniel R. Anderson. (Spring 2008). "Media and Young Children's Learning". ''The Future of Children'' '''18''' (1): 39–61 ]
* Moll, George (executive producer). (2006). Short documentary. Countryline Productions.
* Osborne, Barbara (Summer 1997). . {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000919055242/https://www.media.mit.edu/explain/papers/cme-cta.pdf |date=September 19, 2000 }}. Washington, D.C.: CME/InfoActive Kids, pp.&nbsp;1–16. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
*Pecora, Norma (2004). "Nickelodeon Grows Up: The Economic Evolution of a Network". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). ''Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids''. New York: New York University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-8147-3651-7}}.
* Ryan, Erin; Cynthia Nichols; Melissa Weinstein; Rebecca Burton. (2009). "Helping Hands? The Use of American Sign Language in Nickelodeon's Blue's Clues". ''Conference Papers – International Communication Association'': 1–37.
* Tracy, Diane. (2002). ''Blue's Clues for Success: The 8 Secrets Behind a Phenomenal Business''. New York: Kaplan Publishing. {{ISBN|0-7931-5376-X}}.
* Troseth, Georgene L.; Megan M. Saylor. Allison H. Archer. (May/June 2006). "Young Children's Use of Video as a Source of Socially Relevant Information". ''Child Development'' '''77''' (3): 786–799. ]


==External links== == External links ==
{{Portal bar|Cartoon|1990s|2000s|Animation|Television}}
*
* * {{Official website|www.nickjr.com/blues-clues/}}
* {{imdb title|id=0163929|title=Blue's Clues}} * {{IMDb title|0163929}}
* {{tv.com|4339|Blue's Clues}} * {{epguides|BluesClues}}
*
*


{{Nicktoons}} {{Blue's Clues}}
{{Former Nickelodeon original series}}
{{TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming}}
{{Children's programming on CBS in the 2000s}}


]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]


] ]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 16:24, 30 November 2024

American children's television show This article is about the original 1996 series. For the video game series, see Blue's Clues (video game series). For the 2019 revival series, see Blue's Clues & You!

Blue's Clues
GenreEducational
Created by
Presented by
Voices of
Opening theme
  • "Blue's Clues Theme" (seasons 1–4)
  • "Another Blue's Clues Day" performed by Donovan Patton (seasons 5–6)
Ending theme
  • "So Long Song" (seasons 1–5)
  • "Goodbye Song" (season 6)
Composers
  • Nick Balaban
  • Michael Rubin
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons6
No. of episodes143 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Todd Kessler
  • Angela C. Santomero
  • Traci Paige Johnson
  • Jennifer Twomey
Running time21–26 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkNickelodeon
ReleaseSeptember 8, 1996 (1996-09-08) –
August 6, 2006 (2006-08-06)
Related
Blue's Room
Blue's Clues & You!

Blue's Clues is an American interactive educational children's television series created by Traci Paige Johnson, Todd Kessler, and Angela C. Santomero. It premiered on Nickelodeon's Nick Jr. block on September 8, 1996, and concluded its run on August 6, 2006, with a total of six seasons and 143 episodes. The original host of the show was Steve Burns, who left in 2002 and was replaced by Donovan Patton (as "Joe") for the fifth and sixth seasons. The show follows an animated blue-spotted dog named Blue as she leaves a trail of clues/paw prints for the host and the viewers to figure out her plans for the day.

The producers and creators combined concepts from child development and early-childhood education with innovative animation and production techniques that helped their viewers learn, using research conducted thirty years since the debut of Sesame Street in the U.S. Unlike earlier preschool shows, Blue's Clues presented material in a narrative format instead of a magazine format, used repetition to reinforce its curriculum, structured every episode the same way, and revolutionized the genre by inviting their viewers' involvement.

Research was part of the creative and decision-making process in the production of the show, and was integrated into all aspects and stages of the creative process. Blue's Clues was the first cutout animation series for preschoolers in the United States and resembles a storybook in its use of primary colors and its simple construction paper shapes of familiar objects with varied colors and textures. Its home-based setting is familiar to American children, but has a look unlike previous children's TV shows.

Upon debuting, Blue's Clues received critical acclaim. It became the highest-rated show for preschoolers on American commercial television, and was significant to Nickelodeon's growth. The show has been syndicated in 120 countries and translated into 15 languages. Regional versions of the show featuring local hosts have been produced in other countries. By 2002, Blue's Clues had received several awards for excellence in children's programming, educational software and licensing, and had been nominated for nine Emmy Awards.

A live production of Blue's Clues, which used many of the production innovations developed by the show's creators, toured the U.S. starting in 1999. As of 2002, over two million people had attended over 1,000 performances. A spin-off called Blue's Room premiered in 2004. A revival of the series titled Blue's Clues & You!, hosted by Josh Dela Cruz premiered on Nickelodeon on November 11, 2019. The show's extensive use of research in its development and production process inspired several research studies that have provided evidence for its effectiveness as a learning tool.

History

Background

By 1990, parents, teachers and media experts had been criticizing "the lack of quality fare for children on commercial television" for many years. Up to that point, PBS was the only source for quality children's television; other broadcasters voluntarily set educational standards for their programming and "were expected to regulate themselves", but it led to little change in the quality of children's programs. By the time Blue's Clues premiered in 1996, there was a large number of TV shows for children, but most of them were violent and designed to sell action toys and other products; as co-creator Angela C. Santomero put it, "a vehicle for toy-based 'commercials' ". According to author Diane Tracy in her 2002 book Blue's Clues for Success, "The state of children's television was pretty dismal".

There was little incentive for producing high-quality children's television until 1990, when Congress passed the Children's Television Act (CTA), which "required that networks be held accountable for the quality of children's programming or risk losing their license". The CTA set no hourly quotas and left it to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to determine compliance to the law, so little positive improvements were made. In 1996, the FCC passed additional regulations, including requiring broadcasters to, in a provision called "the Three-Hour rule", air at least three hours of children's programming per week, between the hours of 07:00 to 22:00, and that they be tagged with an E/I (Educational and Informational) logo so that children and their families could easily find the programs. The cable network Nickelodeon, which was recognized, along with PBS, as a leader in the creation and production of high-quality children's programming, was not required to comply with federal regulations to provide informative or educational content, but did so anyway, before the CTA became law.

According to Heather L. Kirkorian and her fellow researchers Ellen Wartella and Daniel Anderson in 2008, since television appeared in homes beginning in the mid-20th century, critics have often expressed concern about its impact on viewers, especially children, who as Kirkorian argued, are "active media users" by the age of three. Researchers believed that there were links between television viewing and children's cognitive and learning skills and that what children watched may be more important than how much they watched it. She reported that up until the 1980s, researchers had only an implicit theory about how viewers watched television, and that young children were cognitively passive viewers and controlled by "salient attention-eliciting features" like sound effects and fast movement. As a result, most researchers believed that television interfered with cognition and reflection and as a result, children could not learn from and process television. In the early 1980s, however, new theories about how young children watch television suggested that attention in children as young as two-years old were largely guided by program content.

