A Balanced Review of the Magic School Bus Reboot

The good, the bad, and the genuinely surprising about the Magic School Bus Rides Again.

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Originally posted by popculturebrain

Here we go.

First off, in the interest of full disclosure, I am a huge fan of the original. Like genuinely huge. I have all the episodes, can quote most of them, and openly promote theories that Ms. Frizzle is a Time Lord (because honestly, it's obvious).

Second off, I have a huge gay crush on the fabulous Kate McKinnon.

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Originally posted by wooden-swings-and-diet-coke

But who doesn't?

So expect these to weigh into my analysis.

Let's start off with the good.

The Good


Fiona

From the moment I heard Kate was onboard, I knew I was going to love this character. And she did not disappoint. Fiona is exactly what she needs to be. She is Ms. Frizzle without being…well, Lily Tomlin. She still has that zest for adventure and thrills at new discoveries.

And while there is a multitude of similarities between her and Valerie (old sayings, clever wordplay, impeccably questionable fashion sense, a flair for danger) she's decidedly different. She's more excitable than her sister and treats her students more like peers than children she is supervising. And while she's never quite as all-knowing as her big sister seemed to be, she knows when to talk and when to let her students suss something out on their own.

And while her past is a bit of a mystery, just like her older sister, she seems just as accomplished and well-rounded. And just as eccentric.

I mean, she literally enters the classroom through a glass ceiling on a rope attached to nothing.

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Originally posted by tiffany-erika

She is Kate McKinnon, who is genuinely thrilled to be here and loving every minute of it.

Sometimes she does get to be a bit much, usually when she's too excited about a clever pun or a new discovery. But she's not Valerie Frizzle. She's Fiona Frizzle. And Kate does a good job of keeping just enough of the original enigma while bringing a new character who is more approachable, vulnerable, and emotional than Valerie was. Honestly, the only emotions I remember Ms. Frizzle overtly displaying on PBS were excitement and happiness.

In PBS, the kids relied on Ms. Frizzle a lot and she seemed to improvise a lot of the destinations and lessons for the day. Here, Fiona seems to already know what they need for a given day or be flexible enough to figure out a solution as they go. And unlike Valerie, who always kept a strong cloud of mystery about her and what she knew and didn't know, Fiona makes it very clear just what she is aware of and not aware of. During the final episode, when the bus is unable to take the pressure of the ocean and things look dire, she is clearly panicking because her kids are now in danger. But she keeps resolutely chipper, trying to reassure and excite them even as her voice breaks.

And this makes sense. The kids are older in this version. At some point, there's no reason for her to hide her knowledge and planning from them or the true scope of the danger they're in. It isn't going to teach them anything new, just reinforce how much more she knows. They aren't going to freak out like they used to, instead, they will search for a solution because they've been in danger before and engineered their way out. She's no longer their guide (like Valerie was), now she's their colleague.

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There is one thing I find a little off about her and that is her tendency to make sassy comments or judgments that are funny in the moment but really distinguish her from what one typically expects from a teacher. In the very first episode, she makes a comment about how dirty the boots they are examining for invasive species are and gets very high-and-mighty about it. I wouldn't mind so much (the boots were pretty nasty) but she does this with the kids occasionally as well (she makes it obvious that she knows Arnold stole her plant in the first episode but still puts him through a lot of guilt-tripping and even some legit trauma before he finally fesses up). And while it's good for a laugh, it seems a little harsh for an elementary school teacher. The kids dont seem to mind though so I'll let it go.

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The Class

The same class is back, which I found surprising. But smart. It would be too much work to establish an entirely new class and then introducing a new Ms. Frizzle would feel off. It would just be a remake, not a reboot.

We have 7 of the original kids here: Arnold, Ralphie, Carlos, Tim, Wanda, Dorothy Ann, and Keesha. In this reboot, Phoebe has been replaced with Jyoti, an Indian girl who is very into engineering and technology. I was originally very upset when Phoebe was replaced (she was the one I related to most in the original series) but Jyoti has earned a special place in my heart. She has her own section below.

In this version, the class is in 5th grade, which is supposed to be one year after the events of the PBS cartoon. I'll have more thoughts on this later but for know, just know that all the kids are now 10 instead of 9 and it actually sort of works.

The kids are all really charming. Especially Ralphie (who may have eclipsed Carlos for the most laughs). Even Arnold, who I found incredibly annoying in the PBS version, was exceedingly likable here. And this was the series where he actively disrupts his new teacher's first lesson! In the first episode, there is a great effort to make Arnold both reprehensible but also sympathetic as he resists the change Fiona brings to his life.

