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Maya Malbon

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Aug 2, 2024, 2:21:18 AM8/2/24
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However, every now and then, a documentary just seems to speak to me. This was the case with the documentary, The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters, and it was also the case for The Man With 1000 Kids, which I found one night while I was scrolling through Netflix.

But then, the story hits some low-lows, and you can see the parents seething, and crying over what Jonathan has inadvertently (Or possibly on purpose) done to hundreds of families. I was quite shocked at how this documentary was able to walk on both ends of the spectrum of comedy and seriousness.

However, all of the parents seem wronged, but also acknowledge that maybe they should have done a bit more research when acquiring a donor. And Jonathan Jacob Meijer, while often displayed as being selfish and a narcisist, also has a backstory where you can sort of understand why he wants to have so many kids.

I am on the kids and family acquisition team where we license TV shows and movies for kids of all ages and backgrounds. Kids and family content is a happy vibe, and I find myself smiling when I watch it.

I chose economics because it seemed like a good stepping stone for many different avenues, from entrepreneurship to economic public policy. I chose consulting in a similar way: I was not sure exactly what it was, but I knew I would learn a heck of a lot. There was so much challenge and variety in consulting. I originally focused on government clients in Washington, DC then switched to financial services when I transferred to New York. When I could not see myself sticking with it forever, I started looking into entertainment.

But parents may not want the kids to watch episodes of "Clifford the Big Red Dog," though I don't know why because he's adorable, or "Happy Birthday Barney," which I totally get can grind on a parent's last nerve.

  • Click on "Manage Profiles" from the Netflix website.
  • Change the "Kids" profile to "Adult" and unclick the "Kids" profile.
  • Then enter the "Kids" profile and move to the offending show. Click the "Thumbs Down" icon, which will gray out the shows.
  • Block all the shows you don't want your kids to watch by clicking the "Thumbs Down" icon.
  • Return to "Manage Profiles" and change the "Kids" profile back to kids by checking the box.
  • Choose either "For Little Kids Only" or "For Older Kids and Below."

While activating the Netflix Kids experience is the most obvious choice to ensure your child is watching age-appropriate content, that profile comes with curated titles selected for the 12-and-under crowd. Everything in the kids' profile automatically has a rating no higher than PG. But you can manually adjust those maturity ratings for each individual profile.

On your web browser, open your Netflix account page and head to the Profile & Parental Controls section. Select your child's profile and click change under Viewing Restrictions. You'll be prompted to enter your Netflix account password before being taken to a screen where you can edit the maturity ratings.

Choose a ratings level up to NC-17. Click Save. Note that if you want to include content that's rated above PG (including PG-13 and TV-14), the kids' profile badge will be removed for that user. On the flip side, here is where you can check the box to designate it as a kids profile. The maturity rating will be lowered. A bonus? These settings also apply to Netflix's games.

Did you know you can block certain titles on individual profiles? Whether your child has a kids' profile or a regular one, parents are able to suppress specific titles. You'll follow the same steps above and navigate to your account page, choose your kiddo's profile and launch the Viewing Restrictions section.

With multiple family members sharing one Netflix account, some crafty kids know how to buck your censorship system. Rather than stick to the rules, they'll skate on over to someone else's profile to watch what they want. By locking all the profiles with a PIN, you can prevent that and stay a step ahead.

Head to your account page from a web browser and scroll to the Profile & Parental Controls settings. Click change on Profile Lock, where you'll be asked to enter your account password. Check the box where it says, "Require a PIN to access XYZ's profile." Enter a four-digit PIN.

Once you set up a profile PIN, you'll have to enter it each time you open your profile on Netflix. But this feature can be used for all the profiles on the account regardless of age. In some cases, certain unsupported devices will not ask for the PIN to unlock a profile; however, it's required to watch content within the profile.

On the heels of resigning from his president and chief creative officer position at Thunderbird Entertainment and its Atomic Cartoons subsidiary at the end of May, Matt Berkowitz will be starting in a new job at Netflix as director of animation for its preschool + kids team on July 1.

