Watch Blue's Clues Season 7 Episode 2: Meet Blue's Baby Brother online free on BingeWatch

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Blue's Clues

Blue's Clues

Blue's Clues is a American children's television show that conducted for ten years, and premiered on the cable television network Nickelodeon on September 8, 1996. Producers Angela Santomero, Todd Kessler and Traci Paige Johnson combined and production techniques and notions that helped their audiences learn. It had been hosted originally by Steve Burns, who made to pursue a music career, and later by Donovan Patton. Burns was a vital reason behind the show's success, and has been an indication of the show's development as a cultural phenomenon. Blue's Clues became the highest-rated show for pre schoolers on commercial tv and was crucial to Nickelodeon's growth. It has been called"one of their very successful, critically acclaimed, and also more revolutionary pre school tv series of all time". A spin off called Blue's Room premiered in 2004. The show's producers and used repetition to reinforce its curriculum founders presented material in narrative arrangement instead of the traditional magazine format, and structured every episode the same manner. They used research on child development and small children's viewing habits that had been conducted in the thirty years since the introduction of Sesame Street from the U.S.. They also revolutionized the genre by encouraging their audiences' participation. Research was a portion of this creative and decision-making process in the creation of this show, and was integrated in to stages and all aspects of this procedure that is creative. Blue's Clues found a storybook together with varied colours and textures in its simple construction paper contours of objects and its own utilization of colours, and was the cutout cartoon series for preschoolers. Its atmosphere was familiar but had a look unlike other children's television shows. A live production of Blue's Clues, which used a number of those production creations developed from the show's founders, toured the U.S. starting in 1999. By 2002, more than two million people had attended 1,000 performances.

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