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Winky-Dink and You

  • TV Series
  • 1953–1957
  • TV-Y
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
66
YOUR RATING
Winky-Dink and You (1953)
Clip: U Boat in the Moat
Play clip4:30
Watch Winky Dink And You
1 Video
1 Photo
AnimationFamily

"winky-dink and you" was the pioneer in interactive programming. The core of the program was children sent away for a kit. The kit had a plastic screen that stuck to the TV tube with static ... Read all"winky-dink and you" was the pioneer in interactive programming. The core of the program was children sent away for a kit. The kit had a plastic screen that stuck to the TV tube with static electricity. Crayons were used to draw on the screen. When a character needed special help... Read all"winky-dink and you" was the pioneer in interactive programming. The core of the program was children sent away for a kit. The kit had a plastic screen that stuck to the TV tube with static electricity. Crayons were used to draw on the screen. When a character needed special help, children would be asked to draw on the screen, give assistance and free the character fr... Read all

  • Creators
    • Harry W. Prichett
    • Edwin Brit Wyckoff
  • Stars
    • Jack Barry
    • Dayton Allen
    • Ham Fisher
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    66
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Harry W. Prichett
      • Edwin Brit Wyckoff
    • Stars
      • Jack Barry
      • Dayton Allen
      • Ham Fisher
    • 8User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes76

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    Videos1

    Winky Dink And You
    Clip 4:30
    Winky Dink And You

    Photos

    Top cast4

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    Jack Barry
    Jack Barry
    • Self - Host
    • 1953–1954
    Dayton Allen
    Dayton Allen
    • Mr. Bungle
    • 1954
    Ham Fisher
    • Self
    • 1954
    Mae Questel
    Mae Questel
    • Winky Dink
    • Creators
      • Harry W. Prichett
      • Edwin Brit Wyckoff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    7.566
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    Featured reviews

    10willyclassof66

    Interactive Simplicity - The prefect formula for the 50"s.

    Some of my fondest early memories was interacting with the Winky Dink Show on Saturday mornings at my grandmother's house. It's amazing how a plastic sheet the size of a TV screen, three crayons, and a cloth can be the creative tools of the first interactive TV show. But I believe my fond memories of helping Winky Dink through dangerous situations with my crayons and cloth will easily surpass the memories of today's kids with Nintendo, XBox, etc. The Winky Dink show is just one example of the clean, simple fun that makes the 50's so euphoric to those of us who were pre-teens during this time. The different between the good guys and the bad guys was clear cut. And even though Winky Dink was always getting into situations where we had to draw a bridge for him to cross a river, a tree to hide behind, etc., we were given the opportunity to be the hero with Winky Dink. I wish I still had my magic drawing screen so that I could draw the "white picket fence" of the 50's again.
    10kens0000

    One of the all-time great kid's shows and a truly a pioneer.

    I enjoyed this show very much. Some of you older readers might remember a few of the following things after I remind you. The cost of the "kit" was $1.00 (actually that amount was supposed to cover the postage and handling). The address was Winky Dink, Box 5, New York, New York (no NY or zip codes - the box number was sufficient at that time). The items came shipped in a cylindrical mailing tube which you could use to roll up the screen and put it back into for storage. I remember them telling you that Winky Dink would be hiding somewhere in the next episode (they usually showed you a few places where he could be)and then they would put lines on the screen one at a time, which you would trace. And when the last line had been traced you would see an image of the place he was hiding (might be a barn or a lighthouse, etc.) This program was the granddaddy of all interactive videos. It was the internet of that era, in that you had input,(lines traced on the screen),from which you got output, (the images you ultimately created from the lines you traced). I know it all looks hokey by today's standards, but to me it was one of the most enjoyable shows I can remember from my childhood. And a far cry from the Simpsons and Bevis and Butthead...
    7jeffclinthill

    Saran Wrap and a crayon worked just as well

    Instead of sending in my fifty cents (which was a week's allowance) for a Winky Dink and You kit, I used a piece of Saran Wrap and a crayon. It worked just as well.
    c382000

    One of my favorite kid shows

    Couldn't get this show in my hometown, but it was a real treat to go to my grandmother's house in Oklahoma, because Winky Dink was on there. I even had the Winky Dink kit there - green plastic to put on the screen, a couple of crayons, and a cloth towel to wipe the marks off. It was so exciting to draw a bridge for Winky Dink to escape across a river, then erase it before the villain could cross it!
    5danhicks

    Follow the instructitons, boys and girls!!

    The show created quite a bit of ire among some parents because kids would draw on their TVs using ordinary crayons and without using the "magic screen" (sometimes doing real damage to the TV). I remember always wanting a "magic screen" so I could participate, but then, just weeks after I got one, the show was cancelled.

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    • Trivia
      One of the first interactive T.V. shows. Young viewers could send for a special plastic sheet that clung to the television screen, and crayons for drawing thereupon. Children were encouraged to draw on the screen in order to assist in telling a Winky-Dink adventure story. Cost for the kit was 50 cents.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert Holiday Gift Guide (1987)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 10, 1953 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Production company
      • Barry & Enright Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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