Conception

In the mid-1990s, Nickelodeon, looking to create programming for preschoolers, hired a team of three producers, Angela C. Santomero, Todd Kessler, and Traci Paige Johnson, to create a new television program for young children. According to The New York Times, Kessler was the first creator to be brought on board to the project. Kessler, a freelance Nickelodeon producer at the time, had previously worked on Sesame Street, but he disliked its format and thought that it was too static and not visual enough. Santomero, who named Fred Rogers as a major influence, worked at Nickelodeon as a researcher and Johnson was a freelance artist and animator. Santomero later said that they "were young, and Nickelodeon took a chance on us".

Daniel R. Anderson of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, who author Malcolm Gladwell called one of the "pioneering television researchers", was an adviser for the new show. Nickelodeon had hired Anderson as an adviser for its Nick Jr. block of preschool programs starting in 1993, although Santomero had already been getting his input about research informally. When Nickelodeon enlisted her to co-create Blue's Clues, he came on in a more formal capacity. Anderson later said that he "jumped at the chance" to serve as an advisor for Blue's Clues because "Nickelodeon was interested in providing programs that would actually benefit preschoolers rather than merely entertain them". Anderson also stated that the choice to produce the show as overtly and clearly educational was a departure for Nickelodeon and for any commercial network. According to research conducted by Nickelodeon, parents of preschool aged children wanted the shows they watched to be educational.

Santomero, Kessler, and Johnson met in a conference room at Viacom, which owned Nickelodeon, in New York for a month to create Blue's Clues. According to Santomero, the creators of Blue's Clues wanted to create a children's television show that was "something very simple and graphic and slow", emphasized social and emotional skills, treated children like they were smart, and helped them feel empowered. The character Blue was originally conceived as a cat, and the name of the show was to be Blue Prints, but the show's name was changed and Blue became a dog because Nickelodeon was already producing a show about a cat and because, as Anderson reported, children who watched the pilot, which was used for testing, "almost universally called the show Blue's Clues". Even though most children's television shows at the time were built around male characters, Blue was female and as The New York Times put it, "never wore a bow".

Kessler handled the show's "computer-based production", Santomero the research, and Johnson the design. By 2001, the show's research team, which worked collaboratively with the show's producers and creators, consisted of director of research Alice Wilder, who joined the Blue's Clues team shortly after the show's debut, Alison Sherman, Karen Leavitt, and Koshi Dhingra. They were given $150,000 to produce a pilot, about a quarter of the budget for other Nickelodeon shows at the time, which was used in 1995 to test the show's interactive elements with its potential audience. The pilot was considered lost, but in 2021, Santomero announced that she owned a copy of it, and that the pilot was filmed in 1994. In September 2023, the full pilot unexpectedly surfaced online, putting an end to the nearly two-decade long search for it.

Premiere and later history

Blue's Clues premiered in the U.S. on September 8, 1996. The premiere was the highest-rated premiere of any Nickelodeon program, and the show became crucial to the network's growth. Scholar Norma Pecora called Blue's Clues the "cornerstone" of Nickelodeon's educational programming. By the end of 1997, it was the highest-rated show for preschoolers on commercial television, and was the third-highest rated show behind children's public television shows; Barney & Friends and Arthur. Within 18 months of its premiere, Blue's Clues was as well known among the parents of preschoolers as more established children's shows such as Sesame Street and Barney & Friends. In 2002, Tracy reported that it was one of the highest-rated shows for preschoolers, was preschool children and their parents' favorite cable preschool program, was viewed by approximately 13.7 million viewers each week, and aired in about 60 countries.

In 2000, after 75 episodes, with "no fanfare" and no announcement from Nickelodeon, co-creator and co-producer Todd Kessler left Blue's Clues and the network to pursue other projects. He told The New York Times that he had "no hard feelings" regarding his departure. Kessler continued to be listed as an executive producer for the run of the show and for any future spin-offs. Also in 2000, CBS, which was also owned by Viacom, began airing the show as part of the centerpiece of its Saturday and Sunday morning children's programming. In 2004, Blue's Clues stopped production, which Santomero called "devastating", although it continued to air on Nickelodeon, and a spin-off, Blue's Room, was launched in the same year. It featured puppets, as well as the original show's second host. Blue's Clues celebrated its 10-year anniversary in 2006 with a prime time special and the release of a DVD entitled "Blue's Biggest Stories", which consisted of eight half-hour episodes spanning the show's history.

In November 2019, a reboot of Blue's Clues premiered. The show, called Blue's Clues & You!, is hosted by Josh Dela Cruz and features many of the same characters in the original show. Steve Burns, the original show's first host, serves as a writer and director on the new show; he has also made guest appearances, along with the original show's second host Donovan Patton, and participated in the casting of Dela Cruz.

Casting

Main article: List of Blue's Clues characters
A photograph of a man wearing an orange T-shirt and blue jeans standing with both of his hands on his hips and looking at the viewer all on a dark background
Original host Steve Burns, shown here in 2009

The most important casting decision was that of the host, the only human character in the show. The host's role was to empower and challenge the show's young viewers, to help increase their self-esteem, and to strongly connect with them through the television screen. The producers originally wanted a female host. After months of research and over 1,000 auditions, they hired actor/performer Steve Burns based on the strength of his audition. Burns received the strongest and most enthusiastic response in tests with the young audience. Johnson said what made Burns a great children's TV host was that "he didn't want to be a children's host ... He loved kids, but he didn't want to make a career out of it". Burns decided to leave the show in the autumn of 2000, departing in January 2001. He was in over 100 episodes of Blue's Clues when his final episodes aired in April 2002. Burns himself stated, "I knew I wasn't gonna be doing children's television all my life, mostly because I refused to lose my hair on a kid's TV show, and it was happenin' – fast."

After the producers conducted 1,500 auditions, Burns was replaced by actor Donovan Patton, who played Steve's brother Joe, introduced to the audience in articles in Nickelodeon's magazine and on its webpage and an arc of three episodes. Burns' departure generated "outlandish rumors" and was featured in a Time magazine story. Patton had never seen Blue's Clues before he auditioned for the part, and like Burns, who worked with him to help him prepare for the role, was also popular with preschool test audiences. The producers later reported that finding someone who could match Burns' "deceptively simple performance" was difficult. Patton became a "household name", although as Johnson stated, his character was named Joe because "Donovan was a little too hard on a preschooler's tongue". According to The New York Times, Patton played the role more relaxed and "taller" than Burns.

Even though research demonstrated that children tend to pay less attention to adult male voices, Burns and Patton were chosen as the program's hosts because they were popular with their audience. Daniel Anderson insisted that Burns and Patton were the best actors for their roles out of the hundreds who auditioned, calling them "actors who could mime as demanded by the mixed action and animation format", and reported that there was no evidence that children paid less attention to them than to other parts of the program. He also said that Burns and Patton overcame what he called "attentional bias against men" in three ways: by behaving energetically and childlike; by breaking the fourth wall and talking directly to the audience, often by looking directly into the camera and asking their audience, "Will you help?", and like Fred Rogers, forming a direct relationship to the audience; and by "always doing something". Anderson insisted that by forming a relationship with the audience, the actors' male voice became cues to the audience to pay attention and stated that it was the hosts' style of presentation that determined child attention.

Johnson was cast as Blue's voice because, of the show's crew, she was able to sound the most like a dog. Nick Balaban, who wrote the music for the show along with Michael Rubin, was cast as the voice of Mr. Salt. Balaban initially used a Brooklyn accent for Mr. Salt before settling on a French accent. Rubin also provided the voice of Mailbox.

