WebProNews

Tag: LeVar Burton

  • William Shatner Drinks With Levar Burton, Talks Reading Rainbow

    William Shatner’s hit web video series, Brown Bag Wine Tasting, has had several great guests from a wide variety of backgrounds, including celebrity chef Alton Brown, as well as a butcher, a magician, a marijuana dealer, a cosplayer, a cosmetic surgeon, and now an educator.

    And that is how Shatner’s latest guest, Star Trek’s Levar Burton, is represented, as an educator. His involvement with Reading Rainbow is discussed much more than his involvement with Star Trek.

    Shatner and Burton sat down with the usual setup of the series, a bottle of wine that neither of them had seen, which is brown-bagged. They discuss whatever Shatner wants to discuss, and drink the wine as they do. With no preconceived notion about what the wine is supposed to be like, they experience it within the context of their discussion.

    In this case, Shatner asks Burton to describe the wine to him as though it were a child Burton might encounter in one of his charities.

    Their discussion turned to Burton’s background, the help his mother gave him growing up, the absence of his father, and so on.

    Regarding his involvement with reading education for children, Burton revealed that it was due to his mother that he jumped into that field.

    “I grew up in a house where reading was mandatory,” he said. “My mother was a teacher before she was a social worker. My mom moved from the Midwest to California because she knew that a better quality of education was available for her kids.”

    And he revealed the idea that launched Reading Rainbow.

    Reading Rainbow was originally created to address what teachers call the ‘summer slide’, when a child is learning how to read, when they’re cracking the code, and they go on a summer vacation, and their reading comprehension skills plummet. This idea was presented to me to use really this powerful television technology to meet them where they are, and take them where we wanted them to go.”

    Now that Reading Rainbow is online and available as an app, Burton says this is his “life’s work.”

    “I’ve just extended and reinvented the brand to apply to kids in the modern era,” he said. “We are very proud of the fact that what we are offering to kids is the opportunity find literature that they want to read based on what they are interested in.”

  • LeVar Burton Takes Kids on a Tweeting Rainbow Adventure

    With apologies to Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel has the best Twitter-themed bits on late night. And with apologies to Reading Rainbow, I’m pretty sure that I’m more interested in watching LeVar Burton host Tweeting Rainbow. Maybe we can just start another Kickstarter?

    Imagine, LeVar Burton teaching kids the ins and outs of Twitter – from retweets to subtweets, from favoriting to blocking. I’d watch as LeVar showed how Twitter can ruin careers, and jumpstart others. How people can say the darndest things, and how you should never, ever, ever, go full Donald Trump. That’s lesson number one, kiddos.

    Kids, do you know what Snoop meant when he tweeted ‘Put ya face in tha mayo’?

    Take a look, your tweet’s been mistook, a tweeting rainbow.

    Image via Jimmy Kimmel Live, YouTube

  • Reading Rainbow Takes a Dark Turn Following Massively Successful Kickstarter Campaign

    You know how we all just pledged a ton of money so that LevAr Burton can revive Reading Rainbow, on the web, for a new generation?

    Ok, maybe we shouldn’t have done that.

    Reading gives knowledge, and knowledge is power. What kind of power can be obtained from simply taking a look, in a book? Apparently, godlike. And what happens when you develop godlike powers? You sure as hell don’t want anyone else sharing in your godlike status.

    Remember–what gives the power? Books. Solution? I’ll let Funny or Die paint the horrible, post-apocalyptic picture:

    Got-damn, LeVar. that’s some heavy stuff. Let’s hope that the new Reading Rainbow’s theme song is a bit brighter when it finally hits the web.

    By the way, that Kickstarter currently boats nearly $3.5 million with over 76,000 backers and 28 days to go. LeVar and Reading Rainbow’s new stated goal is $5 million.

    Image via Funny or Die

  • Star Trek Actor Seeks Help For Reading Rainbow

    Quick question: Do you have $1?

    Chances are that you do.

    Believe it or not, that one buck is more than enough to make a huge difference in a wonderful campaign.

