NEWS

Beakman Blasts Back Into Action

Written by Ryan Eanes
Published November 12, 2006

Somewhere in Antarctica, near the South Pole, two penguins named Don and Herb are perched by their television set, remote control in hand — er, wing. After a bit of Statler-and-Waldorf-esque banter, usually involving any of a number of bad puns about snow, the South Pole, fish, tuxedos, and other penguin-type jokes, the TV is powered on, and there, in an explosion, is a mad scientist in a green lab coat with a huge shock of black hair pointing straight up. Fingers waggling and sound effects flying, this crazed-looking man says, "I'm Beakman, and you've just broken into... Beakman's World!"

If you were a child of a certain age between 1993 and 1997, it's likely that you remember this scenario, as it was how every episode of the Emmy-winning kids' science series Beakman's World began. Partially a product of the Children's Television Act of 1990, the program solicited questions from viewers and answered them in a fast-paced, colorful format that saw no shortage of sound effects. No subject matter seemed off limits, either. One episode, for instance, saw Beakman don a HazMat suit and crawl inside a gigantic model nostril "in the name of science." In another episode, Beakman's mom, "Beakmom," played by Jean Stapleton — better known as Edith Bunker — demonstrates binaural hearing (that is, determining the source of a sound by using two ears) using a specially modified pair of headphones.

Beakman, who often referred to himself as "your own personal scientist," was joined in every episode by Lester, a disgruntled man in a rat suit (Mark Ritts), along with a younger female assistant — Josie (Alanna Ubach) in the first season, Liza (Eliza Schneider) in the second and third seasons, and Phoebe (Senta Moses) in the final two seasons. (Fast Fact: Did you know Lester was originally a rat puppet in the pilot episode? The puppeteer who was supposed to operate the original Lester puppet got sick, and, instead, Mark Ritts was recruited to play a man in a rat suit.)

The three reigned over a cluttered laboratory set (clearly a throwback to Pee-Wee's Playhouse) filled with 34 globes, 14 lava lamps, 14 fire extinguishers, two beauty salon hair driers, and a veritable wonderland of other random objects. "Ray the Cameraman" was also prominently featured in most episodes (well, his hand was, anyway), and a stable of recurring characters, including Soaperman, Balance Man, and greasy spoon short-order cook Art Burn (all clearly Beakman), as well as a number of "famous dead guys" such as Marie Curie, Alexander Graham Bell, and Charles Goodyear, all made regular appearances.

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Ryan Eanes is a freelance writer, designer and producer based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a graduate of Wake Forest University, and is completing a MA in Media Studies at The New School in New York.
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Beakman Blasts Back Into Action
Published: November 12, 2006
Type: News
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Television, Video: Film and TV Business, Video: Family, Culture: Education
Writer: Ryan Eanes
Ryan Eanes's BC Writer page
Ryan Eanes's personal site
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Comments

#1 — November 12, 2006 @ 13:52PM — El Bicho [URL]

I just noticed this the other day as I was flipping around the dial and assumed I was on a cable station. A perfect example that teaching doesn't hav eto be dry and boring.

#2 — November 14, 2006 @ 09:08AM — Joan Hunt [URL]

Congratulations! This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States.

#3 — December 1, 2006 @ 01:19AM — Phil Walsh [URL]

Glad you approved. It was fun to write! I'm glad it's doing well again and I often wonder how many of our original audience really got into science as a result.

#4 — October 13, 2007 @ 18:56PM — Caleb

Dear Beakman what is anti-matter
and how do we know it exists?

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