Format

In The Tipping Point, author Malcolm Gladwell, who called Blues Clues the " 'stickiest'—meaning the most irresistible and involving—television show ever", described its format:

Steve, the host, presents the audience with a puzzle involving Blue, the animated dog ... To help the audience unlock the puzzle, Blue leaves behind a series of clues, which are objects marked with one of her paw prints. In between the discovery of the clues, Steve plays a series of games—mini-puzzles—with the audience that are thematically related to the overall puzzle ... As the show unfolds, Steve and Blue move from one animated set to another, jumping through magical doorways, leading viewers on a journey of discovery, until, at the end of the story, Steve returns to the living room. There, at the climax of the show, he sits down in a comfortable chair to think—a chair known, of course, in the literal world of Blue's Clues, as the Thinking Chair. He puzzles over Blue's three clues and attempts to come up with the answer.

Nickelodeon researcher Daniel R. Anderson called the structure of Blue's Clues a game that presented its viewers with increasingly challenging and developmentally appropriate problems to solve. Early episodes focused on basic subjects such as colors and numbers, but later the programs focused on math, physics, anatomy, and astronomy. The show's producers believed that comprehension and attention were strongly connected, so they wrote the episodes to encourage and increase their viewers' attention. They used content and production characteristics such as pacing which gave children time to respond, as well as "camera techniques, children's voices, musical cues, sound effects, clear transitions, repeatable dialogue, and visuals". Participation, in the form of spoken or physical response from the audience, and the mastery of thinking skills were encouraged by the use of repetition, both within the structure of individual episodes and across multiple episodes. The producers used a variety of formal features, which were auditory, and content features, which consisted of invitations given to the audience. The features were also in the form of both recurrent and unique formats and content. The purpose of the recurrent formats and content, which were similar in every episode, was to increase viewers' attention, comprehension, and participation during key educational lessons.

Nickelodeon originally aired the same episode daily for five days before showing the next one. The producers believed this telecast strategy empowered young children by giving them many opportunities to master the content and problems presented to them. Scholar Norma Pecora considered the broadcast strategy of airing the same episode for five consecutive days in a week "sound educational thinking", because children tend to watch the same episodes multiple times and learn from repetition, and "economically clever" because the network could air 2.5 hours with one episode over five days.

Episodes

Main article: List of Blue's Clues episodes
SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
PilotSeptember 22, 1994 (1994-09-22)
119September 8, 1996 (1996-09-08)October 27, 1997 (1997-10-27)
221November 3, 1997 (1997-11-03)February 15, 1999 (1999-02-15)
326March 14, 1999 (1999-03-14)February 19, 2001 (2001-02-19)
426March 6, 2001 (2001-03-06)April 30, 2002 (2002-04-30)
538May 6, 2002 (2002-05-06)December 12, 2003 (2003-12-12)
613February 8, 2004 (2004-02-08)August 6, 2006 (2006-08-06)

Educational goals

The creators and producers' mission of Blue's Clues was to "empower, challenge, and build the self-esteem of preschoolers ... while making them laugh". According to Anderson and his colleagues, the show's curriculum was based on "inherent respect for preschoolers and their ability to think and learn while having fun". Anderson and his colleagues stated that Blue's Clues was created with the question: What does television teach young children? Kessler, Santomero, and Johnson were influenced by Mister Rogers' Neighborhood and by Sesame Street, the first children's television program to create a detailed and comprehensive educational curriculum developed from research and use developmental theory, child development, learning theory, and research. According to Anderson, it was essential that the writers and creators of Blue's Clues have background and experience in early childhood development theory and research in order to ensure that the audience understood the dialogue, game, and recurrent program elements in each episode.

Like Sesame Street, formative research was an important part of the development of each episode of Blue's Clues, which was included in the show's production budgets. "We wanted to learn from Sesame Street and take it one step further", Santomero said. The producers and creators used formative research, which the producers called their "secret sauce", during all aspects of the program's creative and decision-making process, and Nickelodeon provided the funding to support it. In addition to a curriculum that emphasized reasoning skills relevant to preschoolers' everyday lives, the producers wanted to include audience participation, called by Variety its "call and response style", that encouraged problem solving, mastery of the information presented, positive reinforcement, and prosocial messages. They believed that a strong sense of self-esteem, which they sought to develop in their viewers, was linked to independent thinking and thinking skills. Anderson stated, "Age-appropriate pacing and explicit directions give children an opportunity to have a voice". Anderson and his colleagues compared audience participation on the program with hands-on practice provided by a caregiver. The show's producers believed, despite the viewpoints of past researchers, that children were intellectually active while watching television.

Sesame Street tested a third of its episodes, but the Blue's Clues research team field tested every episode three times with children aged between two and six in a variety of preschool environments such as Head Start programs, public schools, and private day care centers, in order to ascertain their abilities, interests, and knowledge, to ensure the mission and philosophy of the program, and to ensure balanced demographic groups. There were three phases of testing: content evaluation, video evaluations, and content analysis. In their tests of the pilot, conducted throughout the New York City area with over 100 children aged from three to seven, they found that as the pilot progressed, children's attention was captured and sustained, and they became excited and actively participated, standing to get closer to the television and speaking to the host. The producers and researchers also consulted outside advisers, who were chosen based on their expertise and the needs of each script. As Anderson stated, the formative research team served "as a liaison between the feedback provided by the preschoolers and outside advisers and the production team, including writers, talent, producers, directors, element artists, and animators".

When I believed we had the best show on television that could educate preschoolers and positively impact their lives, I was relentless. I wanted so much to give kids a television show that celebrates how smart they are, because I truly believe they are brilliant. I also wanted to create a show that would help pre-schoolers feel good about themselves".

Blue's Clues co-creator and producer Angela Santomero

Blue's Clues was designed and produced on the assumption that since children are cognitively active when they watch television, a television program could be an effective method of scientific education for young children by telling stories through pictures and by modeling behavior and learning. These learning opportunities included the use of mnemonics in the form of mantras and songs, and what Tracy called "metacognitive wrap-up" at the end of each episode, in which the lessons were summarized and rehearsed. The producers wanted to foster their audience's sense of empowerment by eliciting their assistance for the show's host and by encouraging their identification with the character Blue, who served as a stand-in for the typical preschooler.

The thinking games presented in each episode used what Anderson called "a layered approach" that took the varying capabilities of the audience into account. Santomero said that they used scaffolding and that layering was inherent in the script and design of each game. They purposely presented the problem presented in increasing levels of difficulty, to prevent children from feeling frustrated and to master concepts, experience success, and feel empowered to attempt to solve more challenging concepts presented to them. The producers' goal was that all viewers understood the problem, even if they did not know how to solve it. As a result, the child was temporary frustrated by not knowing the answer because after giving them time to come up with it, child voice-overs provided the answers for them, so that they learned the correct answers, even if they were unable to come up with them. If the child was able to come up with the answers, however, they felt "part of a larger, knowing, child audience" when their answers were confirmed by the voice-overs. The child voice-overs also helped viewers maintain high levels of attention during critical educational portions of the episode and modelled the audience involvement encouraged by the program. The audience was told how they could help problem-solve by the host explaining how, by the child voice-overs modeling verbal participation, and by giving them enough time to respond. According to Johnson, the slow pace of the program was challenging for television directors used to the fast pace of television production and for parents, who praised the pace but expressed concerns that their children would find it boring.