While their personalities seem less distinguishable at times, they still retain their characterizations. Ralphie is the lovable jock, DA the nerd (although she has swapped out her beloved pink bookbag for a Frizz-tab), Tim is the artist, Carlos the jokester, etc. Even though they retain these personalities from PBS, all of them have changed slightly, the same way you'd expect a child to change over the course of one year. Some of their traits have been updated as well for the new era this class is getting educated in (for example, DA's tablet and their outfit changes).

The only one I have a problem with is Wanda.

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We'll get to her in the bad.

The kids are still the focus of the show: having conflicts, solving problems, making mistakes, and getting excited about science. Fiona remains as simply their guardian and enabler of their adventures. And while Kate's performance is attention-grabbing, she doesn't steal the spotlight from the kids. Their VAs are all pretty good and seem to have taken their own stylistic choices when bringing back these beloved characters. They keep some core similarities but give unique performances.

Jyoti Kaur

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I was so excited to learn another POC had joined the kids. I was even more excited to learn that she was a southern Indian POC [for context: I myself am not of Indian heritage but I spent a semester in southern India and I admire the culture very much and made some good friends there]. She seems to have taken on both the mantle of wide-eyed newcomer (that Phoebe used to carry) and fearless adventurer in the class (that used to be Wanda's thing…). And she fills the important role of being the gear-head for the class in this new era of technology.

She even gets one of my favorite moments in the reboot: when she's alone with Ms. Frizzle discussing an engineering competition and we learn that the Frizzle sisters built the bus.

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It's such a powerful moment for me because Jyoti is the new kid and Fiona is the new teacher and they use this moment to bond and expand the canon of the series.

Watching her watch the bus in action is genuinely endearing. She always seems like she's both in awe of the magic and trying to figure out how everything works. There's a moment in the first episode where she watches Ms. Frizzle turn Carlos and Wanda into animals and gets very disappointed when she doesn't get a turn.

This may make it seem like I have no problems with Jyoti, but unfortunately, that's not entirely true. She has a section in "the bad" as well.

The Adventure

The series certainly didn't pull punches when throwing people into peril.

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In this reboot, we see the kids fall down two different rivers, raft a volcano, get attacked by T-cells, jump out of a plane onto a glacier, get attacked by a plant, get stalked by sharks (twice!), lose the bus (also twice!), get lost while they're the size of atoms, almost get torn apart by a barracuda, go flying around the Earth at maximum zoom, and get stuck at the bottom of the Mariana Trench.

One thing that is different is that they don't dwell on the suspense as much as PBS did. PBS milked its commercial breaks for all they were worth, drawing out intense situations to make them feel more perilous. The reboot…doesn't. When there is a threat, the resolution is less than 30 seconds away. There are a couple of awkward fade-outs in the middle of some episodes at tense moments but it's not consistent and there's not much point when there's no ad break in the middle of a Netflix video.

This could turn into a whole critique of streaming services ruining suspense in tv writing but I'll just make a note of it here.

The bus has also picked up some new abilities, which are utilized for these adventures. Shrinking down to the size of an atom genuinely thrilled me. I got so excited during "The Magnetic Mambo" when they just kept shrinking…and shrinking…and shrinking…!

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A lot of the "new abilities" seem to include the bus' infinite creative potential. It spits out new technology every other second, from personal vehicles to backpacks that are actually time machines, to a remote that is like a mini-bus that they only use once. I'll discuss the bus more in the bad but it's abilities fall solidly into the good category for me. It means new adventures and deeper dives into older adventures.

The Writing

I don't know if the series writers are affiliated with the PBS cartoon in any way but they definitely know their stuff. The problem I have with most reboots is that they end up feeling and sounding like fanfics instead of continuations. This reboot does not. It carries just enough of the tone of the original through clever wordplay, puns, and wacky adventures while having a distinctly different look and feel.

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They know where they came from but they're not trying to return to that place.

Some of the episodes are very creative and well composed. These include Ep 1: "Frizzle of the Future" (which ingeniously uses the concept of invasive species to integrate Fiona into the MSB canon), Ep 4: "The Battle for Rock Mountain" (which uses superhero culture to teach kids about the rock cycle), and Ep 10: "The Tales Glaciers Tell" (which finally teaches kids about climate change in a way that is straightforward and as "uncontroversial" as it can be).

There are some "less good" episodes but overall, none of them were terrible. They were all funny and clever and presented their lessons well.

Nods to the original

It's never overtly obvious or direct but the references to PBS are there. But in some ways, I think that's better than flat-out insisting that the two are back-to-back canon.

