Let's Wiggle
Common Sense Note
These contemporary tunes are tailored to entertain and teach preschoolers to notice their surroundings and themselves. Extremely easy-to-remember lyrics, repetitive verses, very short tunes, and a kids' chorus all encourage children to sing along and dance.
In "Lechoo Yeladim," the singer translates Hebrew words into English (run, stand, walk) while urging children to move accordingly.
Common Sense Review
Reviewed By: Galia Baron
The Wiggles are the most popular children's entertainers in Australia. Their live concerts are routinely sold out, and many of their albums have gone platinum. The dynamic four (Jeff, Anthony, Murray, and Greg) and the characters they have created (Dorothy the Dinosaur, Henry the Octopus, Wags the Dog, and Captain Feathersword the friendly Pirate) are household names among Australian preschoolers (and many American ones, as well).
In LET'S WIGGLE, the energetic quartet offers an upbeat combination of traditional music and original creations. In "Dorothy the Dinosaur," kids are introduced to the green dinosaur as they "Romp-bomp-a-chomp" to their hearts' content. In "We're All Friends," "Dorothy's Birthday Party," and "Henry the Octopus," young listeners meet the rest of the colorful ensemble. Other tracks encourage dancing, walking, running, jumping, stomping, nodding, and---of course--wiggling. "Bound for South Australia" introduces a little geography, and "The Dreaming Song" treats listeners to the mythical sound of the Australian Aboriginal didgeridoo.
Rate It!
| Content | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CS | adults | kids | ||
Sexual Content |
||||
Violence |
||||
Language |
||||
Message |
||||
Social Behavior |
||||
CommercialismThis is one big ad for the TV show. |
||||
Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco |
||||