Sesame Street reflected the prevailing view that preschoolers had short attention spans; it featured a magazine-like format consisting of varied segments. Based on research conducted over the 30 years since the launch of Sesame Street by theorists like Anderson, the producers of Blue's Clues wanted to develop a show that took advantage of children's intellectual and behavioral activity when watching television. Previous children's television programs presented their content with little input from their viewers, but Blue's Clues was one of the first children's shows to actively invite its viewers' involvement. Its creators believed that if children were more involved in what they were viewing, they would attend to its content longer than previously expected—for up to a half hour—and learn more. They also dropped the magazine format for a more traditional narrative format. As Variety magazine stated, "The choice for Blue's Clues became to tell one story, beginning to end, camera moving left-to-right like reading a storybook, transitions from scene to scene as obvious as the turning of a page". Every episode of Blue's Clues was structured in this way.

The pace of Blue's Clues was deliberate, and its material was presented clearly. Similar to Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, this was done was in the use of pauses that were "long enough to give the youngest time to think, short enough for the oldest not to get bored". The length of the pauses, which was estimated from formative research, gave children enough time to process the information and solve the problem. After pausing, child voice-overs provided the answers so that they were given to children who had not come up with the solution and helped encourage viewer participation. Researcher Alisha M. Crawley and her colleagues stated that although earlier programs sometimes invited overt audience participation, Blue's Clues was "unique in making overt involvement a systematic research-based design element". Blue's Clues also differed from Sesame Street by not using cultural references or humor aimed at adults, as this could confuse preschoolers but, instead, made the show literal, which the producers felt would better hold the children's attention. The structure of each episode was repetitive, designed to provide preschoolers with comfort and predictability. Repetition of the same skills used in different contexts or games within and across episodes encouraged the mastery of thinking skills and the approach to content within an episode was consistent with learning theory that emphasized situated cognition and provided all viewers, no matter their age or abilities, with repeated opportunities to try to solve the problems presented.

Since preschoolers tend to have difficulty understanding transitions, especially when they involve active inferences about time, space, and characters' perspective, the program's producers minimized transitions that required inference so that their viewers' intellectual resources could be devoted to understanding the episode's content. They accomplished this goal by limiting the number of settings during an episode and with the transitions occurring only between them and signaled by dialogue and enough time and information necessary to process them. The primary settings in Blue's Clues were the host's house and backyard, and transitions between them were usually done continuously, without the use of cuts. If transitions were accompanied by cuts, it was done by the host moving to and through a door and continuing as he entered the front or backyard. The biggest transition in Blue's Clues occurred when the host "skidooed" and jumped into a picture or book, done in a magical way with plenty of warning that it was coming, and began and ended in the new environment. Anderson reported that children clearly understood and enjoyed the skidoo transition. Santomero reported that the skidoo transition was inspired by the use of the trolley in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, which also served as a transition device.

Production

The producers and writers of Blue's Clues used content and television production techniques such as camera techniques, the use of children's voices, musical cues, sound effects, repeatable dialogue, and visuals in order to encourage and increase comprehension and attention. Blue's Clues was set in the home—the environment that was most familiar and secure for preschoolers—and looked like no other children's television show. The theme and topic of each episode, which was in development, from idea development to final production, for approximately one year, was chosen by the research team. Writers created a goal sheet, which identified their objectives based on the show's curriculum and audience needs. According to show researcher Koshi Dhingra and her colleagues, the integration of writing and researching Blue's Clues was unique and involved "an extremely collaborative process". Script drafts, once developed and approved by the show's creators and research team, were tested at public and private schools, day care centers, preschools, and Head Start programs by three researchers, who would narrate the story in the form of a storybook and take notes about the children's responses. The writers and creators revised the scripts based on this feedback. A rough video, in which the host performed from the revised script in front of a blue screen with no animation, was filmed and retested. The script was revised based on the audiences' responses, tested a third time with animation and music added, and incorporated into future productions.

According to Dhingra and her colleagues, the researchers represented the preschool viewer. After coming up with an idea for an episode, the writers met with Alice Wilder, head of the research department for Blue's Clues, to discuss their idea. The research department and writers then discussed if the topic and approach to the topic was appropriate for preschoolers, and if they accepted it, the content of the episode was further developed. They would often bring in outside consultants who were experts in the subject matter and the processes in teaching it to preschoolers. Wilder considered the researchers experts in how the concepts they wanted to present would translate to the medium of television rather than in a classroom or museum, but they considered preschoolers, who evaluated each script from their perspective, to be their " true experts". The writer took the information they gathered from the research department, preschoolers, and experts and wrote a treatment, or detailed outline of the script, which included goals for the entire episode and for each game. The writers, Wilder, and the research team had a treatment meeting, which Dhingra and her colleagues described as "an organized creative brainstorm", which was rooted in the philosophy and mission of the show, the art of good storytelling, and the point of view of their viewers. The goal of the treatment meeting was to give the writers everything they needed to create a workable second draft of the episode script, and to ensure that it fit the needs of their viewers.

The researchers brought in experts, if needed, and then, at the second draft stage, interviewed preschoolers. Preschooler testing was conducted in three rounds: the concept test, and video test, and content analysis. The producers and creators of the show, during their interviews of preschoolers, created a rough version of the episode, with the host and preliminary animations and backgrounds, and showed it to preschoolers to gain further feedback and was designed to assess their reactions to the content and visuals. According to Dhingra and her colleagues, the greatest strengths of the development of all episodes of Blue's Clues were the high levels of collaboration between all departments involved in the creation of the show, the clearly defined strategies they used to effectively include their preschool viewers in the development process, and their use of the mission, philosophy, and structure of the program to create and develop each episode.

Most of the show's production was done in-house, rather than by outside companies as was customary for children's TV shows at the time. Blue's Clues was filmed in a studio in Tribeca, Manhattan, New York. The show's creators understood that the look and visual design of the show would be integral to children's attachment with it. Johnson expanded on the "cut-out" style she had created during her college years. Blue's Clues was the first animated series for preschoolers that utilized simple cut-out construction paper shapes of familiar objects with a wide variety of colors and textures, resembling a storybook. Johnson also used primary colors and organized each room of the home setting into groups. The green-striped shirt worn by the show's original host, Steve, was inspired by Fruit Stripe gum. The goals were to make the show look natural and simplistic; as Tracy put it, "freshly cut and glued together with a vivid array of textures, colors, and shadows" similar to picture book illustrations. The program's design was influenced by an understanding of the cognitive, emotional, and social capabilities of preschoolers. For example, the purpose of the notebook in Blue's Clues, which was used to record the clues presented throughout an episode, was to teach preschoolers how to overcome their poorly developed memory skills by using external mnemonic aids and lists. The music, produced by composer Michael Rubin and pianist Nick Balaban, was simple, had a natural sound, and exposed children to a wide variety of genres and instruments. Rubin and Balaban used Anderson's research about the importance of using auditory cues to increase children's attention and inserted auditory signatures to encourage the audience to pay attention to the episodes "at critical junctures for learning". According to Tracy, the music empowered children and gave the show "a sense of playfulness, a sense of joy, and a sense of the fantastic". Rubin and Balaban encouraged the musicians who performed for the show to improvise.

