Yes! Yes! Yes! Johnny Quest on DVD!

johnnyquest2Finally! Johnny Quest is on DVD!

If you’re of the right age, you know without me even telling you that Johnny Quest used to be the coolest thing going on Saturday morning–by far!

In case you aren’t lucky enough to remember Johnny Quest, the series was a thirty minute action/adventure cartoon that started airing back in 1964. It instantly became a classic, and it has remained famous for the last forty years. The main cast includes:

  • Dr. Benton Quest–a SCIENTIST (not specializing in any particular kind of
    science, just whatever the episode was about that week) who globetrots, solving
    mysteries for the U.S. intelligence community.
  • Johnny Quest–his intelligent, irrepressible son who is drawn into the
    adventures by his father’s globetrotting.
  • Roger "Race" Bannon–a government agent assigned to protect Johnny to keep
    him from being kidnapped and used to blackmail his father.
  • Hadji–Johnny’s best friend, an orphaned boy from India, and
  • Bandit–Johnny’s irrepressible, comic-relief dog.

Man, Johnny Quest was cool! The series was drawn on a limited, 1964 TV animation budget, so it used limited animation techniques in order to avoid breaking the budget, but it used the animation in creative and striking ways that make it far more interesting to look at than typical TV animation. It features the intriguing, stylistic designs of animator Alex Toth (who also designed Space Ghost and other classic animation series of the period) and detailed backgrounds that are covered with detail. The series’ premise takes the characters to exotic locations around the globe and confronts them with powerful, sometimes supernatural threats–further adding to the visual dynamism of the series.

Also outstanding is the writing. The scripts are intelligent and (despite the fantastic premise of the series) far more realistic than most animated series. Some of the stuff in the scripts would never make it onto Saturday morning TV today. Consider:

In one episode, Johnny, Hadji, and Race are in a South American jungle when they counter a panther who is about to kill a native man. Race has only a second to act, so to save the man he SHOOTS THE PANTHER. Notice that I didn’t say “stuns the panther with a sonic disruptor pistol.” He SHOOTS IT WITH A RIFLE. Then, rather than letting the boys approach the native, who has the panther laying at his feet, Race tells them to stay where they are and then he SHOOTS THE PANTHER AGAIN to make SURE it’s dead. (Remember: There’s nothing more dangerous than a wounded animal.)

Yes! That’s what you’re SUPPOSED to do in that situation! Save human life and keep it safe, even if it means killing an animal–a valuable lesson in life (one that everybody used to learn) that you’d NEVER see on a modern, politically correct, eco-friendly, Captain Planet-y cartoon.

What a breath of fresh air a show like Johnny Quest is after years of agenda-driven pablum in animated form. It’s striking, intelligent, focused–and even delightfully scary at times for a boy of a certain age. It stresses virtues like loyalty, determination, inventiveness, and facing one’s fears–and it does so without preaching at the audience. The heroes display these virtues naturally while the series stays focused on the STORY instead of wallowing in introspection and self-doubt before finally summoning up the courage to do the right thing.

The current DVD set includes ALL the original Johnny Quest episodes (despite the misleading “Complete First Season” label; the manufacturer apparently is treating a 1986 sequel series as the “second season”), so when you buy this you’ll be getting all the favorite episodes you remember from childhood.

Whether you want to revive memories of Johnny Quest from your own childhood, want to share it with your own, appropriately-aged children, or appreciate it for the first time, hop on board the hovercraft and watch Johnny and the gang face a truckload of evil scientists, enemy agents, and wicked cool monsters.

BUY IT!

Sisters of Mercy Apologize (Re: The Magdalen Sisters)

Y’all may remember the film The Magdalene Sisters that came out a couple of years ago. It was a horrible film that viciously exploted a horrible scandal. The sisters that ran the Magdalene homes had already issued a partial apology when a previous documentary about the situation had aired. Now they have issued a fuller apology.

Thanks For The Prayers, Y'All!

The talk to 7th graders at the non-denominational school up north of L.A. went very well.

The kids were engaged.

The teacher was pleased.

The school chaplain was pleased.

They’re talking about having me back in the future, including possibly speaking to the whole school instead of just individual classes, as I did today.

MUCH obliged for the prayers, folks!

