The Big Flop - ENCORE - Kid Nation: 'Survivor' for Children! with Kurt Braunohler, Megan Gailey & Chris Garcia
Episode Date: November 27, 2023What happens when 40 children are sent out into the New Mexico desert and left to fend for themselves, all in the name of reality TV? Injuries, emotional trauma... and lawsuits. Lots and lots... of lawsuits. Misha is joined by Chris Garcia, Kurt Braunohler & Megan Gailey (I Love My Kid, But…) to examine CBS's absolutely bonkers 2007 reality show, Kid Nation.Follow The Big Flop on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to The Big Flop early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to The Big Flop early and ad-free.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
Eight-year-old Jimmy Flynn is sitting behind a barn, weeping. I'm only eight and I'm in the third grade and I don't think I'm, I think I'm too young to be doing this.
He's surrounded by adults, but no one even tries to comfort him.
Instead, they just lift up their cameras and keep filming.
Because, you see, Jimmy is one of 40 kids who have been cast on a new 2007 reality TV show called Kid Nation on CBS.
They've been sent to live in an old Western movie set in New Mexico for 40 days with hardly any
supervision. They're responsible for cooking their own food and for building their own
functioning society. Eight-year-old Jimmy, he didn't last a week.
The show didn't last more than one season.
But in that one season, children slept on wooden floors with no pillows,
killed animals for food, and some even left the set in an ambulance.
All in the name of reality television.
name of reality television. She said the show producers pitched the show to her family as a kid's summer camp, when in reality, she says it was more like Lord of the Flies. I felt sort of
weird because I thought that maybe they would be adults. So this begs the question, is this
exploiting minors for the sake of entertaining the American public?
We are on a sinking ship.
From Wondery and At Will Media, this is The Big Flop, where we chronicle the greatest flubs, fails, and blunders of all time.
I'm your host, Misha Brown, social media superstar and forever child at heart at Don't Cross a Gay Man.
So howdy, folks, and welcome to Kid Nation. Hello, I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers?
OK, last one. It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right. It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making,
with a secret he feels would ruin him if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to your podcasts,
or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
us on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
Here to help me break down the reality TV flop that is Kid Nation are the hosts of the very funny Wondery podcast.
I love my kid, but comedians Megan Gailey.
Thank you.
Chris Garcia.
Thanks for having us, Risha.
And Kurt Braunohler.
Hello.
So, Kurt, could you talk a little bit about what your guys' podcast is all about?
It's called I Love My Kid, but...
And it's a parenting podcast with absolutely no advice.
There's no experts, no advice.
It's really just us commiserating with each other about how difficult being a parent is.
And so I think this is a way to just feel less alone.
Well, so you all have kids. And so I wanted to tell you the tale of the TV show,
Kid Nation. But to jump into the story, first, let me take you back to the early aughts,
a time when reality TV is taking off. And CBS, they're in pilot season, they're piloting,
and their show Survivor is a sensation.
And around this time, Hollywood executive producer Tom Foreman
is also riding high after winning a 2005 Emmy
for his work on the ABC reality show Extreme Makeover Home Edition,
the tears that we all shed.
Yes, move that Emmy.
So now CBS knows talent when they see it.
So they scoop up Foreman and sit him down to brainstorm some new ideas.
And even though it was just a few seasons into Survivor by now, Foreman's already feeling
like unscripted programming is in a bit of a rut.
Like contestants are already mimicking stuff they've seen before.
So he wants what he calls a fresh casting pool.
And that's when he has his aha moment.
Kids.
Oh, God.
So what are your initial reactions to, like, this innovation?
Is it genius kids in reality TV?
Or, like, what could go wrong?
My initial reaction is Extreme Home Makeover.
Every single one of those houses totally got messed up.
So he's actually an idiot and he should give his Emmy back.
And I don't know if you've ever worked with children.
They steal the spotlight.
They also need to like study and go to school.
So they have very limited hours.
You would be better off working with like feral animals
than working with children in show business.
The feral animals have less rights.
Yes.
I don't know.
I think it's kind of crazy to let kids be on a show.
As a parent, I'm like,
what parent would let their kid do this?
But then I remember like, I don't know,
childcare is expensive
and I spend like $8,000 on bananas a month.
