“Blue’s Clues” spoke to preschoolers on their own level and encouraged them to interact with the show. I thought it was a pretty tall order to get kids to play along and think along. “But I didn’t think it would work, certainly not in the way that it does. “I knew that it was smart, and I knew that it was good, and I knew that it was unlike pretty much anything I had ever seen in children’s television,” says Steve Burns, who played Blue’s owner, Steve, for the first sixof the show. Sunday.įor many kids and parents over the past decade, “Blue’s Clues” has been a cultural touchstone, a show that educated as it entertained, with a sincerity and sweetness not always found in children’s television. With those words, the debut episode of “Blue’s Clues” was under way, kicking off its wildly successful run on Nickelodeon, which celebrates the 10th anniversary of the show with a primetime special at 8 p.m.
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