View Full Version : What Happened to Pappyland? - Why 90s TV Felt So Much More "Real" Than Today


TMC
05-24-2026, 04:09 PM
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Do you remember Jim Henson’s Mother Goose Stories, The Secret Life of Toys, and Pappyland (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pappyland)… or do they just feel like something you dreamed as a kid?

In this episode of Nostalgia Fever Dream, we dive into three of the strangest, coziest, and most forgotten kids shows of the 90s. From the handcrafted storybook world of Jim Henson’s Mother Goose Stories, to the bizarre secret rules and toy paranoia of The Secret Life of Toys, to the magical art-cabin comfort of Pappyland, this is a warm, funny, memory-unlocking deep dive into three shows that felt like hidden rooms in childhood.

We explore how these shows were made, what made them so weirdly unforgettable, the creators and performers behind them, behind-the-scenes details, surprising connections to the larger Jim Henson universe, and the little facts that make these old shows even more fascinating in hindsight.

If you love forgotten 90s kids shows, obscure PBS nostalgia, classic Jim Henson productions, lost children’s TV, and those “wait… I remember this” moments, this episode is for you.

Welcome to Nostalgia Fever Dream — fun, witty, entertaining deep dives into 90s and 2000s TV shows, video games, and culture that still live in the back of your brain.

In this video:

Jim Henson’s Mother Goose Stories
The Secret Life of Toys
Pappyland
forgotten 90s kids shows
obscure PBS shows
Jim Henson nostalgia
90s children’s television
lost kids shows
retro TV nostalgia
childhood fever dream shows

TMC
07-06-2026, 07:17 PM
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I called Pappyland a flop… and a lot of you told me I was wrong.

So in this episode of Dial-Up Days, I’m going back to one of the strangest, gentlest, and most deeply remembered corners of 1990s kids’ television to ask a simple question: was Pappyland actually a failure, or did I completely misunderstand what made the show special?

Premiering in the early 1990s, Pappyland was a children’s art show hosted by Pappy Drew-It, played by Michael Cariglio. With puppets, songs, life lessons, colorful low-budget sets, and step-by-step drawing segments, the show encouraged kids to do something most television never asked of them: pick up a crayon and make something.

And for the people who grew up with it, that mattered.

In this video, we look back at the history of Pappyland, its PBS roots, its later run on The Learning Channel’s Ready Set Learn! block, the strange handmade world of Pappy Drew-It, the Hall of Frames, the show’s financial and legal troubles, and the loyal fans who still remember drawing along decades later.

Was Pappyland really a flop? Was it an overlooked cult classic? Or was it simply a small children’s show that succeeded in a way ratings and merchandise could never measure?

I want to hear from you in the comments: Did you watch Pappyland growing up? Did you draw along with Pappy? Did you ever mail artwork to the Hall of Frames? And be honest — was I wrong to call this show a flop?

Drop your memories below, and let me know what forgotten PBS, Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, or ’90s kids’ show Dial-Up Days should revisit next.

Thanks for watching Dial-Up Days — where we rewind the strange, forgotten, underrated, and unexpectedly important pieces of ’80s, ’90s, and early 2000s pop culture.