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Small Screen: Let’s Go Luna! takes kids on world tour with PBS

LOS ANGELES — Carmen, Leo and Andy are globe-trotters to envy, jumping from Paris to Nairobi to New Orleans and beyond in the company of a tour guide who knows her way around: Luna the moon.
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The PBS animated series LetÕs Go Luna! debuts this morning at 9 on KCTS. ItÕs also on PBS Kids video streaming platforms.

LOS ANGELES — Carmen, Leo and Andy are globe-trotters to envy, jumping from Paris to Nairobi to New Orleans and beyond in the company of a tour guide who knows her way around: Luna the moon.

PBS’s animated series Let’s Go Luna! is a road trip aimed at giving viewers age four to seven a glimpse of the world’s people and cultures beyond their own familiar corner.

The series, which debuts at 9 this morning on KCTS, will visit all seven continents and 19 cities. Antarctica is the stop for a special Christmas episode airing Dec. 10.

PBS joined with Emmy Award-winner artist and writer Joe Murray (Rocko’s Modern Life, Camp Lazlo) to fill a social-studies need for its young audience, and the result is lively, fun and — don’t tell the kids — educational, since it’s public TV.

Carmen, a butterfly from Mexico, Australian wombat Leo and Andy, a frog from the United States, are buddies travelling with Circo Fabuloso, a performance troupe run by their parents. The group’s fourth wheel is Luna, whose nightshift duties makes her available for daytime adventures. As created by Murray and voiced by Judy Greer, Luna is a joyful — even madcap — companion.

In the first episode, her exuberant dancing unleashes minor chaos in Mexico City as she joins the children’s emergency search for a substitute band to entertain the president. There are mariachis to meet, a tour of the city and a dash of hiccup-causing salsa flavouring the story, a taste of what’s to come as the series hopscotches around the world with clever, engaging animation.

Skeptics contended that young viewers would be at sea over the show’s concept, said Linda Simensky, vice-president of children’s programming for PBS.

“We’ve been told a number of times that kids wouldn’t really understand global awareness,” with a perspective limited to their town and perhaps where relatives live, she said, adding, “We took that as a challenge.”

While history, geography, anthropology and more are folded into the series, the result is what Simensky calls a “very simple” concept: People do a lot of the same things all over the world, just in different ways, or they do different things to get to the same point.

That approach works well for the age group, said Simensky, who knows her audience. She’s been at PBS since 2003, developing series including Wild Kratts and Odd Squad, and previously worked at the Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon.

Episodes will be available across PBS Kids streaming platforms, including the PBS Kids video app. The series was inspired by Murray’s own family travels. “My wife is from Belgium and my kids have spent a lot of time in Europe. We could see the advantage of having kids be more exposed culturally to other places,” he said. “I thought America was especially kind of sequestered.”