    LeVar Burton, the actor best known for playing Lieutenant Commander Geordi La Forge on Star Trek, recently began a kickstarter campaign to bring back another show dear to his heart: Reading Rainbow.

    The hit show aired on PBS from June 1983 until November 2010.

    During that time it was credited with helping multiple generations foster a love of reading.

    It’s been a few years since the show was cancelled, but clearly the enthusiasm attached to RR remains.

    On Wednesday, the Kickstarter was launched to bring back Reading Rainbow.

    Burton and those attached to the project were asking for just $1 million to bring RR to the worldwide web in an online series.

    To their amazement, the Kickstarter fund exceeded that amount within the first 24 hours. Twice.

    The project runners initially hoped to reach this modest goal within 35 days. To say they underestimated the nostalgic impact of the Kickstarter fund is an understatement.

    Now they’ve re-adjusted their goal to $5 million with new ideas and possibilities attached to the project, including making RR available on multiple platforms.

    Yet another adjusted goal may be necessary as the Kickstarter fund gathers steam. The third day of the Kickstarter program isn’t over yet and already $3.1 million dollars (and counting) has been raised. Nearly 70,000 individuals have donated thus far.

    The overwhelming success of this campaign should demonstrate how close Reading Rainbow is to the hearts of many.

    Predictably, not everyone is convinced that this project is on the level. One Washington Post author landed in hot water with an article that seems to suggest that this Reading Rainbow project is little more than a scam.

    Her logic seems to be based on the idea that they’ve already made more than enough for a new season of the show on PBS.

    The problem is that not too many people watch PBS in 2014.

    Put Reading Rainbow on the web and the program can and will reach a far wider audience.

    If you decide to give your last $1 to something, why not give it a project that aims to fight childhood illiteracy?

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • LeVar Burton And “Reading Rainbow”: Questions Arise

    LeVar Burton has been all over the web in the past two days after seeing his Kickstarter campaign for a reboot of “Reading Rainbow” hit and surpass the $1 million goal within its first 24 hours of being up. Burton filmed the moment the numbers turned over to $1 million and recorded a teary message for all his backers, saying how overwhelmed he was by the response and promising that the campaign is crucial to launching a program that will help millions of children.

    The classic show won’t be seeing a startup, however; Burton, who bought the rights to the name “Reading Rainbow”, plans to expand on a reading app from RRKidz that will enable teachers to utilize special tools in the classroom. And because it was taken off the air in 2009, some are wondering if the idea of a reboot is necessary.

    “If Reading Rainbow is so epically popular, then why was the show cancelled to begin with? And now that it’s coming back — as a for-profit company, not a charity — is it really the best vehicle for teaching literacy to “millions of children”?” writes Caitlin Dewey of The Washington Post.

    But the “Reading Rainbow” mobile app has been hugely successful, drawing on the upsurge in technology use among children and pre-teens to get them excited about reading, just like the old show did. The new web version will expand upon that for teachers and homeschoolers, and will include lesson plans and tools for progress tracking.

    “I wanted to put in the hands of kids a library of books and videos, like the TV show did, all in the service of inspiring a love of literature and exploring the world — connecting the real world to the literature that kids are reading,” Burton said.

    The joys of sharing a book with a child and opening up the world of reading to them are unlike any other, Burton says, and can have lasting rewards for them.

    “There is nothing more powerful to me than that elemental experience of storytelling: being read to aloud, following along, seeing the story in the pictures and feeling it in your heart. It is really beautifully, brilliantly embodied in the sharing of a children’s book….If you are a reader, then you have the ability to educate yourself. When you have the ability to be a lifelong learner, there are no limits on what you can acquire in terms of knowledge and information. It represents the ultimate freedom of mankind.”

    So far, the Kickstarter campaign has nearly reached $2 million in support and has 33 days to go.