Before joining Atomic as head of development in 2016, Berkowitz was a VP of creative and business development at LA-based Arc Productions (formerly Starz Animation). As an independent he produced a family-friendly animated feature called Extinct (2021), with Tolerable Entertainmnet, Cinesite, HB Wink and China Lion, which released in theaters in some territories and Netflix released it in others.

Now is a great time for children to learn a foreign language. Research shows that people learn languages much more easily in childhood than they do in adulthood. In addition to that, learning a second language comes with a ton of benefits including better opportunities later on in life.

As mentioned before, interaction is paramount. At TruFluency Kids, we believe in the Bellieu Method. The Bellieu Method in summary is making communication the forefront of language learning, using relevant, everyday vocabulary that everyone will use on a daily basis. We believe in focusing on listening and speaking, just like kids learned their first language.

After being removed from Paramount+ in June, Star Trek: Prodigy returned to streaming on Christmas Day via a global re-launch on Netflix. And the animated show appears to be hitting its target audience as it is already showing up on Netflix Top 10 lists around the world.

After months of not being available to stream, the first season of Star Trek: Prodigy is back. All 20 episodes are available now on Netflix globally. The show about alien kids who find adventure on a Starfleet ship (with a little help from a hologram of Captain Janeway) debuted strong. After just the first day, it popped into the list of Top 10 Kids TV Shows in the USA at #9. As of today, it has climbed to #6. Prodigy is one of only two recently added shows in the Top 10.

Launching on the biggest streaming service in the world gives Prodigy a chance to find a new audience. The series was designed from the outset to appeal to younger audiences not familiar with the franchise. Elements of Trek lore were introduced gradually over the first season, making it more welcoming and accessible for new fans.

The success of the relaunch is not just in the USA. Netflix is streaming Prodigy across the globe, except for Canada (where it is already available via CTV and the CTV app) and the SkyShowtime countries in Europe. Netflix has a larger global reach than Paramount+ so in many markets, viewers are getting their first chance to see Prodigy. According to the tracking site FlixPatrol, on its first day Prodigy also ranked in the Top 10 lists in the UK, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, and New Zealand. UPDATE: Just like the USA, the show is moving up the ranks globally. Today it moved from #9 to #6 in the UK and from #5 to #1 in Germany. It also jumped into the top 10 lists in Australia, Italy, and France.

The second season of Prodigy was completed earlier this month. Netflix will release season 2 in 2024, but they have not yet announced when or if they will be splitting up the season of 20 episodes. The producers of the show have made it clear it is possible for Netflix to order additional seasons. If the show continues to perform well, Prodigy may live on into season 3 and beyond.

Netflix wanted to keep the show but Paramount wanted to have Discovery releasing on both Paramount+ when they were launching the service in Europe while also keeping it on Netflix but Netflix wanted the show exclusive according to journalists from Deadline and Variety.

So Paramount bought back the international streaming rights for the show and also Discovery was a ratings hit for Paramount+ as reported by Paramount themselves (they also said SNW was a ratings hit too so if you believe that report you have to believe the other one too).

And just for fun I went and Googled and nothing came up about Discovery being in any top 10 lists for Netflix. The only top ten lists that keeps coming up are their rewatched Star Trek episodes, ironically back in 2017.

But I been saying for months I thought more people would at least give it a chance because Netflix is just a much bigger site and because of all the buzz over the show after it cancelled. I said it to someone in the last thread I had faith more people would at least check it out because how much fans pushed to get it back on the air. So even people who never watched it became more curious about it over all the hoopla.

One last thing i know you hate Discovery for whatever reasons but trying to spread a false narrative that the show was a ratings failure is wrong. I wish Trekkies like yourself would stop posting false information on a show just to fit your narrative of hate.

Paramount+, which rebranded from CBS All Access, did not reveal how many people had watched the shows or how many hours they had been watched for, but instead broke down its most-watched across numerous other categories.

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