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Children and Nature Documentary Airs

(Detroit) Metro Times – April 09, 2008
By Jim McFarlen

Cat Stevens would be proud. Then again, this might be the kind of depressing realization that prompted him to become Yusuf Islam. Though his song of nearly 40 years ago is nowhere to be heard, a new locally crafted documentary suggests the same haunting musical question Stevens asked then still demands answers today: Where Do the Children Play?

The hourlong Michigan Television production, airing at 9 p.m. Tuesday, April 15 (repeated at 2:30 a.m. Wednesday, April 16), on WTVS/Channel 56 is a must-see for parents or anyone who cares about kids, a compelling, serious look at a normally carefree subject. Interspersing lovingly photographed footage of youngsters exploring their natural surroundings of woods and waters with opinions of experts from as far away as Great Britain (all seemingly shot outside; nice touch), Where Do the Children Play? makes a convincing case that free play in the outdoors, a function essential for normal childhood development and taken for granted by the postwar generation, has given way to video games, Facebook pages and fear of the world beyond the front gate.

Only 10 percent of kids even walk to school anymore. Indeed, among the doc's more provocative notions is that kids from poor (not poverty-ridden) city neighborhoods are growing up in a better environment for play and socialization today than youngsters in the sterilized suburbia of soccer leagues and regimented play dates.

"I like that this film blows stereotypes apart and forces people to take a different look at things," says its writer-director-producer Christopher Cook, multiple regional Emmy winner who's possibly better known as food critic for Hour Detroit magazine. "We've been going through a lot of societal shifts in the country, and I wanted to create an awareness, especially on the part of suburbanites, that the continuing outward movement to bigger and better places is not always ideal, especially for kids."

Shot entirely in Michigan, the work travels to unspoiled, isolated Beaver Island, where young people don't have — gasp! — cell phones or e-mail addresses, yet seem to be getting on fine. Contrast that to the Rainforest Café in Auburn Hills, where kids can see and touch animals up close — and mechanized. The most consistent voice among the grown-ups is Richard Louv, author of the book Last Child in the Woods, who has a knack for the summarizing remark. "Kids who've been growing up in the last 20 years see nature as an abstraction," he notes. "It's a generation looking at screens instead of streams."

The independent production, seven years in the making and fueled by seed funding from the University of Michigan, has been picked up by public TV stations throughout the state and on Washington, D.C.'s giant WETA-TV, among others, a rarity for any program not funneled down the PBS pipeline. The programmers may realize that determining Where Do the Children Play? is too important to ignore.

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