worthitorwoke.com
Gus Plus Us
Gus Plus Us is a live-action children’s television series that premiered in 2022, produced by a homeschooling family in Texas. Each episode centers on Gus, his sidekick Karrot, and their friend Lucy as they navigate adventures that feature original songs and themes such as teamwork and patience.
Gus Plus Us Review (S1: E1-3)
Competing against their own original program, A Wonderful Day with Mabel Maclay, The Daily Wire has introduced the Texas-born children’s program Gus Plus Us to its children’s streaming platform, Bentkey. Humans have been mixing it up with puppets in children’s broadcast television since 1947, when the Kukla, Fran, and Ollie first went over the airwaves. However, as you can see from the clip below, as spectacles, they’ve come a long way.
Visuals and music are what truly set Gus Plus Us apart from other small, single-location preschool programs. While not extravagant, the sets and design elements are crafted with exceptional taste, and the overall composition is remarkably pleasant, giving the impression of a scope and depth that far exceed what is surely a very small soundstage. Those responsible for the visuals are masters of their craft.
The third episode takes the core cast “outside” of the home main set for the first time. With only simple camera tricks, green screen, and shockingly good Foley/sound design, the showrunners add a kinetic energy to the program that was noticeably missing in the previous two entries. This promises that, as the show continues to evolve, viewers can expect the same clever sense of play and invention to keep pushing its little world wider.
Likewise, the music, though limited, vastly outclasses virtually any other children’s program today. Clearly, the husband-and-wife duo responsible for Gus Plus Us are talented musicians, but rarely has a program outside of Sesame Street produced musical numbers with such skill and professionalism. That the production is minuscule by comparison only makes it that much more impressive.
However, when shopping for programs for your very young children, if you’re anything like my wife, you’re almost certainly more concerned with the content than anything else, especially of the educational variety. Unfortunately, this is where Gus Plus Us falls short. Of the three episodes that we were given to screen, the lessons were thin. That’s not to suggest that a program aimed at preschoolers should be teaching existentialism, or anything. Yet, something more substantial than it is nice to be nice would elevate the program from a twelve-minute opportunity for stay-at-home moms to grab a glass of rosé to must-watch TV for the little ones.
That said, the last of the three episodes we watched had a lesson of questionable value and perspective, so much so that it would give me pause enough to feel obliged to monitor the next few episodes alongside my children (see Woke Report below).
PARENTAL NOTES
Age Appropriate
There’s nothing shown or said that exceeds the maturity level of its intended audience.
WOKE REPORT
Ladies Night
This one doesn’t make the show woke, but it is noteworthy that the program skews for girls. The first episodes are about baking cakes and decorating for birthday parties, etc. Again, there’s nothing woke about that, but it does mean that it’s not a show that I would choose to put in front of my four-year-old boy.
Then Why Compete?
The final episode, which was the most thematically male-skewed of the three I was given to view, features an incredibly well-done car race between the two puppet characters. The lesson of the episode is that of the importance of “being a good sport.”
Conceptually, that’s a lesson most of us can get behind. However, the episode’s writers fall into the modern trap of suggesting that being a good sport means not caring whether you win or lose. Few ideas have done more quiet damage to young men than this one. You should care about winning—not for the trophy itself, but because striving to win teaches lessons that carry into nearly every corner of adult life. In fact, it’s impossible to be a true good sport without caring about the outcome. Apathy—the absence of investment—has no place in competition. Good sportsmanship is about grace, poise, honor, and humility. It’s about learning from your mistakes, showing character in defeat, and rising to do better next time, just as much as it’s about handling victory with dignity.
We’ve raised whole generations of low-testosterone losers on the despicable notion that winning doesn’t and shouldn’t matter.
This isn’t enough of a sample size for us to mark the Woke-O-Meter down below BASED, but it is concerning, nonetheless.
The post Gus Plus Us first appeared on Worth it or Woke.