The host performed each episode in front of a "blue screen", with animation added later. The show's digital design department combined high-tech and low-tech methods by creating and photographing three-dimensional objects, then cutting them out and placing them into the background, which made the objects look more real and added perspective and depth. Johnson hired artist Dave Palmer and production company Big Pink to create the animation, which was at that time a new technology, from simple materials like fabric, paper, or pipe-cleaners, and scan them into a Macintosh computer so that they could be animated using inexpensive computer software such as Media 100, Ultimatte, Photoshop, and After Effects. instead of being repeatedly redrawn as in traditional animation. Johnson credited Kessler with the idea of using the Macintosh. The result was something that looked different from anything else on television at the time, and the producers were able to animate two episodes in eight weeks, as compared to the sixteen weeks necessary to create a single episode by traditional methods. Their process looked like traditional cut-out animation, but was faster, more flexible, and less expensive, and it allowed them to make changes based on feedback from test audiences. Unlike traditional animation environments, which tended to be highly structured, the animators were given information about the characters and goals of the scenes they would animate, and then given the freedom to work out the timing and look of each scene themselves, as long as their creations were true to the characters and to the story. By 1999, the show's animation department consisted of Palmer, twenty animators, eleven digital designers, and five art directors and model makers. By 2002, Nickelodeon had built a "state-of-the-art" $6 million digital animation studio that housed 140 people, including 70 animators.

Reception

Ratings for Blue's Clues were high during its first season, and it was Nickelodeon's most popular preschool program. It has been described as the first commercial television show for preschoolers that was both educational and profitable. Its creators met regularly with businesses that developed Blue's Clues merchandise and products to ensure toys that were educational and met "the same high ... standards as the show". Products, like the show, were heavily tested prior to marketing. Blue's Clues had sold almost 40 million units of its 45 VHS and DVD titles by 1998 and generated over $1 billion in product licensing in 2000. More than ten million Blue's Clues books were in print by 2001 and over three million copies of six CD-ROM titles based on the show had been sold. Seven Blue's Clues titles sold at least 1 million copies each. The show's first direct-to-video production was Blue's Big Musical Movie (2000), featuring Ray Charles and The Persuasions; it received mostly positive reviews and has sold over 3 million copies since 2006. The launch of Blue's Clues products at FAO Schwarz's flagship store in New York City was the most successful product launch in the store's history and was attended by over 7,000 people. Steve Burns' final episode in 2002 was viewed by 1.9 million preschoolers and received a 47 percent share of the overall audience. By 2002, Blue's Clues had received several awards for children's programming, educational software, and licensing. It won eight consecutive Emmys between 1998 and 2005 and won a Peabody Award in 2001.

Ray Charles, shown here in 1990, appeared in the popular Blue's Clues VHS Blue's Big Musical Movie. It was his final film role prior to his death four years later, in 2004.

Starting in 1999, a live production of Blue's Clues toured the U.S. to positive reviews. As of 2002, over 2 million people had attended over 1,000 performances. The creators of the TV show were involved in all aspects of the live show, aiming to translate the bond between the TV show's audience and its cast to the stage. The creators chose Jonathan Hochwald as the live show's producer, Gip Hoppe as its director, and Dave Gallo as its set designer. Neither Hoppe nor Gallo had any previous experience in children's theater. Nick Balaban and Michael Rubin, who wrote the music for the TV show, composed the live show's soundtrack. The producers were concerned with children's response to the host, who was played by Tom Mizer (a different actor than the host of the TV show), but his young audience enthusiastically accepted and embraced him. Actors were encouraged to improvise and respond to the audience, which resulted in changes throughout the show's run. The show's script included humor that both children and their parents could enjoy.

Regional versions of the show, featuring native hosts, have been produced in other countries. Kevin Duala hosted the United Kingdom version and the show became part of pop culture in South Korea. In total, Blue's Clues was syndicated in 120 countries, and was translated into 15 languages. In 2000, it became one of the first preschool shows to incorporate American Sign Language into its content, with between five and ten signs used consistently in each episode. Blue's Clues won an award from the Greater Los Angeles Agency on Deafness (GLAD) for promoting deaf awareness in the media.

Cultural influence and impact

The extensive use of research in the development and production process of Blue's Clues inspired several studies that provided evidence for its effectiveness as a learning tool. As Anderson and his colleagues reported, Blue's Clues had "a beneficial cognitive and social impact" the longer younger children watched it, which increased steadily over time, and that its benefits to cognitive development are both durable and cumulative. They also believed that the research conducted on the program demonstrated that when children's television programs were based on information gained from child development concepts, had a systematic curriculum, and were designed with "a research-based understanding of how children use and understand television, it can be a powerful and positive influence". As they stated, "it appears that the program is not only doing well, but it is also doing good”. In 2004, Anderson said that Blue's Clues "raised the bar" for educational television; he and Variety reported that audience participation became an important part of other educational preschool TV programs such as Dora the Explorer and Sesame Street. Anderson also reported that after Blue's Clues, all of Nickelodeon's educational programming included the use of formative research.

In 2019, shortly after the premiere of Blue's Clues & You, the New York Times called Blue's Clues "something of a throwback: a leisurely paced, unflashy show with the educational bona fides of its public TV predecessors Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street". It also stated that Blue's Clues paved the way for shows like Dora the Explorer. The program was the first children's cable show built entirely around direct address, the first to invite preschoolers to play along with the characters with games and "mini-mysteries", and the first to include built-in silences designed for child participation. As The New York Times stated, "The show was interactive before interactivity became mundane".

Based on anecdotal evidence that preschoolers enjoyed repeated viewings of the programs they watched on television, including Anderson's own experience with his four-year-old daughter, who asked to watch a tape of the pilot of Blue's Clues 17 times, the producers decided to repeat each episode daily for a week. Despite no published evidence that repeated viewings resulted in increased comprehension, especially for younger viewers, and would reinforce the problem-solving skills taught in each episode, and because they did not have enough money to produce a full season of episodes, Nickelodeon agreed to their broadcast strategy, and they were the first network to experiment with the approach. In the summer of 1996, before the premiere of Blue's Clues, Santomero, Anderson, and Wilder conducted a study, funded by Nickelodeon, about the effect of repeated viewings of the pilot episode on its viewers and their ability to learn the curriculum content contained in the episode.

Anderson reported that the results of the study were "clear, striking, and to us, very interesting". They found that except for the five-year-old boys they tested, audience participation greatly increased with repetition, especially for the problem-solving portions of an episode, as did their comprehension and problem solving. Anderson stated, "As children learned how to solve the problems they would shout out the answers, talk to Steve, point to the screen, jump up with excitement, and so on". After five viewings, children had also become skilled at solving similar problems that had not been presented in the episode. Anderson reported that the repetition broadcast strategy worked during the program's first year. Nickelodeon used the same strategy for its premiere of Dora the Explorer in 2000, and Nielsen ratings for both programs indicated no change in audience size during the time the repetitions aired. The study also demonstrated that watching Blue's Clues changed how children watch television and that their problem-solving skills and interaction would transfer to other programs they watched.

