Is this a Good Movie for a 6 year old?

Little kids need something to keep them busy. Is an old Barney movie good for a 6 year old?

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Barney's designed by education experts so yeah

Do they like Barney? What kind of 6 year old doesn't already have an entire collection of favorite movies to watch?

I think 6 might actually be a little too old for Barney, actually

Why did that guy have like a full kitchen in his truck?

youtu.be/JRFoAkaWJWQ

Nah, get the kids some Sesame Street.

this movie is such a fever dream.

But why?

Barney the Dinosaur, 1992:
>Never talk to strangers, you just can't tell if they're good or bad
Star Butterfly, 2015:
>I think that strangers are just friends you haven't met.

How sad that times have changed and morals degraded with them.

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If you take never talk to strangers literally you will never make friends.

>a naive character in a show made for tweens doesn't have the same morals as an authority figure stand-in in a show made for toddlers

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Be easy on the guy, he was home schooled and his parents weren't particularly bright.

So how do preschoolers make friends then?

barney is all cute and friendly until he sees a pony

Do parents not teach their kids to not talk to strangers anymore? It seems kind of unavoidable with how early kids start browsing the internet.

I just brought my Thomas toys and 2 boys came up to ne asking to play.

Wait a sec, I thought "a stranger is a friend you haven't met" was an actual Barney quote. He was actually the opposite moral this whole time?

I've been Mandela'd.

in preschool

Yeah but when they first go to preschool the other preschoolers are strangers

I'm pretty sure by "strangers" they meant random people on the streets not being introduced by their parents/guardians

There's a firm difference between meeting people in a social environment where you're bound to interact with them sooner or later, and approaching random people out in public without any way of knowing if you should have any business with them.

A stranger isn't just someone you haven't officially met, but someone who is literally strange to you - a classmate or a neighbor isn't so strange because they're natural and familiar parts of your environment. Some dude on the bus or on a park bench has nothing in common with you other than just so happening to be in the same place at the same time for a moment.

Why would someone on the bus be more dangerous though? People you know can kill you too.

Ironically Star is mentally much closer to the target audience for Barney than the target audience for her show.

Barney did say that in the early 90s and he also had kids hide him from their parents in the garage in an even older episode. Later he changed his stance on strangers in the show.

Familiarity breeds security and understanding. Unfamiliarity leads to more resistant behavior.

Kids go outside by themselves and see other random kids on the streets of the places they live.

>inanimate object transforms into living creature

What is this called again?

Yeah and they can still use the security to rape you or something

So those kids would be neighbors and therefore wouldn't be strangers. If kids went out into another neighborhood they weren't familiar with, the kids there would be strangers.

So why did Star's parents choose to enroll her (i.e. bribe the principal) in some random-ass public school in California? What even was their connection to that area? Did they not know of literally anywhere else on Earth to send Star? It doesn't make any sense.

Because California is the center of the universe apparently