"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.