For the fourth episode of the Culture Study podcast I’m joined by Philip Maciak — who manages to be a professor, the television critic for The New Republic, and an avid consumer of children’s television — to talk about Paw Patrol.
We talk about copaganda, plot laziness, why 90% of the characters are boys, how Paw Patrol gets “in the water” at most kids’ schools even if they don’t actually watch the show, and take arguably too deep of a dive into the theme song. If you hate Paw Patrol, this episode is for you. If you’re annoyed by its banality, this episode is for you. Even if you’ve never heard of it, it’s a really fascinating exploration into why so much kids media turns out the way it does.
Show notes:
The Paw Patrol Theme Song (if you really want to subject yourself to that again)
The DuckTales Theme Song!!!!
Just a good Paw Patrol Meme:
We’re currently looking for your questions for future episodes about:
Goodreads (what has made it so bad, a particular trend you’ve observed, should you go to Storygraph, you can take this anywhere you want)
Very Contemporary Architecture Trends (like ‘modern farmhouse’) and/or wtf is going on with Chip & Joanna Gaines these days, why is their new show so banal
Cold Plunge Culture
Whatever Bradley Cooper’s deal is
ONLINE PURCHASE REVIEWS (as in: what motivates people to leave reviews? With photos? What makes a good review, what makes a worthless one?)
You can submit them (and ideas for future eps) here (and here’s the subscriber-only priority form)
Would love to hear your thoughts on Paw Patrol, the state of kids television, the episode in general…how we’re supposed to feel about Scrooge McDuck. Come join us in the comments!