In 1999, Anderson and a team of researchers, some of which were his colleagues at Nickelodeon, studied how episode repetition affected comprehension, audience participation, and visual attention. The researchers tested whether repeated viewings of the show resulted in mastery over the material presented, or whether viewers would habituate to what they watched or become bored. The study demonstrated that for the first few repetitions, children pay close attention to the educational content because it was more cognitively demanding. The researchers concluded that audience participation was lower because children were devoting more of their cognitive resources to understanding and solving the problem presented in the episode. When they mastered the problems, which the researchers suspected happened the third time the children viewed the episode, they paid the same amount of attention to the educational content as to the entertainment content, which was less demanding. Audience participation, however, increased because their cognitive resources were freed up and because they knew the answers to the questions asked by the host and other characters. Anderson and his colleagues believed that their study proved that episode repetition appeared to foster their viewers' empowerment, as demonstrated in the viewers' enthusiastic efforts to help solve problems the host and other characters posed.

The study also demonstrated that experienced viewers (those familiar with the program) looked less at the screen than inexperienced viewers. All children looked at educational content more than at entertainment content. Experienced viewers looked at content unique to the program, but inexperienced viewers did not distinguish between the two types of content, since for them, all content was new. Experienced viewers interacted with the program more and showed better comprehension of the content than inexperienced viewers, especially when they were exposed to content that was repeated across episodes. As Anderson and his colleagues put it, "These results further support the notion that when content is new and challenging, preschoolers pay greater attention, but when it is in a recurrent format and therefore readily mastered, they interact more". In other words, "Interaction in Blue's Clues to some extent thus reflects mastery". Nielsen ratings of the show's first season, when the same episode was shown daily, were flat over the five-day period, which indicated to Anderson that young children did not tire of its repetition or of its complexity over time. According to Crawley and her colleagues, the producers' repeat broadcast strategy had no negative effectives of the program's ratings and appeared to be a success.

In 2000, another team of researchers, including Anderson, Crawley, and other Nickelodeon colleagues, studied if watching Blue's Clues changed the way children watch television and if they learned "an interactive style of television viewing”, meaning that they were more interactive with an episode from a different series than viewers who did not have experience watching Blue’s Clues. They compared experienced and unexperienced viewers as they watched an episode of Big Bag, a “curriculum-based magazine format” series that aired on Cartoon Network, directed towards approximately the same audience as Blue’s Clues. They found that although experienced Blue's Clues viewers paid less overall attention to Big Bag than inexperienced viewers, their patterns of attention across Big Bag were identical to their attention to an episode of Blue's Clues. They also demonstrated that viewers had the same amount of comprehension in both programs, but Blue's Clues viewers interacted more with Big Bag than inexperienced viewers. When the content of Big Bag was new and challenging, Blue's Clues viewers paid more attention, and when it was familiar, either from previous viewings or in a format they recognized, they interacted with it more. In short, Anderson and his colleagues found that "interaction in Blue's Clues to some extent reflects mastery" and felt that their study demonstrated that watching Blue's Clues changed how young children watch television. Researcher Shalom M. Fisch, however, stated that although the show attempted to be "participatory", it could not truly be so, because unlike interactive computer games, the viewers' responses could not change or influence what occurred on-screen.

Actress Marlee Matlin, shown here in 2009, appeared in several Blue's Clues episodes introducing American Sign Language to its young viewers.

In 2002, Crawley, Anderson, and their colleagues conducted another study on the effects of Blue's Clues, this time researching whether more experienced viewers mastered the content and cognitive challenges faster and easier than first-time viewers. They surmised that experienced viewers would comprehend and interact more with the recurring and familiar segments of the show designed to aid comprehension, but they found that familiarity with the structure of an individual episode did not provide experienced viewers with an advantage over the inexperienced viewers. Crawley and Anderson also studied whether experienced viewers of Blue's Clues interacted more with other children's TV shows and whether the viewing behaviors they learned from Blue's Clues could be transferred to other shows. They found that although experienced viewers of Blue's Clues interacted with an episode of another series, they did not spend more time watching it than viewers unfamiliar with the show. The researchers stated, "It is apparent that, although preschoolers learn to enthusiastically engage in overt audience participation, they do not, by and large, have a metacognitive understanding of why they do so."

The 2002 studies demonstrated that experience with watching one TV series affects how children watch other programs, especially in the way they interact with them. They also showed that since children are selective in the material they attend to and that their interaction increases with comprehension and mastery, children tend to pay more attention to novel information and interact more with material they have seen before and mastered. According to Crawley and her colleagues, Blue's Clues demonstrated that television could empower and influence children's long-term motivation for and a love of learning. As they stated, "One need only to watch children watch Blue’s Clues to realize that they respond to it with enormous enthusiasm".

Erin Ryan and her colleagues performed a 2009 study on the effect of the use of American Sign Language (ASL) in Blue's Clues episodes. They analyzed 16 episodes over two weeks for the content and frequency of the signs used and found a high incidence of ASL use by various characters, but that it was inconsistent, especially in the connection between English words and their corresponding signs. The purpose of signed communication and its connection with ASL and the Deaf community was also not clearly explained. The researchers speculated that hearing children with no previous ASL exposure would become familiar with ASL and with deaf people by these episodes, thus reducing the stigma attached to deafness and hard of hearing individuals. Based on other research about the positive effects of teaching ASL to hearing children, the researchers also speculated that it could lead to an increase of vocabulary skills and IQ, as well as improve interpersonal communication. They surmised that deaf children would feel more included and less isolated and have more opportunities to view positive models of ASL and deaf people.

Georgene L. Troseth and her colleagues at Vanderbilt University studied how toddlers used information gained from prerecorded video and from interactions with a person through closed-circuit video, and found that two-year-old children did not learn as much from prerecorded videos because the videos lacked social cues and personal references. Two-year-olds who viewed a video with instructions about how to find a toy in an adjoining room from a non-interactive researcher did not use the information, even though they smiled and responded to questions. Troseth speculated that their research had implications for interactive educational shows like Blue's Clues, which although was "on the right track" because the host invited interaction with the show's viewers, did not provide children with the social cues to solve real-world problems. Troseth stated that repetition, repeated exposure, and familiarity with the show's host may increase children's ability to learn facts and to use strategies they learn from Blue's Clues to solve new problems. Her research suggested that Blue's Clues engaged young children and elicited their active participation because they mimicked social interaction.

2019 revival

Main article: Blue's Clues & You!

On March 6, 2018, Nickelodeon announced a revival of the series, with a new host and 20 new episodes. An open casting call for the show's new host occurred in April, and production began in the summer of 2018. On September 13, 2018, it was announced that the show would be titled Blue's Clues & You!, and Josh Dela Cruz would be the host of the revival. The show premiered on November 11, 2019.

Notes

  1. Tracy's book is a business guide based on Nickelodeon and the history of Blue's Clues. Publishers Weekly noted the value in Tracy's discussion of the creators' and producers' business model but found Tracy's tone "less than optimal for discerning executive readers".
  2. According to Tracy, Wilder, who had a doctorate in educational psychology, reinvented the role of research in children's television, and helped train the writers and animators to trust and use research. Wilder also developed the curriculum that guided the program's script development and implemented its formative research.
  3. Adobe Systems was surprised that their products were being used in the production of a children's television show. According to Tracy, "Not even the developers of the software knew it could be used to create character animation on the scale Blue's Clues was using it", Adobe later requested that the show's animators join their client development group, and made several changes and improvements to their software as a result.
  4. In order to keep the integrity of the Blue's Clues brand intact, a branding guide "bible" called Blue's Clues 101 was created that explained the show and provided examples of products that both correctly and incorrectly reflected it.

