VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
2911
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThe everyday discoveries of a curious young hand puppet named Oobi. He and his family have funny, simple adventures that celebrate the awkward steps of growing up.The everyday discoveries of a curious young hand puppet named Oobi. He and his family have funny, simple adventures that celebrate the awkward steps of growing up.The everyday discoveries of a curious young hand puppet named Oobi. He and his family have funny, simple adventures that celebrate the awkward steps of growing up.
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I am a mother of two-year-old and a secondary English teacher and watching this show makes me flinch at all the incomplete sentences in which the characters speak. In one episode Oobi and his supposedly ethnic friend Kako take singing lessons and attempt to sing "Row Row Row Your Boat" in a round except the creators think it's fine to omit words from their (the characters) vocab so the song they sing goes more like "row row row boat gently down stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, life but dream." My child loves show but I have to leave the room when it's on or I go insane verbally filling in their pronouns and conjunctions or whatever other fragmented sentences dribble from their mouthes (or fingers). The message they try to get across is always a good one and sometimes they throw in subtle humor only adults will get, but the writers definitely need to stop worrying about saving trees and start teaching kids that grammar is not all that bad.
It was really interesting to read so many different reviews of Oobi. It does sort of bother me that so many go so far as to say the show is a waste of time because their four year old hates it. Perhaps this is because its designed for young toddlers? And the gloss language? Again, directed towards toddlers, who don't ALL speak in clear perfect sentences. We should remember that all of our kids progress at different levels and respond to different things. It doesn't make things horrible or a waste of time, it means its not right for you or your child. (and, hey, if its right for you, its really just an added bonus since very few of the kids programming out there is tolerable for adults) To the person who responded about her child's PDD, I am so psyched that you found something that works! My boyfriends daughter's ability to remember simple lyrics (as opposed to before where she just would make US sing) is a pretty rad development, which tells me that even if it bores older kids and adults, its still making a difference for us.
When our family got the Noggin network, we discovered a show with talking hands, complete with eyes, that were as heartwarming as anything we had ever seen. Basically, this show is like crack for little kids it is so addictive. Oobi learns about the world around him with his grandfather, Grandpu, his little sister Uma, and his best friend Kako. They do much of everything regular families do, and they learn about different things in the process. My kids love this show so much. We constantly watch Oobi, which I don't really mind, because the characters aren't loud or obnoxious, and my kids learn a lot from them. Oobi is definitely a show worth letting your kids watch!
My one year old son loves this show. And I have found it very entertaining myself. Especially the Grandpu character, Oobi and Ooma's apparent guardian. Grandpu always endures what the kids have to offer no matter what, whether it's bathtime or a "Grandpu day" meal made of Grape Jelly, Tuna and Hot Sauce.
There are definitely jokes there that a child would not get, but an adult would snicker at, in fact I laugh out loud several times. One example, Oobi was helping with an infant, smelled something foul and blamed Grandpu. Of course, the baby had a dirty diaper. Great fun all around for the entire family. Catch it on Noggin when you can, you won't be disappointed. I, too, was against it at first.
There are definitely jokes there that a child would not get, but an adult would snicker at, in fact I laugh out loud several times. One example, Oobi was helping with an infant, smelled something foul and blamed Grandpu. Of course, the baby had a dirty diaper. Great fun all around for the entire family. Catch it on Noggin when you can, you won't be disappointed. I, too, was against it at first.
I don't think the speech is that bad unless you have an older child watching it that already knows about sentence structure. The speech is very reminiscent of the Dick and Jane books.
Oobi run. You run. We run.
Oobi dance. You dance! Insead of saying, "This is a bathtub. I take a bath to get clean." He will say, "Bathtub. Oobi bath. Oobi clean!"
Its a children's show! There isn't that much to say about it! My kids like to take the eyes to their Mr. Potato head and stick them in between their fingers to pretend they are Oobi. Its cute.
Oobi run. You run. We run.
Oobi dance. You dance! Insead of saying, "This is a bathtub. I take a bath to get clean." He will say, "Bathtub. Oobi bath. Oobi clean!"
Its a children's show! There isn't that much to say about it! My kids like to take the eyes to their Mr. Potato head and stick them in between their fingers to pretend they are Oobi. Its cute.
Lo sapevi?
- Quiz"Pipo" was the working title of the series when it was first pitched to Noggin. It was changed to Oobi when it was discovered an Italian clothing line was called Pipo. Also the two "O"s are a reference to the character's eyes.
- Curiosità sui creditiEvery episode ends with the production logo for Little Airplane Productions. It features a scene from a sketch called "I'm a Little Airplane" that Josh Selig created for Sesame Street in 1994.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Soup: Episodio #4.16 (2007)
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- 13min
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