in Television | June 8th, 2026 Leave a Comment

A great many, and per­haps the major­i­ty of Amer­i­cans now between their late twen­ties and ear­ly six­ties, have spent time in Mis­ter Rogers’ neigh­bor­hood. My own peri­od of reg­u­lar vis­i­ta­tion would have been in the nine­teen-eight­ies, a decade when Fred Rogers intro­duced his preschool-age view­ers to guest stars from Lou Fer­rig­no, in and out of Incred­i­ble Hulk make­up, to a ten-year-old boy with spina bifi­da. He also took on geopo­lit­i­cal issues, up to and includ­ing mutu­al­ly assured nuclear destruc­tion, and social ones, as on the mem­o­rable “divorce week” of 1981. Such top­i­cal broad­casts were mixed in with re-runs pro­duced as far back as 1969, the year Mis­ter Rogers got the coun­try’s atten­tion by invit­ing Offi­cer Clem­mons to share his wad­ing pool.

What those of us then tun­ing in did­n’t see was any­thing from the first, black-and-white sea­son of Mis­ter Rogers’ Neigh­bor­hood, which com­prised an aston­ish­ing 130 episodes that aired in 1968 alone. You can watch the series pre­miere at the top of the post, just recent­ly uploaded onto the show’s new offi­cial chan­nel.

It may come as a shock to see a 39-year-old Mis­ter Rogers, whom most of us remem­ber as the embod­i­ment of avun­cu­lar­i­ty or even grand­fa­ther­li­ness. But what’s even more strik­ing, if unsur­pris­ing, is that his onscreen per­sona, with its dis­in­cli­na­tion to talk down to chil­dren, nev­er real­ly changed. That sure­ly owes to its appar­ent iden­ti­ty with his off­screen per­sona: as he liked to put it, “kids can spot a pho­ny a mile away.”