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Preschool: Blue's Clues". Burbank, California: Nickelodeon Animation. Archived from the original on 29 December 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  2. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 262
  3. Osborne, p. 1
  4. ^ Tracy, p. 5
  5. ^ Calvert and Kotler, p. 278
  6. Osborne, p. 2
  7. ^ Santomero, Angela (21 February 2018). "I Admired Mr. Rogers As a Mentor from Afar – Now I'm Walking in His Sneakers". USA Today. Archived from the original on 3 August 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  8. "Blue's Clues for Success: The 8 Secrets Behind a Phenomenal Business". Publishers Weekly. 17 May 2002. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  9. Swartz, Mimi (2004). "'You dumb babies!: How raising the Rugrats babies became as difficult as the real thing". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids. New York: New York University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-8147-3651-7.
  10. Hayes, Diane Aden (1994). "The Children 's Hour Revisited: The Children ' s Television Act of 1990". Federal Communications Law Journal. 46 (2): 295. Archived from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  11. Lawrie Mifflin (August 9, 1996). "U.S. Mandates Educational TV for Children". The New York Times. p. 16. Archived from the original on February 18, 2015. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  12. Tracy, p. 6
  13. Calvert and Kotler, p. 283
  14. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 255
  15. ^ Kirkorian et al., p. 40
  16. Kirkorian et al., pp. 40–41
  17. Tracy, p. 7
  18. Tracy, p. 12
  19. ^ Carter, Bill (21 June 2000). "TV Notes; 'Blue's' Creator Wouldn't Stay". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 December 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  20. Gladwell, p. 110
  21. Tracy, pp. 13–14
  22. ^ Mifflin, Lawrie (3 August 1997). "The Joy of Repetition, Repetition, Repetition". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 7 March 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  23. ^ Onstad, Katrina (6 November 2019). "'Blue's Clues' Returns, and Silence Is Still the Star". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 December 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  24. Gladwell, p. 100
  25. ^ Anderson (1998), p. 34
  26. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 241
  27. Tracy, p. 17
  28. Moll, event occurs at 2:39.
  29. Moll, event occurs at 3:16.
  30. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 261
  31. Dhingra et al., p. 2
  32. Tracy, pp. 67–68
  33. Garcia, Cathy Rose A. (28 October 2013). "Meet the woman behind Blue's Clues, Cha-Ching". ABS-CBN Corporation. Quezon City, Philippines. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  34. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 258
  35. Tracy, p. 68
  36. Tracy, p. 14
  37. ^ Dominguez, Noah (20 January 2021). "Blue's Clues Co-Creator Says She Has the Lost Pilot". CBR.com. Archived from the original on 14 February 2021. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  38. ^ Carras, Christi (10 October 2019). "Why Nickelodeon's New 'Blue's Clues' May Feel Very, Very Familiar". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 4 June 2021. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  39. ^ Schmelzer, Randi (6 August 2006). "Tale of the Pup: Innovative Skein Leads Way to Preschool TV boom". Variety. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  40. "Blue Prints Blues Clues Pilot". 1994 – via Internet Archive.
  41. ^ Tracy, p. 3
  42. ^ Pecora, p. 37
  43. ^ Collins, James (24 November 1997). "Television: Tube for Tots". Time. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  44. Heffernan, Jennifer (26 January 2007). "Calling Blue: And on That Farm He Had a Cellphone". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 14 January 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  45. ^ Ingman, Marrit (2 August 2006). "New Tricks Help Old Dog Stay on Air". Variety. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  46. Gates, Anita (5 August 2006). "'Blue's Clues' Celebrates Its 70th Dog Year on the Air". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 6 June 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  47. Carlozo, Louis R. (22 August 2006). "'Clues' turns 10; 'Arthur' enters new sphere". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on 2022-06-06. Retrieved 2021-06-06.
  48. ^ Tracy, p. 45
  49. Moll, event occurs between 3:53–4:44
  50. Tracy, p. 46
  51. ^ Norris, Chris (9 February 2004). "Me and You and a Dog Named Blue". Spin. Archived from the original on 14 June 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  52. "Steve Burns to Leave 'Blue's Clues'". Archived from the original on 2022-11-24. Retrieved 2022-11-24.
  53. Moll, event occurs between 7:45–10:27
  54. Moll, event occurs at 8:49
  55. Tracy, p. 47
  56. Moll, event occurs between 9:23–9:52.
  57. ^ Kiesewetter, John (29 April 2002). "'Blue's Clues' puts on new host, new shirts". Cincinnati Enquirer. Archived from the original on 2013-01-02. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  58. Barron, Natania (25 January 2010). "GeekDad Talks with Donovan Patton of the New Nickelodeon Show Team Umizoomi". Wired. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  59. Lipton, Michael A. (3 June 2002). "Am I Blue? Absolutely". People. Archived from the original on 6 May 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  60. Wadler, Joyce (23 May 2002). "Public Lives; Searching for Clues in the Land of the Blue Dog". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 13 December 2019. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  61. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 259
  62. Anderson (2004), pp. 258–259
  63. Moll, event occurs at 3:10
  64. Moll, event occurs at 4:55
  65. Tracy, p. 52
  66. Gladwell, p. 122
  67. ^ Anderson et al. (2000), p. 181
  68. ^ Jaffe, Eric (December 2005). "Watch and Learn". APS Observer. 18 (12). Archived from the original on 2016-07-30. Retrieved 2013-03-23.
  69. Crawley et al., p. 267
  70. ^ Crawley et al., p. 265
  71. Pecora, pp. 37–38
  72. ^ Anderson et al., p. 180
  73. ^ Anderson et al., p. 182
  74. ^ Fisch, Shalom M.; Rosemarie T. Truglio (2001). "Why Children Learn from Sesame Street". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 234. ISBN 0-8058-3395-1
  75. Anderson (Nick Nation), pp. 256–257
  76. Gladwell, p. 111
  77. Tracy, p. 67
  78. Tracy, pp. 66, 70
  79. Sandler, Kevin S. "'A Kid's Gotta Do What a Kid's Gotta Do:' Branding the Nickelodeon Experience." In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids. New York: New York University Press, p. 53. ISBN 978-0-8147-3651-7.
  80. Sandler (Nick Nation), p. 53
  81. Anderson (2004), p. 242
  82. Gladwell, p. 127
  83. Tracy, pp. 21–23
  84. Tracy, p. 16
  85. ^ Tracy, p. 40
  86. Tracy, pp. 21–22
  87. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 257
  88. ^ Tracy, p. 18
  89. Tracy, p. 19
  90. Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 180–181
  91. Anderson (2004), pp. 259–260
  92. ^ Dhingra et al., p. 5
  93. ^ Tracy, pp. 82–84
  94. ^ Dhingra et al., pp. 6–7
  95. Dhingra, pp. 6–7
  96. Dhingra et al., p. 7
  97. Dhingra et al., p. 8
  98. Dhingra et al., p. 12
  99. Dhingra et al., p. 16
  100. ^ Tracy, p. 103
  101. Moore, Frazier (June 15, 1998). "Success of 'Blue's Clues' is no mystery". SouthCoastToday.com. Archived from the original on May 12, 2021. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  102. Tracy, p. 95
  103. ^ Tracy, p. 41
  104. Tracy, pp. 42―43
  105. Anderson (2004), p. 256
  106. ^ Tracy, p. 51
  107. Tracy, pp. 50–52
  108. Tracy, p. 43
  109. Tracy, p. 100
  110. ^ Tracy, p. 106
  111. Tracy, p. 94
  112. Tracy, p. 101
  113. Tracy, p. 105
  114. Tracy, p. 109
  115. Tracy, p. 107
  116. ^ Anderson, p. 35
  117. ^ Tracy, p. 35
  118. Tracy, p. 156
  119. Tracy, p. 155
  120. ^ "Skein Helps Nick Dig up Disc Bones". Variety. 2 August 2006. p. A3. Archived from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  121. Goodall, Gloria (29 September 2000). "'Blue's Clues' Movie, a Video Treat". Christian Science Monitor. Archived from the original on 4 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  122. Tracy, p. 4
  123. "Blue's Clues". The Peabody Awards. 2001. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  124. ^ Tracy, p. 53
  125. ^ Tracy, p. 55
  126. Tracy, p. 54
  127. Tracy, p. 56
  128. Tracy, pp. 56–57
  129. "The One Show: Kevin Duala". BBC. Archived from the original on 2018-04-26. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  130. Tracy, pp. 59–60
  131. Lee, Felicia R. (22 April 2000). "A Children's Adventure in a Deaf World". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 17 October 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  132. Tracy, p. 58
  133. Gladwell, pp. 125–126
  134. ^ Anderson et al. (2000), p. 192
  135. Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 192–193
  136. Anderson (2004), p. 244
  137. Weisman, Jon (2 August 2006). "Interactive innovator draws raves". Variety. Archived from the original on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  138. ^ Anderson et al. (2000), p. 182
  139. Gladwell, p. 125
  140. ^ Anderson (2004), p. 263
  141. Crawley et al. (1999), p. 637
  142. ^ Crawley, et al., p. 278
  143. ^ Anderson et al. (2000), p. 184
  144. Anderson (2004), p. 264
  145. Anderson et al., p. 183
  146. Anderson et al. (2000), p. 185
  147. ^ Crawley et al., p. 279
  148. Anderson et al. (2000), pp. 185–186
  149. ^ Anderson et al. (2000), p. 186
  150. Crawley et al. (1999), p. 636
  151. Fisch, Shalom M. (2004). Children's Learning from Educational Television: Sesame Street and Beyond. Mahwah, New Jersey.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, p. 199. ISBN 0-8058-3936-4
  152. Crawley et al., pp. 266–268
  153. Crawley et al., pp. 274–275
  154. Ryan et al., p. 17
  155. Ryan et al., p. 20
  156. Troseth et al., p. 786
  157. ^ Troseth et al., p. 796
  158. Butler, Karen (10 March 2018). "Nickelodeon is Bringing Back 'Blue's Clues' with a New Host". UPI. Archived from the original on 14 November 2018. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  159. Boucher, Ashley (6 March 2018). "Nickelodeon to revive 'Blue's Clues' with 20 new episodes". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  160. Petski, Denise (13 September 2018). "Nickelodeon's 'Blue's Clues' Reboot Gets New Host & New Title". Deadline. Archived from the original on 2018-09-13. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  161. Petski, Denise (14 February 2019). "'SpongeBob' Spinoffs, 'All That' & 'Are You Smarter Than 5th Grader?' Revivals & More On Nickelodeon's 2019 Content Slate". Deadline. Archived from the original on 2019-02-14. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  162. Pedersen, Erik (26 August 2019). "'Blue's Clues & You' Teaser & Premiere Date: Ex-Hosts Return For First Episode". Deadline. Archived from the original on 2019-08-27. Retrieved 29 December 2021.

