

But Dora and the Lost City of Gold tries something different it tries to be funny. Just as the people who've made movies off of Sesame Street and Thomas the Tank Engine. When a movie was announced, I kept wondering how that would be done as movies based off a little kid aimed material rarely sells. In the age where reboots and remakes are all the rage, it makes sense Hollywood would want to tap into the nostalgia of Dora before it was too late. I merely saw it as harmless while Nickelodeon saw it as money. But unlike Blues Clues that had very mundane and general mysteries, Dora the Explorer at least tried to add a little more education with zoology and a main character that was Latina. From the few episodes I saw, it did it's job well buy keeping kids interacting with the show. I was already too old for it, but it was a monster hit for the under seven demographic it was aiming for. I was in middle school when Dora the Explorer made it's debut on Nickelodeon. "Can you find the map behind either of the three bushes?" is one of several things little Dora would ask her viewers on her show Dora the Explorer.