    Image via YouTube

  • LeVar Burton Works to Bring Back ‘Reading Rainbow’

    If you remember the days of LeVar Burton hosting the PBS show Reading Rainbow, then your childhood was awesome. Unfortunately, most of the kids in elementary school now can’t say the same, and Burton is looking to change that. Burton started a campaign on Kickstarter this morning to raise $1 million to bring back Reading Rainbow. If the crowdsourced project is successful, the Reading Rainbow program will be available online and will be provided to 1,500 classrooms at no cost.

    After teasing of big news to come on Twitter, LeVar Burton posted the announcement that he is trying to bring back the popular reading show this morning. The announcement was met with an outpouring of support, with people wasting no time in pledging anywhere from a buck to hundreds of dollars to bring back the show.

    Check out Burton’s Twitter announcement below.

    Burton says he wants to bring back Reading Rainbow because of the staggering number of children that will grow up illiterate.

    “I believe that every child has a right, and a need, to be literate. We have a responsibility to prepare our children…and right now, the numbers show that we, as a society, are failing in that responsibility,” Burton posted to his Kickstarter page. Burton goes on to say that “1 out of every 4 children in America will grow up illiterate,” which is a ridiculously high number for a first world country.

    Check out LeVar Burton’s Kickstarter video for Reading Rainbow below.

    As with most crowdsourced projects, people that pledge money are promised certain goodies depending on how much money they contribute. People that donate will receive anything from a special thanks on Burton’s website for a $5 donation all the way to a private dinner in Los Angeles with LeVar Burton as well as Burton’s Star Trek visor for a pledge of $10,000.

    Even though Burton has five weeks to raise the necessary funds, it looks like he will be able to raise that amount in less than a day, as more than $800,000 has already been pledged to the campaign. Around 20,000 people have made pledges so far, which shows just how much people believe in the project.

    Whether you choose to contribute to Burton’s project or not, here is a nice blast from the past:

    Image via Kickstarter

  • It’s Reading Rainbow’s Turn in the PBS Icons Remixed Series

    With their Icons Remixed series, PBS Digital Studios is doing it right. So far, they’ve taken some of the best personalities from their decades of programming and given them a freshening up of sorts. And the results have been great.

    Today, another classic PBS icon gets the remix treatment: LeVar Burton and Reading Rainbow.

    “For years, LeVar Burton and Reading Rainbow have taught kids everywhere about the power of books and imagination. To this day, the show continues to encourage a love of reading and connect children to the world they live in through quality literature — so they can “go anywhere, be anything.” With this remix, John Boswell has captured those enduring lessons in song — a fitting tribute to an important part of PBS history,” says PBS Digital Studios.

    “One of the best inventions ever was the book. A book lets you zoom through time and space – but don’t bother packing. You can stay in one place!” Right on, LeVar.

    Make sure to check out the previous episodes of the Icons Remixed series: Mister Rogers, Bob Ross, and Julia Child.

  • Reading Rainbow App Comes to iPad

    When Reading Rainbow aired its last episode back in 2006, millions of teens and 20-somethings shed a nostalgic tear for one of their favorite childhood TV shows. Now those same kids-at-heart can relive those childhood memories and interact with them on their iPad.

    LeVar Burton, the host and producer of Reading Rainbow, announced this week that the Reading Rainbow app for iPad is now available. The app is designed for children 3-9 years of age, an offers hundreds of children’s book with all-new videos featuring Burton. The apps uses themed “islands” to help children find books suited to their age, reading level, and interests. Each book features an audio storytelling by celebrity actors, including, of course, Burton himself. The books also feature animations and “related activities.”

    “I come from a family teachers, and when I was offered the opportunity to host Reading Rainbow in 1983, I recognized immediately the value in using technology to inspire kids to read,” said Burton. “Reading will never go out of style, but the tools used for learning are changing. I am excited to bring Reading Rainbow back so that parents who watched the show can now share that same feel-good experience with their own children but on a platform that resonates with today’s digital kids.”

    Similar to his Geordi LaForge character on Star Trek: The Next Generation, Burton has embraced new technologies. He has a prodigious following on Twitter, and has undergone DNA testing to trace his ethnic heritage to the Hausa people of Nigeria. Burton stated that one of the things he and app creators RRKidz, inc. were most cautious of was disappointing existing fans of Reading Rainbow.

