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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DragonflyTV | 1/1 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DragonflyTV | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T07:45:20.797676+00:00 | kb-cron |
DragonflyTV (subtitled GPS: Going Places in Science for seasons 5–6, and Nano for season 7) is an American science education television series produced by Twin Cities Public Television. The show aired on PBS Kids from January 19, 2002, to December 20, 2008. It was aimed at ages 9–12. Seasons 1–4 were co-hosted by Michael Brandon Battle and Mariko Nakasone. Seasons 5–7 were hosted by Eric Artell and were produced in partnership with science museums. DragonflyTV was created in collaboration with Project Dragonfly at Miami University, which founded Dragonfly magazine, the first national magazine to feature children's investigations, experiments, and discoveries. DragonflyTV pioneered a "real kids, real science" approach to children's science television and led to the development of the SciGirls television series. DragonflyTV and SciGirls were funded in part by the National Science Foundation to provide a national forum for children's scientific investigations. Reruns of DragonflyTV aired on select PBS stations until 2019, and later in off-network syndication to allow commercial stations to meet federal E/I mandates.
== Episodes ==
=== Season 1 (2002) ===
=== Season 2 (2003) === Teams of DFTV's kid scientists demonstrate different approaches to investigations – experimental, engineering, and observational.
=== Season 3 (2004) ===
=== Season 4 (2005) ===
=== Season 5 (2006) ===
=== Season 6 (2007) ===
=== Season 7 (2008) ===
== Telco-syndicated series == In 2009, after DragonflyTV ended, the series was sold to off-network syndication and the rights were handed over to Telco Broadcasting. 62 of the 72 episodes were re-packaged, while 10 episodes have their own original versions intact. Edits included replacing licensed music with generic music, resulting in a new theme song (which replaced the original hip-hop theme with a new generic tune with kids chanting the show's name).
== References ==
== External links == Project Dragonfly DragonflyTV at pbskidsgo.org (archived from the original) DragonflyTV.com DragonflyTV at IMDb Twin Cities Public Television