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AIBU?

To think that Horrid Henry is..

56 replies

bridgeandbow · 08/05/2011 08:42

just well - horrid, as well as poorly parented, undisciplined, unaware of consequences and, quite frankly, a total brat. All made worse by the fact that his more sensitive brother is portrayed as a bit of a wimp.

My DS 5 got a book for his birthday, we have read one story and both agree that it is rubbish. Why should my son want read about this brat?

OP posts:
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festi · 07/10/2011 13:13

the film is british and its great. far less hardcore than the cartoon Grin but seriously the fim sees henry as the herom pretty much and he joins forces with margaret. I hate the cartoon but did actualy think the film was well done. I have not read the books but guessing the film is a better portrayal of the books.

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FloweryRuna · 07/10/2011 12:58

Sorry for bringing up an old thread. I loked around online for something similar and this came up.

I too don't like the parents of Horrid Henry. I used to briefly look at the TV cartoon and assumed he was a naughty boy. Now I've been watching a few episodes with my daughter and I'm seeing it differently. Horrid Henry is, what I can describe as cheeky but he also seems bullied (yep). He's picked on by some of the kids at school. He's not liked by his neighbour, Margarate. His parents deliberatly favour Peter and give Henry a hard time. One episode I saw made me feel so sorry for Henry because everyone, including his mum, was laughing at him. Another episode had his mum switch off his favourite TV show and put on Peter's TV show instead just to be nasty. She then told him off for being upset about it. So I really despise the parents on that cartoon.

Btw I haven't seen the Horrid Henry film. Is that American?

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GooseyLoosey · 16/05/2011 14:57

The one I hate most is Angelina Ballerina. She is so self obsessed it's difficult to comprehend and she is almost always rewarded for it too. The morality in those tales can be hard to find.

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BibiD · 16/05/2011 14:45

Think the point about Horrid Henry's parents is so valid ... Henry is parented badly and I've used this as a topic for discussion with my sons. Another interesting thing about Horrid Henry is that he always suffers the consequences for his behavior - in a way i think he shows kids what would happen if they did ... eat all the sweets, not get out of bed ... or any of the other 'horrid' things Henry does! We love it in our house - if you are looking for a way into Key Stage 1 and 2 citizenship issues, Horrid Henry is a great starting point!!!

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MollieO · 09/05/2011 19:15

I don't think Captain Underpants does encourage good spelling. What it does do is encourage a love of reading. Ds's reading improved hugely when he realised that if he tried a bit harder he could learn to read books like the Captain Underpants series that are very funny indeed.

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strandedbear · 09/05/2011 16:53

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

HeadfirstForHalos · 09/05/2011 16:37

Yes, the Little Princess is a brat. Peppa Pig is a whiny little shit tooGrin

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CalamityKate · 09/05/2011 14:29

Horrible child and a terrible influence!

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EllenJaneisnotmyname · 09/05/2011 13:46

Ha ha, Captain Underpants and spelling! Not a good role model, mind you , neither is Winnie the Pooh! Luckily my DSs read them well before they could spell, and had grown out of them before juniors when they started to knuckle down to writing properly. The books did give them a love of reading, however, which is just as important IM humble O.

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SpiderObsession · 09/05/2011 13:34

"I don't think it's supposed to be read as a manual on how to behave at home"

Unfortunately that's just how DS(5) saw it. He mimicked the behaviour and insults in school and at home. He has social development issues and is too literal in his thinking.

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FreudianSlipper · 09/05/2011 13:29

have not watched it yet

but i can not stand She's A Little Princess, she is a horribly spoilt little girl who has no consideration for others because she is allowed to behave in such a selfish way. what is cute about her or am i missing the point is it meant to show little girls how not to behave

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wonka · 09/05/2011 13:26

I hate Captain Underpants, please somebody tell me how reading this encourages good spelling?

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ilovemyhens · 09/05/2011 13:08

Horrid Henry is banned in our house.

ds1 did receive some HH books one Christmas, but after reading one to him for about 15 minutes I realised that it was horrendous and contained just the behaviour that I was trying to cope with in ds1 Sad The books were binned after that and they don't watch CITV anyway.