    “I am really proud to say that I do believe that we have successfully reinvented, from the bottom-up, what was a television show into a multi-dimensional experience about the exploration and discovery of quality children’s literature in a digital environment that kids can lose themselves in – in a good way,” said Burton.

    The Reading Rainbow app is free for download in the Apple App store. It currently boasts 150 interactive books and 16 video “field trips,” with the promise of more to come. In addition, the app features customized recommendations for childred as well as a reward program to encourage reading. Take a look at Burton’s announcement and a hands-on demonstration of the app below:

    (Video via engadget)

  • Geordi From Star Trek Takes Control Of Twitter!

    LeVar Burton, Star Trek’s Lieutenant Geordi, and also Reading Rainbow’s TV show host of 26 years, has attempted to take control of the handle @ReadingRainbow. Apparently while trying to register for the handle he discovered that someone else already beat him to it.

    Checking into the matter further, he learned that the user holding the @ReadingRainbow Twitter name hadn’t Tweeted anything in over three years. Seeing an opportunity to assume the name, Geordi, I mean Burton, seized the helm and reached out to his fan base:

    “Dear @twitter I’m trying to contact the individual who’s sitting on @ReadingRainbow but he hasn’t Tweeted in #3YEARS Can you help? Thanks!”

    Over 700 fans rushed to his aid and retweeted the message. This caught Twitters attention and within hours Burton got what he wanted. @ReadingRainbow was his. No mentioned of a reaction from the previous owner.

  • Reading Rainbow Gets A Reboot

    Reading Rainbow Gets A Reboot

    LeVar Burton seems to be on a life-long mission to put books in the hands of kids, and thank god for that. As the star of the widely popular show and indelible part of my youth Reading Rainbow, he told a generation of kids that they can go anywhere and be anything.

    And now he wants to give a whole new generation of kids the same message using the new technology that we now have at our disposal.

    Burton has announced that he is launching RRKidz, and educational app that takes the world of Reading Rainbow to the iPad and select Android devices. The app will of course contain books – 300 at the launch. It will also contain videos of Burton exploring different real-life places, mirror the content of the original PBS Reading Rainbow. He’s already recorded videos all over NASA, for instance. The new app will also feature educational games.

    Burton wants this app to stand out in a crowded field of educational apps for kids. He tells Fast Company that he will be “curator in chief,” hand picking the books, games and other app features.

    “I’m the curator,” he says. “I chose the voices, I put together the team; this is the value of 25-plus years of experience that I bring to this venture.” Reading Rainbow is a cultural landmark, and Burton both hosted an produced it. So if anyone knows how to get kids engaged when it comes to reading, it’s him.

    The app will also include some special features – a truly multimedia experience for the readers. The stories will sometimes come with enhanced voice-overs from Burton himself, special animations (part of what made the show such a hit) and games built right into the PDF book itself.

    Remember a few months ago when I tweeted about Reading Rainbow coming back? 23 hours ago via Twitterrific · powered by @socialditto

    It’s great to finally be able to talk about @RRKIDZ
    #ReadingRainbowfortodaysconnectedkids #bydhttmwfi 20 hours ago via Twitterrific · powered by @socialditto

    “For 25 years Reading Rainbow gave me the opportunity to excite children about books and reading through the medium of television. With RRKidz, I will be able to bring that same spirit of discovery, imagination and adventure to today’s digitally connected kids through enhanced e-books,” says Burton. “RRKidz’ innovative platform allows us to deliver an incredibly exciting interactive storytelling experience through partnerships with leading publishers.”

    Apparently, the initial app is just the beginning. RRKidz wants to grow into a larger educational platform.

    This will most likely be a huge hit. You want to know how relevant Reading Rainbow remains? Check out what made its way up the Reddit charts recently (Courtesy) –

    And for relevance and nostalgia’s sake, please enjoy this awesomeness –