Al Roker’s ‘Weather Hunters’ on PBS Kids makes his dream a reality
Growing up, Al Roker loved animation. His Saturday mornings were devoted to Bugs Bunny and Road Runner, and he would spend hours studying Preston Blairβs book on how to draw cartoons. He dreamed of becoming an animator for Walt Disney. But when he grew up and became the βTodayβ weatherman instead, he had the idea to combine his love of weather with his love of animation into a childrenβs TV series.
βWeather Hunters,β premiering Monday on PBS Kids, follows 8-year-old Lily Hunter (Tandi Fomukong) as she, her younger brother, Benny (Lorenzo Ross) and her older sister, Corky (Kapri Ladd), investigate the weather with the help of their parents, Dot (Holly Robinson Peete) and Al (Roker). The children in the series are based on Rokerβs own three children: Courtney, Leila and Nick. And in a case of art fondly imitating life, Rokerβs Al Hunter is a local weatherman with a penchant for dad jokes.
βThis really is one of those instances where everything that you love in your life comes together,β Roker says. βThe show reflects what my childhood was. My parents were very supportive of their children and what their dreams were.β
Roker has been developing the show since his now-adult children were the ages the Hunter kids are in the series. βGood things come to those who wait,β he says with a laugh.
βThis is a real passion project for him,β says Sara DeWitt, senior vice president and general manager of PBS Kids. β©βWe love to have a creator who is so excited about getting kids interested in the world.β
For PBS Kids, a series rooted in weather exploration was a natural extension to its current slate of programming. βWeather plays such a big part of kidsβ lives,β DeWitt says. βWhat should I wear today? What if it rains and I canβt do the thing I was planning to do? Where does that thunder come from? It just immediately opened up so many ideas and possibilities for us about ways we could really connect with families and get them more excited about the scientific topic.β
βWeather Huntersβ centers on Lily Hunter and her family, which includes her father, Al, who, like Roker, is a weatherman.
(Weather Hunters Inc.)
Over the course of the first 10 episodes, all of which will premiere digitally on PBS Kids at launch, Lily and her family will investigate things like fog, clouds, leaves changing colors, thunderstorms, snow and the moving rocks of the desert. Sara Sweetman, an associate professor at University of Rhode Island, is an educational advisor for the series. βWeather is such fantastic content because it is very relevant to the kidsβ lives,β she says. βThey understand why itβs important and how it impacts them.β
But weather science, like all science, can get complex pretty quickly. βI was really adamant that thereβd be one takeaway message [in each episode],β Sweetman says. βWhat we really want is [for] kids to watch the show and then run into the kitchen to find their dad or their mom and say, βGuess what?β and be able to state that one idea really clearly.β
Sweetman was involved in each 22-minute episode from the very first pitch. βThe ideal situation for educational media is that we hit the learning moment at the same moment as the emotional arc of the story,β she says. βWe know from research when we can do that, that kids take that meaning away and hold on to it.β
Peete, the voice of Dot, has been friends with Roker for years. She starred in Hallmarkβs βMorning Show Mysteries,β which Roker produced and was based on Rokerβs novels. For Peete, whose father, Matthew Robinson Jr., was the original Gordon on βSesame Street,β starring in the series is a βfull-circle moment.β βPBS just meant so much to me,β she says. βItβs one thing for your dad to be on TV. Itβs nothing for your dad to be on like the best TV childrenβs TV show ever. I wish my dad could see that I was actually on PBS doing this type of show with Al. He would be very, very proud that I would continue this legacy of childrenβs entertainment and education.β
Executive producer and showrunner Dete Meserve says animation allows the series, which is aimed at children ages 5 to 8, to have flights of fancy like the flying mobile weather station known as the Vansformer that the family explores in combined with βreality-based scientific explanations for whatβs happening.β The episode on clouds explains how even though Benny can no longer see the sun behind the clouds, the sun is still there.
All kids are scientists, says Meserve, and itβs particularly nice that the character at the center of this series is a young girl interested in science. βThereβs research that shows that if she can see it, she can be it,β Meserve says. βAnd Lily is surrounded by her siblings who have an equal interest, but the way they interact with it is different. Corky wants to film and document it. And then you have Benny, whoβs more the artistic part of it. He wants to draw.β
The show also seeks to make some weather phenomena like hurricanes or thunderstorms less scary by helping the young audience understand the science behind what is happening. βWeβre explaining what it is and how it works,β Roker says. βKids can feel some sense of empowerment. In the show we talk about, how do we, as a family, prepare? How do we protect ourselves? How do we keep ourselves safe?β
Throughout the series Lily will form hypotheses and test them to see if the facts fit what she originally thought. βThose are all things that I think the show excels at β helping create those skills for critical thinking that kids can take forward as they get older,β Roker says.
He also hopes children walk away with a sense of the true beauty of weather. βThereβs really this magic that happens around us,β he says. βAnd itβs based in science.β