They don't slap you in the face with call-backs but if you are a fan of the original, you catch them.

Here's a few I noticed:

  • The perfect joke to explain Phoebe's absence
  • Mr. Rhule (the principle from the original) is referenced by name
  • Wanda's mom and little brother (William) have a cameo (with Wanda's original VA as Mrs. Li, I'm pretty sure)
  • Ralphie's face when the class travels inside Carlos' nose (because in PBS, the whole class ended up in his nose)
  • Arnold freaking out when they end up in Ralphie's stomach (because that episode from PBS was legitimately traumatizing for him)
  • The bus being attacked by white blood cells while in the bloodstream
  • Weatherman! ("sheika, sheika kaboom!" was sorely missed though…)
  • Keesha directing (with a megaphone of course)
  • Ralphie building a robot (again, for seemingly no valid reason and with a questionable amount of resources)
  • Arnold loving rocks and geology
  • Ms. Frizzle asks them if they've ever been eaten (there were several times in PBS but not in the reboot)
  • JANET! (dammit)
  • several VAs from the original make cameos

It's refreshing in a way, to know that these things were done with fans like me in mind.

The Bad


I may love a lot about this reboot but it is not without a few glaring problems in my mind.

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Here goes:

The BUS

I'm just going to say it: the original bus was better. It had more of a personality and felt more real than this cube.

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In my opinion, where this went wrong was that technology played too much of a role. Maybe this was unavoidable due to the major changes in technology in the past 20 years. But it doesn't even look like a bus anymore. It has a freakin' tablet screen right on the control panel…do buses have those now? What was magical about PBS's bus was that it looked like a bus but could change and mold itself into whatever was necessary with the push of a button. Now Fiona has to scroll through a screen of apps to find the "mode" she needs.

There is less magical about the bus this time; it more just seems like an incredible feat of engineering. There is even a joke about how the Frizzle sisters built the bus. Instead of turning kids into things, most of the time now, they just have their own personal vehicles to drive around the ocean or fly through space. That's not magical, it's just really well-funded.

Also, apparently now the bus can sustain damage? And then magically repair that damage? I guess the T-Rex did bite through the roof on PBS…

Also, the bus doesn't actually have to drive places anymore. Instead it just kind of…teleports. There's an episode where the kids go inside the nervous systems of two of their classmates and both times, they just kind of vanish and reappear where they need to be.

(Also, the kids are oddly comfortable with the idea of the bus entering their bodies? Like I get it, if they've been through an entire previous year of a Frizzle using their body for science, maybe they're okay with a bus shooting up their nose and their class spending half the day in their bloodstream. But a lot of the human biology episodes of the original were not consensual? Is this change really a bad thing? Is this tangent getting too long?)

On the plus side, the bus is solar-powered now.

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So :D

The Timeline?

They kept a lot from the original, so much so that I think the intention was to make it seem like only one summer had passed between the two series. It makes sense on paper: this way fans of the original aren't too put off and kids watching both series back to back for the first time won't be too confused by the switch.

But the problem with this is that it's too unbelievable.

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Technology really advanced this much in a few months? Wanda changed that much over the summer ( see below )? Ms. Frizzle got her PhD in two months? Well, actually if anybody could do that, it would be Valerie Frizzle…

So the intention is good and logical but all the details don't really work out. I've coped with it by considering this an "alternate universe", where the kids stayed together for another year (with some changes) after a year of similar adventures to PBS but with all the advanced tech present. So instead of being from the 90′s, this class was born in the late 2000′s.

If you're not insane (like me), it probably won't bother you. And it does make for a pretty funny opening scene.

Race Depictions

Not really sure if I should be bringing this up but I did want to address it. Whatever animation they used for the show does make certain characters appear…whiter…than they did on PBS.

But the whole color palette is different so I'm not sure if this was an intentional artistic choice or just unlucky circumstance. I really don't know enough about animation to comment. But white-washing of any kind falls into the bad category for me (even if unintentional).

Wanda

*sighs dramatically* And here we are at last…

Wanda was such a titan of a character in PBS. She probably had the most character development apart from Arnold throughout all 52 episodes.

So I really don't know what happened here.

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With most of the others, where they are at now makes sense given that it's supposed to be "one year later" in their lives. But Wanda seems like she had a total personality change in just a few short months. She's no longer adventurous and instead, she's…really compassionate? I mean, she wasn't outright mean in PBS but she was callous and occasionally unintentionally hurtful. Now she's suddenly a bleeding-heart animal activist? I mean, in PBS she was definitely changing towards being more considerate and open but she still kept that adventurous edge and wild streak. Now she has mellowed out considerably. So much so in fact that she resembles Phoebe more than she does Wanda.

