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Sunday, 11 September 2022

Teletubbies is banned in our house, Peppa might get banned in Italy

 

Peter Griffin, from Family Guy, drawn by Monty


Today’s post is about cartoons rather than science.  Nowadays, cartoons play a big role in the childhood of many kids.  Kids with severe autism grow up to be adult-sized kids with autism and their love of cartoons never fades.

Cartoon characters feel like real characters to kids, perhaps more so than actors.

A polite way to judge severity of autism might be to just ask what kind of cartoons are watched.

We have a particularly broad range of cartoons because when Monty’s big brother was born, I wanted him to see some of the really great ones, that were not shown on TV where we live.  So we accumulated a vast array of videocassettes and then DVDs.

I was never a fan of baby TV and we rather skipped that genre and moved straight to the classics like Thomas the Tank Engine and many similar series, that seem to have been forgotten.

Monty has his iPad and his favourite spot at home is in a room facing the garden where he has his piano, and a TV with a DVD player and just about functional VCR.  His number one position is sitting on a bouncy (pilates) ball beside a large window while balancing his iPad on his knee.  To watch cartoons on the TV he just has to turn left slightly.

Monty was never a big Teletubby fan, but big brother must have seen him watching it, or checked the browsing history.  Teletubbies was banned. 

Like many people with autism, Monty really likes rules.  I don’t think he cares about Teletubbies at all, but he loves having a rule banning them.

 “Can you watch Teletubbies in B.P. street number 53?  Yes, or No?”

The correct answer is No, because no babies live there.

Cartoons have become categorized into suitable for babies, small boys, medium boys and big boys.

The Minions, long a big favourite of Monty’s, is fortunately suitable for everyone.  I am surprised that so many adults like it, not just Uncle Stuart.  I recently took Monty to see the newly released Minion movie and he was the youngest person in the audience and I was not the oldest.

I always liked stop-motion video.  This is the old-fashioned way of making cartoons when you use drawings or models and film them moving frame by frame.  When Monty’s big brother was 11 years old, he made this cartoon with his classmate.

 

 

The big hits in our house include:

The original Thomas the Tank Engine (before they used CGI), along with the books by the Reverend Wilbert Awdry   

Percy the Park Keeper, Bob the Builder, Brambly Hedge

Thunderbirds, Stingray and Captain Scarlet (made by filming models and puppets)

Wallace and Gromit (stop motion video with using plasticine figures), they won 3 Oscars

All the original Tom & Jerry

All the old Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny, Goofy going back to the 1930s

The earlier seasons of the Simpsons, when it was very good

Family Guy (see the above drawing of Peter Griffin - we also have a Lois and Chris)

South Park is more for me and big brother, who like what may appear to be politically incorrect, but actually is very inclusive.


We were never really into Peppa Pig, but Peppa is getting into trouble in Italy.

 Italian politician demands ban on Peppa Pig episode showing lesbian couple

A senior member of a far-right Italian political party tipped to win general elections this month has appealed to state broadcaster Rai not to screen an episode of the globally popular children’s cartoon series Peppa Pig over the inclusion of a same-sex couple in its cast of characters.

 

The episode, called Families, was shown for the first time in the UK on Tuesday, and features two co-parenting lesbian polar bears. A character called Penny announces: “I live with my mummy and my other mummy. One mummy is a doctor and one mummy cooks spaghetti.” The family then sit down for a meal together.

A much better example is Sanna Marin, the 36 year old Prime Minister of Finland; she has two mothers. Some people in Finland were shocked recently when she (and her male spouse) had a party at the official residence, photos leaked out and, horror of horrors, she really knows how to dance.  I would say that it a good thing - a Prime Minister whose dancing is not embarrassing! 

This then brings me to the latest work of autism self-advocates, Bruno the Brake Car.

 


            Bruno the Brake Car joins "Thomas & Friends" as first character with autism

 “Bruno rolls in reverse at the end of the train, which gives him a unique perspective on the world.  Detail-oriented Bruno enjoys schedules, routine, and knows where all the tracks lead on Sodor.  The engine car also uses his lantern on his red exterior to communicate his emotional state, moving when he is excited or cautious and he can create ear defenders by puffing out steam if he feels sensitive to loud noises.

 

This all sounds great, but out in the school yard don’t be surprised to have your child with mild autism be addressed by “Hey, Bruno!”, or “Your lights flashing again, Bruno!”.

I did do a quick check on political correctness and cartoons.

If you happen to watch Family Guy, you will know that Peter, the Dad, says many extremely unpleasant things to his daughter Meg (voice by Mila Kunis).  Some brothers now taunt their sisters by calling them Meg.  Mila Kunis, being interviewed by Graham Norton, told how she constantly gets told "Shut up Meg!"

On the other hand, in South Park we have two characters with cerebral palsy, Jimmy who walks with crutches but has normal IQ and Timmy, who is in a wheelchair, has a very low IQ and very limited speech.

While some people think South Park is a foulmouthed show (and it is), creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone really seem to 'get' disability much more so than many slightly disabled people, who self-advocate to the world.

