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That all changed when I read CinemaBlend’s The Day the Earth Blew Up review (we gave it 4 out of 5 stars). After reading ...
Generations of kids have grown up with chubby cartoon characters like Fat Albert, Winnie the Pooh and Homer Simpson -- and it may not be good for their diets. A first-of-its kind study finds that ...
Children's entertainment has occupied a special place in television since the early Saturday morning cartoons of the 1930s.
How about we take this to the next level? Our newsletter is like a refreshing cocktail (or mocktail) of LGBTQ+ entertainment and pop culture, served up with a side of ...
Cooper went up against his co-star Ashley Walters in his category, as well as Javier Bardem (“Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story”), Rob Delaney (“Dying for Sex”), Peter Sarsgaard and Bill Camp ...
Some estimates say the average preschooler sees more than 500 breakfast cereal commercials a year. And characters in those ads carry a lot of clout. "Early Show" Contributor Taryn Winter Brill ...
The findings prompt the authors to describe children's cartoons as "rife with death and destruction," with content akin to the "rampant horrors" of popular films for adults given restrictive age ...
There are many cartoon characters, whether on TV, in movies, in books or elsewhere, who appear to be rather rotund (obviously Homer Simpson pictured above isn’t really for young kids). But even though ...
The same marketing tactics used to sell sugary cereal and junk food to children could just as effectively sway youngsters to want more fruit and vegetables, a recent study suggests. Researchers from ...
If you've got young kids, here's the sort of research you do every time you go to the grocery store. Push the cart down the cereal aisle and which box does your kid grab? Probably the one with Shrek, ...
Be it SpongeBob SquarePants or Tony the Tiger, food companies have long used cartoon characters to market their products to children. But that tactic can also sway younger kids to eat fresh vegetables ...