Who looked at the original cartoon and logically thought that she was the character who needed to be changed the most? If they were that desperate to include a character who cared for animals that much, why not make it Carlos?

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They already have an episode where he adopts a pet rat. And on PBS, he was skeptical of Phoebe's concern for the animals she tried to save but never dismissive. He even comes to care for natural ecosystems like swamps in the PBS episode "Get's Swamped". With this characterization, it would give this show something new and interesting: a compassionate male character. One who is defined by his gentleness and concern. Isn't it good for boys to have a role model like that?

Also, no offense to Carlos but apart from being the jokester, he really doesn't have that much of a character. Someone like Arnold has several defining traits: worrier, rock expert, cynical. For Carlos, I have trouble coming up with anything other than funny. This change to a passionate animal activist would have added a whole new layer to him.

So that was a real missed opportunity in my eyes.

The only change in Wanda I genuinely liked was her seemingly much closer friendship with DA compared to PBS.

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I always liked how they became better friends in the final PBS episode ("Takes a Dive") and wanted to see that expanded. Seeing that the writers kept it, it feels like a small nod to that adventure and an indication of how well they wanted to keep the series continuity intact.

Jyoti

So here she is again. And while I do love Jyoti as a character, as a writer I have some problems with her. First and foremost, she's too good at what she does. The Mary Sue trope is strong with this one.

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This kid has a literal invisibility cloak. And creates an AI. And she's only supposed to be ten years old. While her high-tech gear certainly adds an element of intrigue to the show, I find I cant always suspend my disbelief when she does something too outlandish. Like make a functional 3-D printed model of a T-cell in under half an hour.

She doesn't really have character flaws either. Granted, she's only really the "main kid" in one episode ("Three-in-One") but the most development she has is when she snaps at Ralphie and feels bad about it. She also gets mad when DA loses her locket in "DA and the Deep Blue Sea" (so much so that everyone reacts with fear, even Ms. Frizzle) but she gets over it very quickly. The only "mistake" she makes is not specifying to her AI which pot of water she wants to be boiled (resulting in the water her class is exploring turning to steam). So really the only flaw is possibly that she's impatient?

She's not too ambitious or too proud or too inconsiderate, all of which could fit with her character that we've seen so far. Instead, she's just useful. Whenever she needs to be. My hope is that next season she has an episode where she genuinely grows and we see some character flaws.

Another thing about her that is confusing (but this may just be my lack of knowledge showing) is exactly what her Indian roots are. In the episode "The Magnetic Mambo" she insists upon dancing a "kathakali" which is a type of Hindu dance art unique to the Kerala region of India.

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But in a later episode, "Three-in-one" we meet a robot she has invented that she calls "Naniben" which (she explains) means "little sister" in Gujarati, a language spoken by only one community in Kerala (to my knowledge). So I either take this to mean that the writers got very specific with her place of origin, or that her parents come from two different states of India (one from Kerala and one from Gujarat?). But I'm sure no one else is giving it this much thought…

The Plugs for Future Episodes

While Lily Tomlin is always a blessing, I have to admit her segments weren't always handled as well as they could have been.

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This is obviously the reboot's way of doing the producer segments from PBS. It's a clever way to address scientific shortcomings or tell kids "dont try this at home!". This really shouldn't bug me. But it did. While it was nice to see Professor Frizzle having her own adventures and seeing a glimpse of what was coming, having her explicitly say things like: "stick around" or "wait and find out" felt like overkill.

And I know this is for kids but they're going to watch anyway! You don't have to have a hook for bingeing. Bingeing these episodes is worse because then the lessons don't stick as well! If the kids are excited by it, they are going to come back the next day or week and watch more. Don't encourage them to rush through their education.

Episodes I question

Not sure if these count as "bad" but there were some episodes that had me scratching my head. These fall under the "less good" episodes I mentioned before.

E5: The Magnetic Mambo - When I think atoms, I definitely think dancing! There seemed to be a bit of a leap here between the conflict and the lesson (being about magnetism and how atoms align in a magnetic field). Also, I had to watch the "lesson" part of this episode twice before I understood it. Not sure if that reflects more on my education quality than the writing but…

E9: Space Mission: Selfie - I'm not really sure what I'm supposed to have learned from this one. That satellites are a thing? That objects orbiting the Earth orbit at different heights? The lesson wasn't really clear. Maybe if I watch it again, I'll get a better idea…also, the Frizzle family has some kind of internet empire?

