|
|
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What should watch an airplane-loving 3 years old kid?, April 4, 2002
My son is just 3 years old and he is far away from becoming a professional of the wide blue yonder, or anything else. Like many kids of his age, he looks up frequently to the sky and points "look at that plane!", as if he had a factory-installed radar, and at the table he announces that a spoon is about to land, so the noodles will be met at gate 4. Like many kids of his age, he drags me along, to and across every airport and airfield he sees, and he loves to watch the planes come up, down and around. So... I began to look for books, videos and other stuff to please him and, at the same time, if possible, recover for myself the power to decide when to go to the nearest airport.Then I found there were: 1. Movies with planes. He may laugh out loud with Rocky and Bullwinkle, which is imaginative enough for a kid, but sure I will not let him watch Pearl Harbor for a while. Oh, yes. He once had chosen Pearl Harbor at a video store. 2. He's had enough with Barney and the Little Airplane, Bear in the Big Blue Jumbo and Teletubbies Go Flying. He says he's ready for something more extreme. 3. Discovery videos about planes. They are fun and instructive, but you cannot imagine the reaction of the relatives when a 3 year old starts repeating "the force which makes helicopters try to rotate in opposite direction to their rotors is called 'torque'" (toddler pronunciation, please). 4. Videos for pilots. Expensive and much too difficult to translate from 'plane English'. Then I found this one, fun, instructive, easy, realistic and yet imaginative, containing all real live action he demands, showing from the backstage many real planes just like the ones he sees at the airport. Now I have decided to buy the entire collection, including fire trucks, garbage trucks, police cars, trains, boats, spaceships and that bunch of big funny noisy machines I don't have in my backyard to show him. This video is excellent --his words, not mine.
|