Sources

  • Anderson, Daniel R. (1998). "Educational Television is not an Oxymoron". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 557 (1): 24–38. doi:10.1177/0002716298557000003
  • Anderson, Daniel R. (2004). "Watching Children Watch Television and the Creation of Blue's Clues". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-3651-7.
  • Anderson, Daniel R.; Jennings Bryant; Alice Wilder; Angela Santomero; Marsha Williams; Alisha M. Crawley. (2000). "Researching Blue's Clues: Viewing Behavior and Impact". Media Psychology 2 (2): 179–194. doi:10.1207/S1532785XMEP0202 4
  • Calvert, Sandra L and Kotler, Jennifer A. (2003). "Lessons from Children's Television: The Impact of the Children's Television Act on Children's Learning". Archived August 8, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. Applied Developmental Psychology. 24 (3), pp. 275–335. doi:10.1016/S0193-3973(03)00060-1. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  • Crawley, Alisha M.;Daniel R. Anderson; Angela Santomero; Alice Wilder; Marsha Williams; Marie K. Evans; Jennings Bryant (June 2002). "Do Children Learn How to Watch Television? The Impact of Extensive Experience With Blue's Clues on Preschool Children's Television Viewing Behavior". Journal of Communication 52 (2): 264–280. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2002.tb02544.x
  • Dhingra, Koshi; Alice Wilder; Alison Sherman; Karen D. Leavitt (April 2001). "Science on Television: Case Study of the Development of "Bugs" on "Blue's Clues" (PDF). Change Agents in Science Education. Annual meeting. Seattle, Washington: American Educational Research Association, pp. 1–18
  • Gladwell, Malcolm (2000). The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. New York: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 0-316-31696-2
  • Kirkorian, Heather L.; Ellen A. Wartella; Daniel R. Anderson. (Spring 2008). "Media and Young Children's Learning". The Future of Children 18 (1): 39–61 doi:10.1353/foc.0.0002
  • Moll, George (executive producer). "Behind the Clues: 10 Years with Blue" (2006). Short documentary. Countryline Productions.
  • Osborne, Barbara (Summer 1997). " A Field Guide to the Children's Television Act". Archived September 19, 2000, at the Wayback Machine. Washington, D.C.: CME/InfoActive Kids, pp. 1–16. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  • Pecora, Norma (2004). "Nickelodeon Grows Up: The Economic Evolution of a Network". In Hendershot, Heather (ed.). Nickelodeon Nation: The History, Politics, and Economics for America's Only TV Channel for Kids. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-3651-7.
  • Ryan, Erin; Cynthia Nichols; Melissa Weinstein; Rebecca Burton. (2009). "Helping Hands? The Use of American Sign Language in Nickelodeon's Blue's Clues". Conference Papers – International Communication Association: 1–37.
  • Tracy, Diane. (2002). Blue's Clues for Success: The 8 Secrets Behind a Phenomenal Business. New York: Kaplan Publishing. ISBN 0-7931-5376-X.
  • Troseth, Georgene L.; Megan M. Saylor. Allison H. Archer. (May/June 2006). "Young Children's Use of Video as a Source of Socially Relevant Information". Child Development 77 (3): 786–799. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00903.x

External links

Portals:
Blue's Clues
TV series
Films
Video games
Related
Former Nickelodeon original programming
1970s debuts
1980s debuts
1990s debuts
2000s debuts
2010s debuts
2020s debuts
TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming
Youth Programming
1985–2022
Family Programming
2023–present
Children's Programming
2023–present
Children's programming on CBS in the 2000s
First-run
animated series
First-run
live-action series
First-run
interstitials
Rebroadcasts
Categories: