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Round-The-Clock TV
Channel For Babies
Debuts
By David Crary
Associated Press, May
10, 2006
NEW YORK -- Escalating
an already heated
national debate, a
first-of-its-kind TV
channel premieres
Thursday designed
specifically for
babies -- an age group
that the American
Academy of Pediatrics
says should be kept
away from television
altogether.
The new,
round-the-clock
channel is called
BabyFirstTV. For $9.99
a month, it will be
available initially by
satellite through
DirecTV and later
through cable TV
providers as well.
Discussion: Infants
Watching TV?
TV offerings already
abound for older
toddlers, and a
lucrative -- though
controversial --
market has developed
for baby-oriented
videos, attracting the
Walt Disney Co. and
the makers of Sesame
Street, among others.
But until now there
had been no ongoing TV
programming aimed at
infants.
"This is the first
channel dedicated to
babies and their
parents --
transforming TV from
its original purpose
into a way for them to
interact," said Sharon
Rechter, BabyFirstTV's
executive vice
president for business
development and
marketing.
"The fact of life is
that babies are
already watching TV,"
she said. "That's why
having BabyFirstTV is
so important -- what
we want to offer is
completely safe,
commercial-free and
appropriate content."
A 2003 study by the
Kaiser Family
Foundation found that
68 percent of children
under 2 watch TV or
videos daily and 26
percent have a TV in
their bedroom.
Nonetheless, the
pediatrics academy
recommends that
children of that age
not be exposed to TV
or videos, saying that
learning to talk and
play with others is
much more important.
The academy's
guidelines were cited
last week in a
complaint filed with
the Federal Trade
Commission,
challenging claims by
leading makers of
videos for babies that
their products were
educational.
Seattle-area
pediatrician Donald
Shifrin, chairman of
the academy committee
that studies
television and
children, urged
parents to exercise
prudence and to view
the new TV options
skeptically.
"Sesame Street has
opened a Pandora's box
by legitimizing the
idea that TV needs to
be developed for this
demographic," Shifrin
said. "We're not the
nation's nanny, but we
do want to provide a
little balance -- we
don't want to make TV
the default
entertainer for
children."
Critics of TV for
infants also are
skeptical of
assertions by
BabyFirstTV and other
companies that their
products are designed
to be watched by
babies and parents
together in an
interactive manner.
"Experience tells
anyone that it's not
going to be used that
way," said Dr. Michael
Rich, director of the
Center on Media and
Child Health at
Children's Hospital
Boston. "Parents use
it to park their kids
in front of the TV so
they can get things
done."
Rich said the
companies "are
basically letting
parents off the hook
from their guilt by
saying, 'This is
educational,' so
parents can justify it
to themselves."
Rechter said
BabyFirstTV is not
claiming that its
programs - designed
for viewers from 6
months to 3 years old
- will make babies
smarter. "But having
babies and parents
interact helps
children's
development, and we
give them that
opportunity," she
said.
Asked about the
possibility that
parents might simply
use the new channel as
a baby sitter, Rechter
replied, "We could
speculate as much as
we like about what
parents should do."
"If a baby is watching
TV, let's put them in
front of appropriate
content," she said.
"At the end of the
day, parents make the
decisions."
BabyFirstTV's advisory
board includes Dr.
Edward McCabe, a
pediatrician who is
physician-in-chief at
UCLA's Mattel
Children's Hospital.
"I was skeptical when
I first heard about
it," McCabe said. "But
I became convinced
that this is a major
evolution in media for
kids."
Rechter said
BabyFirstTV will start
with 250 hours of
content, 80 percent of
it original. Some of
its programs will come
from baby DVD
companies, including
Brainy Baby and First
Impressions, and it
has an agreement with
Sterling Publishing, a
Barnes & Noble
subsidiary, to use
children's books in a
"Story Time" program.
By the end of 2006,
Rechter said,
BabyFirstTV also will
be available in
Spanish.
The three companies
behind BabyFirstTV are
Regency Enterprises, a
film and TV production
company that is a
partner of Fox
Entertainment; Kardan
N.V, an investment
group based in the
Netherlands and
Israel; and Bellco
Capital, a private Los
Angeles-based
investment fund.
CCFC's Statement on
BabyFirstTV
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