Posted on 09/29/2006 7:11:35 AM PDT by gridlock
The MSM is treating Christianity as hard core pornography.
Had he known how much he'd have to change the show - including Bob and Larry's tagline, "Remember kids, God made you special, and he loves you very much," that concludes each episode - Vischer said he wouldn't have signed on for the network deal.
I find it hard to believe they didn't read the fine print. This is really disappointing, when my kids were little they LOVED the VeggieTales.
"Did someone in the company embezzle all the cash? How does a company with a cash cow like Veggie Tales go bankrupt?"
That was what I was wondering. 50 million in sales and they are bankrupt???
Touched by an Angel? Seventh Heaven?
When I was growing up, we had a Mennonite family friend who'd babysit us when my parents went away. She loved Highway to Heaven.
If VeggieTales were so amazingly, astoundingly popular, why did the company go broke?
There was no sex to leave in the story. They were just to clean for the evil NBC.
They over-extended when they decided to make the theatrical release "Jonah" and never got out of the debt-hole they dug.
SD
You know, when I was a kid I loved "Davey and Goliath" but I didn't get the religious outreach at all. I thought it was a bit strange that they went to church a lot and read the Bible, because there were very few Protestants in my town, but it never occurred to me to be like them.
I thought it was cool that the Methodists were putting on a cartoon. I had no idea what the Methodists were.
Um, Xena, don't take it so literally. "Four-letter word" has a broader meaning.
SD
haha, liberal take on Larry and Bob. Very clever!
I know . . . I just think there are so many intriguing things to be done with English that cliches should be avoided, and especially when they're logically inaccurate.
According to him the owners would not put a firewall on the network. They would much rather trust people to do the right thing.
The security administrator confessed that he put one in anyway and lied to the owners. He figured it was easier to apologize after the fact.
If true, the owners once again demonstrate that they are nimwits.
They're going to replace the end line with "Remember, kids. Allah made you special, and Mohammed wants you to kill Jews and kaffirs very very much." That'll get by NBC's censors.
That's no exaggeration. NPR would abosolutely lap up your version as a culturally sensitive show.
You're kidding, right? How would he NOT know this? I could've told him this would happen.
You got a point there, Dan. VeggieTales were never my favorite teaching tool. But they are a far sight better than most other stuff being produced for children these days, so I counted them with the Good Guys.
If the Christian content is removed, I am afraid they will become just another touchy-feely Care Bear kind of thing. If they were to come to that point, they would cross over into being actively harmful. Every bit of happy-clappy secular BS masquerading as spiritual education displaces an opportunity to teach children a truthful message.
I don't know how bad the new de-contented version of VeggieTales has become, so I will hold back from lining them up with the Bad Guys, for now.
Dave was right about the movie...they expanded the company hugely in order to make that film, and never made enough back quick enough to cover themselves.
I saw Vischer at a conference November before last. He got choked up talking about it. A creative guy, he found himself wanting to write for Big Idea, but he had to hire other people to do the writing because he was stuck in HR meetings all day.
A miserable way to go for all concerned, and in the process he lost control of his creations: the characters themselves.
SD
I saw that flipping channels last night. Burt-on was disappointing. I switched to a PBS documentary. Go figure.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.