So, a few months ago we ordered The Best of The Electric Company DVD set. We’ve had the set for a few months, but tonight was the first time we sat down on started watching it. We didn’t get past the first episode but wow…

This was probably the first episode of The Electric Company I’ve watched in more than 25 years. I know the show had cheesy ’70s styles, songs, hair, etc… but I really forgot just how cheesy things were.

Despite the super cheesy feel (like Morgan Freeman wearing an outfit that made him look like Jimmy Hendrix) the boy seemed to enjoy it.

There was a part of me that was a bit concerned about The Boy watching the show, the Electric Company was one of those shows that parents groups said led to shortened attention spans. Not only that but the reality is that the show was targeted at kids older than The Boy. The thing is, when I watched the show I was too young for it too, and at the time, I think most of the lessons were over my head.

But what kept me from pulling the plug, why I decided to let The Boy watch the show is because I thought about what happened a few years later when I was in elementary school learning how to read. As I started learning phonics all of the skits and songs from The Electric Company that I had heard years earlier started to come back to me. They started making sense, and those songs and skits actually helped me learn my phonics. If he starts to pick up those songs I hope that they help him when he learns how to read a few years from now.

I also started to look at the difference between the shows that The Boy watches now compared to what I used to watch as a kid. Overall I think the quality of the shows are better. Unlike Sesame Street and The Electric Company when I was a kid, several of the shows he watches aren’t passive experiences. Several of the shows he watches encourage him to get up and dance or somehow interact with what’s going on.

While I know that The Boy would gladly become a couch potato if we let him, it makes me happy to see him getting up and and singing (in his own way) and dancing to the songs. While television isn’t a substitute parent, it does make me happy to see that he is learning from the shows that he is watching.

Although I can’t quite figure out just what he’s getting from Dirty Jobs, American Chopper, or even Mythbusters….