E11: Ralphie Strikes a Nerve - When your team sucks at volleyball, what's the logical thing to do? Certainly not spend an immoral amount of time and resources building a giant Pacific Rim - inspired robot! But somehow that's the logical conclusion here? Don't get me wrong, it works for the lesson (learning about the nervous system) but not so much for the plot?

The Surprising


The Animation

I know this is an unpopular opinion but..the animation really isn't that bad.

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Sure it's jarring at first but the more I watched it, the less it bothered me. The movements were still fluid, the characters were still expressive. And this is 2017. Hand-drawn animation is not as popular as it once was.

And this is honestly not that bad. There were even all the little details that were accounted for. Like how Fiona's and DA's hair float when they're in orbit. And when they descend into Carlos' bloodstream, they have to illuminate the scene. As you watch it, you get bothered by the style less. And the PBS cartoon had its animation errors that were laughably bad. My favorite was in "For Lunch" when Arnold is somehow inside the bus currently going down his esophagus. Watch it again and you'll see what I mean.

The New Theme Song

I had somehow forgotten that the fabulous Lin-Manuel Miranda had signed on to do the theme. And he did not disappoint. I rock out to this version just as hard as I did to Little Richard's version.

The Framing

In the PBS episodes, each episode usually only focused on 1 kid, the "main kid" who had a lesson to learn that episode. Occasionally, they had episodes focused on two kids but it was usually just Wanda and Arnold or whoever was fighting.

This time around, they really make an effort to include more kids in the lessons. A lot of episodes still have a "main kid" but they are less the center of attention. It makes the show feel less formulaic, which was refreshing to see.

The Original Ms. Frizzle Leaving

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As well as it worked for a send-off, Valerie Frizzle leaving doesn't make a lot of sense when you look at the two series together. During her tenure as the teacher on PBS, we saw Ms. Frizzle grow to love her kids and start to treat them more like colleagues than a class she was supervising. She genuinely loved her job and looked like she was going to be doing it forever.

So the fact that she switched gears to become a research professor is odd to me. Don't get me wrong, the more women with Ph.Ds on tv the better but she had always seemed so content to be just a teacher. So maybe she's just stepping down for Fiona's sake? Maybe I'm just reading into this far too much for a cartoon?

Still, it seemed a little on the nose to have the original Ms. Frizzle essentially "graduate" from this series now that she's too busy pursuing her own projects to be a voice actor on a kids show. But if they had to give a reason for her to leave that wasn't her dying, this was a great one.

Still don't get why Liz didn't go with her through…Goldie is fine but wouldn't it make more sense for the new teacher to have a new sidekick?

Keesha's moms!

Okay, this is unconfirmed but I'm pretty sure these two:

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Are intended to be Keesha's parents.

If so then :D

I'm always for more LGBTQ representation in cartoons and Keesha did seem to be the logical choice. Her parents were never introduced in the original, just her grandmother. So I'd love for these two to come back and actually have a line or two next season that confirms their relationship.

The Battle for Rock Mountain Episode

I have a whole post on this here. Just go read that for why I was genuinely surprised by this concept and its execution.

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The permission slips?

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I'm sorry but no. This is too much, even for a joke. How does Ms. Frizzle even go about writing these things with a straight face? Maybe it was more just a ploy to get one or two funny lines out of the cast. I think that was a common critique of the original as well; that Ms. Frizzle couldn't possibly be sending her kids home with permission slips that said things like: we're going inside an active volcano to study island formation.

Well, apparently she did…and still does…

Well played reboot…well played…

In Conclusion


If you're still undecided about the reboot, I hope this review helped put it in perspective a little. It has its ups and downs and, like any reboot, necessary changes and unnecessary changes.

Based on what I've consolidated here though, I think I would put this in the "good" reboot category. It's certainly no "Death Note" movie but there are some things that people hate on. But the showrunners clearly know that they've got 20 years worth of fans watching them and they make efforts to let those people know that they know the source material (see my list of references to PBS above). I enjoyed watching it. I am probably going to watch several episodes again, even a few years from now. I am genuinely interested in what concepts they decide to show next and if they are going to develop their characters as well as PBS did.

In my opinion, you cant really hate a show like this for being a reboot. Because it's meant only to do good for kids by teaching them about science and nature. I would show this to my kids or students alongside the original and not feel like it was jeopardizing their education at all. The original cartoon was instrumental in sparking my love of science and I can totally see this version inspiring some young student to delve deeper into topics they learn in school.