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wonderfultykes · 09/05/2011 12:59

I HATE horrid henry and thank goodness so does DS. It reminds us of a boy who pushed DS down the stairs aged 3 - he loved those books, so there you go ! Wink

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itsabiggywhatdoidonow · 09/05/2011 11:05

oh and dd also gets reminded hh is not real!

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itsabiggywhatdoidonow · 09/05/2011 11:03

I hate horrid henry and knows it, she loves it, some times I do need to need to enforce hh bans in my house.

Once I put dd aged 5 on the naughty step and in her screaming hissy fit she proclamed, I hate you mummy, and Im going to marry horrid henry and leave this house and theres nothing you can do about it!

I had to go into another room and piss my self laughing. This followed by another ban along with a chat about some issues thrown up by hhs behaviour his poor parenting. I thing sometimes like anything we do need regulate what our children are exposed to and with hind sight 4/5 was not an appropriate age for dd to be viewing or reading hh I think 6/7+ is far more appropriate, so I have taken books away and avoid it on tv.

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TheMitfordsMaid · 09/05/2011 10:52

My son loves Horrid Henry. I think it is actually quite refreshing to read a book that doesn't have a moral message flung overtly in your face. My son isn't stupid enough to copy Henry's behaviour. After all, he doesn't expect to see a talking pig after watching Peppa.

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aldiwhore · 09/05/2011 10:41

I am not into burning books or banning them... but I have been known to hide ones I don't like.

My eldest knows not to behave like Horrid Henry (Dennis the Menace doesn't both me at all for some reason) and my youngest soon learns that there's a difference between comedy entertainment and actual real life acceptable behaviour.. that's something we all learn, Horrid Bloody Henry or not.

The stage show??? Oh ye Gods!

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munstersmum · 09/05/2011 10:37

Loathe Horrid Henry. DS has a couple but I shan't be buying any more. Even worse was the stage show (went with friends & their kids before DS had read any).

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BelovedCunt · 09/05/2011 10:34

i think banning a book like hh is po faced in teh extreme.

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tattycoram · 09/05/2011 10:33

Don't know about teh books but I have just banned the programme for my four year old. His behaviour was getting even worse than normal. I think it's probably fine for older kids but DS1 just copied him

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Bearcrumble · 09/05/2011 10:32

I used to deal with the complaints for the Horid Henry TV show.

I vividly remember one angry parent ringing up because one of the characters had a Liverpudlian accent and had stolen something. He thought this was terrible typecasting and wanted to assure me that scousers were not all thieves.

I restrained myself from saying 'yes but you've proved the sterotype about them being whiners'.

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HeadfirstForHalos · 09/05/2011 10:26

Yes, I'm surprised at parents banning books too! Mine love the Horrid Henry's, and they certainly don't behave the way HH does! I think they like to be "shocked" at the things he does, as they are the things they would never do!

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EllenJaneisnotmyname · 08/05/2011 20:29

My DS found Horrid Henry books a bit boring. As much as I'm an anti-Americanism fascist, we all lurved Captain Underpants. (Not so much when DS put 'squishies' under the toilet seats at the local ball pit place!)

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wook · 08/05/2011 20:20

I'm surprised about parents banning reading material from their children- yes there may well be better writing out there, and/or better behaved protagonists but why can't the child make decisions about what they want to read?
Genuinely mystified as to why anybody would want to do this to their dc. Very draconian move, and surely only likely to create intrigue in a 'Frankie says Relax' kind of a way.
When ds read these books with me (before he grew out of them, which happened quite soon) we would just have a little chat about what was going on - eg why is Henry doing this?, why would Henry's mum do that? That's not very kind! etc - same as with any book, you discuss it!
Our dcs will meet people who have nits, call each other names, act out at school, play tricks, tease, namecall etc- and they will do those things themselves, whatever they read.
Puts me in mind of friends who were not allowed to watch Grange Hill- flippin 'eck!

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