The whole point is that Jimmy and Timmy are out there all day with the boys, behaving badly, getting into trouble and getting no special treatment.  That is real inclusion.

Who wants to be the brake car, at the back of train? Every boy, autistic or not, would want to be the engine, at the front, pulling the train.

Rather than asking the the Autistic Self Advocacy Network for advice, the producers of the new Thomas show should have asked Trey and Matt for advice.  The result would have been something I would watch.







10 comments:

  1. Hi Peter the video was very well made, congratulations to your son!. I really enjoyed watching Shaun the Sheep and Wallace and Grommit with him, he doesn't pay much attention to Disney movies. He now loves to watch Recess, I think it has to do with the clarity in the dialogues, I personally love the 90's humor.

    My son has been going to soccer classes and his peers weren't told that he has autism, like when he was in kindergarten and everyone knew. The coach hasn't told me anything, and I can't hear what they say in training, but it seems some kids are nice and some aren't patient, he runs sometimes in tiptoes or jumps and flaps his hands, and I've seen a kid that imitates him, at times I think it was a terrible idea, but then he is happy when they finish. I admit I am afraid though, that the other parents or the coach tell me he can't go anymore due to his condition.

    My mom says that in her times in school they were all mixed, she had peers that had been in the same grade for years and where in school with her younger siblings, she was also with a girl with down syndrome and says my aunt got into fights defending a disabled girl, so they were used to them and integration came natural, and they helped them by instinct, now she says many kids aren't used to see these kids every day, let alone play with them.

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  2. Dear Peter, my daughter did indeed watch kiddie stuff such as Peppa/Ben and Holly and it helped her a lot to understand some basic concepts. She graduated to Disney stuff. Having the female version of Aspergers, I literally (not figuratively) do not understand Spongebob, Family Guy, the Simpsons and South Park. Its all too crass and cynical and fast for me. To each their own I guess.
    What is your take on the new trend, loperamide?

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    Replies
    1. The study from Norway that suggested Loperamide is interesting.

      https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphar.2022.995439/full

      They did propose Loperamide (Imodium) and 3 other drugs, bromocriptine, drospirenone, and progesterone.

      My blog is full of references to the protective effect of female hormones (estradiol and progesterone). so progesterone is no surprise.

      Loperamide (Imodium) is cheap and OTC in many countries, so it has attracted interest.

      The good news is the method that the researchers used. The number of researchers applying some common sense is increasing.

      As with all potential interventions, it is going to be a balance between some, hopefully, good effects and the unwanted effects of the drug. Loperamide (Imodium) every day is not going to work in someone with constipation.

      Loperamide (Imodium) is easy to try.

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    2. So Peter if I was try this . Would you do a half dose of Imodium every day or full dose every second day. Last thing you would want to do with your child is give them constaption. As this such easy intervention to try I definitely will give a shot but the side effects might be wosre then any benefit

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    3. I would first see if there is a benefit at the regular dose. If you see a benefit but have side effects then you can look for a different drug that targets the same receptor. Or you lower the dose and see if you keep the good effects and lose the bad effects.

      If there is no benefit at the standard dose you can move on to other ideas.

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  3. Hi Peter, my son has had a very bad summer--he started being aggressive for the first time in many years. Allergy meds did not seem to help, and I cannot get him to take verapamil due to the taste. But oddly, the one thing that seems to have snapped him out of it was the over-the-counter dewormer, pyrantel pamoate. We treated the whole family for pinworms after we found an infection in his sibling. It might just be a coincidence, but he got MUCH calmer almost immediately afterwards, and the effect has endured for several weeks. Do you have any insight into whether there is a plausible mechanism for improvement with this kind of treatment?

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    Replies
    1. This type of drug is a Wnt inhibitor. Wnt signaling plays a role in autism and indeed in cancer. In theory these pinworm drugs stay in the gut and do not make it into the bloodstream, maybe some did get through.

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  4. Hello, how many days did you give Pyrantel? I'm also asking you because my boy, since the summer started, the heat is high, he started having bad temper tantrums, and even verapamil doesn't calm him anymore, cetirizine is the only one that keeps him little, for 3 years I haven't had anger attacks, I gave cephalosporin 10 antibiotic without any results, he has a severe heel pain when taking a bath, I thought it was a pandas.... I think something is from the bites of mosquitoes, then something was activated.....Is there anyone in this situation???

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    Replies
    1. Dragos, when we faced this problem a few years ago, the solution was to add Pioglitazone 30mg once a day from May to October. It is still working. It is in addition to Verapamil + cetirizine.

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  5. Thanks Peter,I gave pioglitazona and it seemed like it was worse,I solved I think the problem with an Indian antiparasitic Nikworm.Am administered yesterday and today is another child,I did not give any verapamilul in the morning. It seems that something from mosquitoes has activated a virus, was turbo ,aggressive and did not know about it. We are trying to get from Moldova of pyrantel pamoate. It seems that pyrantel is a big solution in autism.

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