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Culture Study Podcast

The Pernicious Laziness of Paw Patrol

Culture Study Podcast

Anne Helen Petersen

Fashion & Beauty, Society & Culture, Arts

4.6637 Ratings

🗓️ 27 December 2023

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

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.

If you like the episode, it is SO HELPFUL for our fledging pod if you can share it with others. Send it to your nerdy friend or parent who’d love it. Post it on social media. Follow or subscribe to the pod on your podcast app, and/or write us a quick review on iTunes.

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Got a question or idea for a future episode? Let us know here. This week, we’re looking for your questions for future episodes about: Celebrity Philanthropies (weird ones, good ones, why do they exist, etc.); Moms for Liberty; Very Contemporary Architecture Trends (like ‘modern farmhouse’); Why Goodreads is the way it is (think expansively here); ONLINE PURCHASE REVIEW CULTURE (as in: what motivates people to leave reviews? With photos? What makes a good review, what makes a worthless one?); Whatever Bradley Cooper's whole deal is.

You can submit them (and ideas for future eps) here.



This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit culturestudypod.substack.com/subscribe

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

For millennials, young Jetnexers who are listening to this, what is the analogous show in our

0:09.6

cartoon universe? Oh, interesting. Is it, is it Power Rangers? I don't think so. It's not,

0:15.3

Power Rangers is a little bit later. Yeah. I think that the genre of this show is a team of people

0:20.6

helping somebody. And I think in that sense of this show is a team of people helping somebody.

0:22.5

And I think in that sense, I want to say maybe rescue rangers is a reasonable analog for this.

0:29.4

A lot of these helping teams are kind of working in an extra legal or vigilante capacity,

0:37.2

as opposed to the sort of institutional, foundational, foundational pillars of Paw Patrol.

0:42.1

Who deputize them?

0:43.0

Who deputize them?

0:44.6

I imagine all of those Rescue Rangers shows ends with, like,

0:47.7

one of the Paw Patrol cops showing up and being like,

0:50.1

you're not allowed to do any of this.

0:53.6

Leave this to us.

0:57.6

I'm Ann Helen Peterson, and this is the Culture Study podcast.

1:01.4

I'm Philip Macyak.

1:02.8

I'm the TV critic for the New Republic.

1:05.3

I teach at Washington University in St. Louis, and I'm the author of the book Avidly

1:10.5

Reads Screen Time.

1:12.1

How do you think about writing about television,

1:14.3

like right now?

1:15.4

Like, how do you talk to your students when you're teaching

1:18.2

about reading TV as a cultural text?

...

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