(P.S. Someone asked how this situation came up: Basically, the school has a 30% Catholic student body and is making a good faith effort to not present a biased view of history. The parents of one of the Catholic students in the school arranged for me to come up and give the talks to the 7th grade history classes to help ensure balance. Compliments to them for being so on-the-job and making this happen!)

Thanks For The Prayers, Y’All!

The talk to 7th graders at the non-denominational school up north of L.A. went very well.

The kids were engaged.

The teacher was pleased.

The school chaplain was pleased.

They’re talking about having me back in the future, including possibly speaking to the whole school instead of just individual classes, as I did today.

MUCH obliged for the prayers, folks!

(P.S. Someone asked how this situation came up: Basically, the school has a 30% Catholic student body and is making a good faith effort to not present a biased view of history. The parents of one of the Catholic students in the school arranged for me to come up and give the talks to the 7th grade history classes to help ensure balance. Compliments to them for being so on-the-job and making this happen!)

Say A Prayer For Me!

This morning I’m going to be up in Los Angeles giving three talk. These talks have some unusual characteristics:

1) They are about “a Catholic perspective on the Reformation.”

2) They are being given to 7th-graders.

3) They are being given in an interdenominational school that is 70% Protestant (including LOTS of Calvary Chapel kids).

4) They need to not cause overly much controversy with the kids’ parents.

Prayers appreciated.

(For my next trick, I will end world hunger.)

Language Learning After Childhood

A reader writes:

Hope you are well. I love the blog and enjoy especially the Language helps. I have Mounce’s Greek for the rest of Us. My wife is Puerto Rican and I want her to talk to my kids in Spanish. I would also like to learn but wonder how hard it is for an adult to learn Spanish or Latin etc.
Have you ever seen anything on this subject of adult learning of Language? Especially those that can’t travel to another country.

If you want to learn Spanish, I strongly recommend Pimsleur Spanish. This will make it far easier than typical Spanish classes. See my language resource recommendations for buying advice (i.e., how to get it the cheapest way).

As far as the ability of adults to learn langauge, it has long been noticed that adults often don’t learn them as well as children. There are two proposed explanations for this:

1. Humans have a language learning faculty that starts to degenerate once we hit puberty.

2. Adults have less time and motivation to study langauges than little children do.

When it comes to learning accents, a variant of position #1 may (or may not) be true. Adults have a terrible time learning certain sounds and accents. Fortunately for you, Spanish is not a language English-speakers have this trouble with, there are certain sounds in Eastern Arabic and Eastern Aramaic that are virtually impossible for English-speakers to pronounce (after a lot of practice, I’ve gotten to where I can do them if I pronounce them very carefully, but they aren’t natural for me).

When it comes to learning the language itself (not just how to pronounce it with a native accent), I’m convinced that position #2 is true: There is no language learning faculty that degenerates with age. Adults simply have less time and motivation compared to children.

Pimsleur was one of the things that helped convince me of this. It is modelled on the way kids learn their first language, and I was struck at how easily it was to learn using this method. After some experience with the method, I became convinced that position #1 is simply a myth. If you were to put an adult in the same position as a child, we’d do just as well–or better.

Imagine what it would be like if you were dropped into an environment in which you had no exposure to anything but your new language, twenty four hours a day, seven days a week, for years. You couldn’t talk to anybody in your native language. You don’t have anything to read in it. There is no TV, movies, or radio shows in your native language. Nothing! All you can do to get your needs met is (a) cry or (b) start learning the language of the natives.

I think that if I (or anybody) were put in this situation, after six years I’d speak the language at least as well as a six-year old child. Probably better, since as an adult I’d have a leg up on babies learning a language for the first time–i.e., I already know a lot about how languages work and how to experiment to find out the new language maps onto concepts I’ve already acquired (e.g., I already know what a dog, a God, love, death, and justice are, and it’ll be a lot easier for me to figure out the local words for these concepts than it will be for a baby who has to acquire the concepts at the same time he’s learning the words). The same would go for you.

So take heart! Your ability to learn languages hasn’t degenerated with age–in fact, in some ways you’re better off learning a new language than a baby is. You may not be able to have the total immersion environment a baby has, but if you apply yourself you can achieve your language goals, and it will be easier than you think if you use the best methods (like Pimsleur).