Creating Reading Rainbow: The Untold Story of a Beloved Children's Series by Barbara Irwin, Pamela Johnson, Tony Buttino

Creating Reading Rainbow: The Untold Story of a Beloved Children's Series

by Barbara Irwin, Pamela Johnson, and Tony Buttino

Reading Rainbow is one of the most successful PBS children’s series in television history, earning numerous national and international awards including 26 Emmys and a Peabody Award. But perhaps more important than anything else, Reading Rainbow helped generations of children cultivate a love for books.

Reading Rainbow is very much a story of humble beginnings and enormous perseverance. Over five summers, Tony Buttino Sr. and his colleagues at WNED-TV, the public television station in Buffalo, New York, worked in collaboration with educators and librarians to experiment with summer reading programs. But after trialing these programs, the WNED team realized there was a big need for a new children's literacy series and believed they could create a new show with local and national collaborators and friends. After fits and starts, and enough twists and turns to fill a children’s book, Reading Rainbow premiered in the summer of 1983 and captured the attention of 6.5 million young viewers.

Creating Reading Rainbow explores the many intriguing and homespun stories that, when woven together, reveal how this groundbreaking and iconic television series came to be. What led to the series being called “Reading Rainbow”? How did the road to Reading Rainbow wind its way through Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood? How did a public television station in Buffalo spearhead a movement in education and spark the passion for reading in millions of children? And, what does lasagna have to do with it?

Reviewed by Jeff Sexton on

5 of 5 stars

Share

Well Documented History Of The Origins Of An Acclaimed Program. Coming in at 32% documentation, this is one of the better documented nonfiction tales I've read of late. Given that it doesn't actually make many claims that require larger amounts of evidence, this is actually even more astounding - the authors documented seemingly more just to provide the data than to necessarily "prove" their claims. Which is to be commended.

 

The actual narrative of the tale as told though... could use some better editing, and perhaps the final version of this text - vs the Advanced Review Copy edition I read - has that better editing. But for the edition I read, the narrative could get a touch disjointed at times, often switching between authors and perspectives from paragraph to paragraph and even seemingly at times within a given paragraph. Which makes the overall reading experience a bit tougher, which is a shame given that the very story we're learning here is the creation of a program that would become truly legendary in getting kids excited about reading.

 

Those looking for a large presence of host LeVar Burton are going to be disappointed, as while the book discusses how his involvement came about and then references him a few times as it progresses through the timeline of the show, there are only a few scant quotes directly from him - most seeming from the very documentation the authors cite in the end.

 

Instead, this book focuses more on coauthor Tony Buttino's own history and efforts to get the show up and operational, including deep dives into his family and neighborhood as he grew and developed as both a person and a television professional.

 

Still, for anyone interested in learning the backstory of Reading Rainbow and how it came into existence, this book is a treasure trove unlike any other. Very much recommended.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • 10 June, 2024: Started reading
  • 13 June, 2024: Finished reading
  • 21 June, 2024: Reviewed