With many academics spending weeks indoors with their young children, it was only a matter of time before their critical gaze drifted to kids鈥 TV.
And while the scholarly attention devoted to programmes such as听PJ Masks,听Go Jetters听and听Ben and Holly鈥檚 Little Kingdom听has generated some unexpectedly metaphysical reflections, there is one show on which academics have focused:听PAW Patrol.
In a sign of our unusual times, Philip Cowley, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London,听听on 9 April about an apparent plot hole in the Canadian CGI-animated show about a team of talking dogs and their rescue missions in Adventure Bay.
Referring back to the season one episode 鈥淧ups Get a Rubble鈥, 鈥渋n which Rubble joined as a grown-up dog鈥, Professor Cowley wondered how this was possible given that in season three鈥檚 鈥淧ups Save the Mayor鈥檚 Tulips鈥, 鈥淩yder shows his collection of things from when the pups were babies, including Rubble鈥檚 rug鈥.
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鈥淢y world is rocked,鈥 joked Professor Cowley, known for his research on British electoral politics.
That observation on 9 April triggered an enthusiastic response from those in academia and the political world with similarly detailed knowledge of the canine rescuers.
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Robert Colvile, director of the Centre for Policy Studies, the free market thinktank, wondered 鈥渨hy, if it鈥檚 an emergency, Ryder takes the time to draw little caricatures of the situation鈥 or, if they have 鈥淯ltimate Rescue vehicles in the basement, why do they ever bother using anything else鈥?
That thread inspired a host of reflections on other children鈥檚 TV shows, including a problematic episode of听Peppa Pig听in which Peppa and a friend enjoy a trip to the zoo. 鈥淲ho decides which animals are fit to be valued members of society, with the right to go to school, have jobs, wear clothes & own homes, and which ones have to live behind bars,鈥 said one follower.
鈥淔rom my conversations with fellow academics who have kids, they鈥檙e pretty well up on TV, both the good and the bad, and there鈥檚 a lot of bad,鈥 Professor Cowley told听糖心Vlog.
鈥PAW Patrol听is one of those that does get them riled, though 鈭 I think it鈥檚 because it has few redeeming features,鈥 he said, adding that 鈥渁cademics, being earnest sorts, will like the stuff from which kids learn things, even if they also get your kids to pressure you to buy plastic tat鈥.
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Those looking for more sustained analysis on the subject, though, should search out a recent听听by Liam Kennedy, assistant professor of sociology at Western University in Canada, titled 鈥淲henever there鈥檚 trouble, just yelp for help: crime, conservation, and corporatization in PAW Patrol鈥, published in the journal听, which argues that the show propagates an anti-government, pro-capitalist message.
鈥淧oliticians are presented as incompetent or unethical, and the state, either incapable of delivering or unwilling to provide basic social services to citizens, relies on the PAW Patrol corporation to investigate crime, rescue non-human animals in states of distress, and recycle,鈥 argues Dr Kennedy. 鈥PAW Patrol听echoes core tenets of neoliberalism and encourages complicity in a global capitalist system that (re)produces inequalities and causes environmental harms,鈥 he concludes.
That critique, published in February, sparked an unusually strong pushback, mostly from US right-wing media. It even led Canada鈥檚 leader of the opposition Andrew Scheer to record a special video听听on the topic, in which he labelled Dr Kennedy 鈥渒ooky鈥 and condemned coverage of his 鈥渟ocial justice warrior worldview鈥 analysis before launching his own defence of capitalism and privately delivered public services.
鈥淚鈥檓 glad to hear that scholars and parents are taking a more critical look at media their children are consuming,鈥 Dr Kennedy told听THE. 鈥淚 hope that continues post-pandemic.鈥
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