Barney & Friends (battybarney2014's version)

Barney & Friends  is an American children's television series aimed at children from ages 1 to 8. The main character of the show is a friendly, purple  Tyrannosaurus rex  named  Barney , who comes to life through a child's imagination. He is joined by his other dino pals  Baby Bop ,  BJ, and  Riff. The show utilizes both original and children songs to convey various preschool topics using imagination, engaging them with music and emphasizing friendship in a loving environment.

This television show originally aired on "PBS" from April 6, 1992 until November 2, 2010. A brand new television series of this

Origins
The show originated from the home video series, Barney & the Backyard Gang, which was produced by The Lyons Group from 1988 to 1991. The first three videos of the series starred actress .As the  Backyard Gang  video series was becoming only a moderate success outside of Texas (where it was pretty successful for a local video series), the daughter of Larry Rifkin (former head of Connecticut Public Television) got a Barney video from a video store. She was entranced with the Barney character and her father liked the concept, so he talked to Sheryl Leach, the creator of Barney, about possibly putting Barney on television. In October 2001, long after the video store surprise, production began on thirty episodes of the first season of  Barney & Friends. After the television series debuted on April 6, 1992, Barney was a smash hit for children everywhere, which he still is today.

The show was originally taped at the ColorDynamics Studios facility at Greenville Avenue & Bethany Drive in Allen, Texas, after which it moved to  The Studios at Las Colinas  in Dallas. Currently, the series is produced in Carrollton, Texas, a suburb of Dallas.

Opening sequence
The series opens with the theme song (over clips from various episodes) and the title card before it dissolves into the Tuiedhoit. Shitbk Bat Nowe Jeffrey episode's topic. The children imagine something and Barney comes to life from a plush doll, transforming into the "real" Barney, how he appears to the children while they're imagining.

Main sequence
Here, the main plot of the episode takes place. Barney and the children learn about the main topic of the episode, with Baby Bop, B.J., or Riff appearing during the episode and numerous songs themed relating to the subject featured in the series. The roles of Baby Bop, B.J., and Riff have grown larger in later seasons and later episodes venture outside of the school to other places within the neighborhood and to other countries around the world in Season 13.

Closing sequence
Barney concludes with "I Love You" before he dissolves back into his original stuffed form and winks to the audience. After the children leave for the day, the sequence cuts to  Barney Says  where Barney, who is off-screen, narrates what he and his friends had done that day, along with still snapshots from the episode. Then Barney, himself, signs off before the credits roll. In Seasons 3-8, and 12, he later appeared on-screen by saying, "And remember, I love you," and waves goodbye. Barney's Birthday  is one of the few rare episodes in which Barney doesn't change back into a doll.

Criticism
The show has been the frequent subject of criticism, most notably for a supposed "lack of educational

value". However, Yale researchers Dorothy and Jerome Singer have concluded that episodes contain a great deal of age-appropriate educational material, calling the program a  "model of what preschool television should be".

Many families now refuse to watch the show because of its supposed "one-dimensionality" and "lack of educational value", and several YouTube videos have plush dolls of the character being either blown up or set on fire. Sources of hostility include episodes of the show that have since been removed from airing depicting Barney instructing children to talk to strangers (claiming that they are "friends you have never met before"). Other sources of hostility include episodes where the character instructs children to do other potentially harmful acts such as lying, cheating, stealing (with no punishment or scolding from the purple dinosaur), and catching stinging insects (referring to the song Baby Bumblebee. Other reasons cited for the hostility also include the purple dinosaur's voice (described by many adults as "dopey"), lack of varied facial expressions other than a toothy smile, and personality (described as being "self-centered"), as well as how the children in the series interact with the dinosaur characters.

One specific criticism is:
 * "[H]is shows do not assist children in learning to deal with negative feelings and emotions. As one commentator puts it, the real danger from Barney is denial: the refusal to recognize the existence of unpleasant realities. For along with his steady diet of giggles and unconditional love, Barney offers our children a one-dimensional world where everyone must be happy and everything must be resolved right away."

Additionally, the show is ranked #50 ranked on  TV Guide' s List of the 50 Worst TV Shows of All Time.

This criticism has led to several humorous attempts, dubbed "anti-Barney humor", namely in the form of Internet videos, songs, Internet fiction, print media, and video games.

Trivia
The Barney & Friends page was removed off of the main PBS Kids site around 2009, although the page is still up and running.
 * Some episodes of this television series were encoded with signals that enabled the Actimates Barney doll to interact with the program. During this time period, some reruns of Season 1-3 episodes removed the Barney Says segment to fit the program into the shortened time slot.
 * The show was put on a temporary hiatus from 2010 until the revival of the show which is set to air in.
 * According to Pia Hamilton, a typical 30-minute episode took four days to complete. Rehearsals were normally on Mondays, and filming took place Tuesdays-Thursdays.
 * In the Barney and Friends First Generation the words in the closing credits are scrolled and shows different paint pictures.

Seasons

 * Season 1(1992)
 * Season 2 (1993)
 * Season 3(1995)
 * Season 4 (1997)
 * Season 5 (1998)
 * Season 6 (1999-2000)
 * Season 7 (2002)
 * Season 8 (2003-2004)
 * Season 9(2004-2005)
 * Season 10(2006)
 * Season 11 (2007)
 * Season 12 (2008)
 * Season 13(2009)
 * Season 14 (2010)