I don't know.
It's fine.
I don't know.
Have fun.
Get out of my face for a while.
You know, I think there are some successes out there, like the baking competitions, things like that, where they have a skill.
Yeah, but like any sort of elimination show is really like difficult for me.
Even like Top Chef, they're grownups, but I'm like, oh, no, that Brazilian man.
like difficult for me. Even like Top Chef, they're grownups, but I'm like, oh no,
that Brazilian man. So then to see children be told like your cupcakes suck, get out of here.
That's so harsh and sad. And I know they do it in a nicer way, but I just think kids have like enough going on and they don't need to be like, well, I got to go to work now too.
and they don't need to be like,
well, I gotta go to work now too.
Well, so begins this journey to cast Kid Nation.
And the casting call describes the show like this.
Settling in Bonanza City, New Mexico,
once a thriving mining town, but now deserted,
these kids ages eight to 15 from all walks of life will build their own new world, pioneer style.
They will confront grownup issues while coping with the classic childhood emotions of homesickness,
peer pressure, and the urge to break every rule.
So, like, how would you feel reading that show description?
Sounds like Burning Man, which I've been to four times.
And I kind of like the idea.
I'm like, get it out of their system at eight years old.
Get all crazy in the desert, and then by the time you're 20,
you're ready to, you know, you learn a trade and get a real job.
It's just like, get it out of the way.
The desert.
The desert aspect of it is maybe the craziest.
It's the craziest.
Like, why can't they go to the Great Lakes?
Or, you know, go to, like, a campground.
Like, there's camps that house children. But to be like, no, we're sending them basically to Mars. And I got so homesick as a kid, I would like fake a stomach ache at sleepovers. I can't imagine just being in rural New Mexico.
Well, Foreman, he realizes he needs a special group of children.
So he reaches out to schools and these talented and gifted programs.
And he puts casting calls in these various cities around the country.
So each child had two minutes in front of a camera to say why they wanted to be on Kid Nation.
And there are some perks.
Aside from just being on TV, the kids would be given a $5,000 stipend for competing in the show. And at the end of each episode, one contestant would receive a golden star worth
$20,000. Okay. If you get one of these casting calls, aren't you just sending the worst kids
in the school to try and get them off your back? Like, I'm not
going to send my straight-A students. I'm going to be like, oh yeah, this kid, he's great. Go to
New Mexico. I'm sending the biggest F up losers that way. But then there's some real downsides
to being cast too. If their kids are cast, parents need to sign a 22-page waiver relieving CBS of practically all liability,
including in cases of, quote, serious bodily injury, illness, or death.
No!
So let's play a game.
So I'm going to read some lines that might have been included in this 22-page waiver,
and you all have to decide whether they are a real clause or one we just made up.
Okay.
First one.
There may be injuries arising from, quote,
rock avalanches, encounters with wild or domesticated animals, acts of God, end quote.
Acts of God.
I think, yes, real.
That's for sure.
Absolutely. Yeah. Acts of God is end quote. Acts of God, I think, yes, real. That's for sure. Absolutely.
Yeah.
Acts of God is a classic lawyer thing.
Acts of God is classic, I don't want to get sued.
Yeah, Acts of God, also in all perpetuity, in all media, here to ever create.
Yes, yes, yes.
I can imagine parents reading that wrong and being like, wow, God will save them if we need to.
In case anything goes wrong, God's got us.
God will save them if he needs to.
In case anything goes wrong, God's got them.
Second one.
Parents acknowledge that their children will be, quote,
armed with a variety of tools and weapons,
including but not limited to a leatherman,
hunting knife, crossbow, and machete, end quote.
What?
I mean, this is so crazy.
It must be real.
Yeah, God was real.
I don't know what a Leatherman is.
I thought that was a gay man who only wears
leather.
So like a multi-tool.
Yeah, real.
Nope, that one was fake.
We made that one.
Oh, good one.
It was very specific.
Yeah.
Good job to the producers.
All right, so third one.
Producers have the right
to, quote,
search the minor's person
and minor's belongings,
including, without
limitation, by x-ray or similar device. End quote. I'm going to say no.
I'm wrong.
I'm wrong every time.
That is insane.
But like we consent to that every time we go to the airport.
So I guess yes.
Yeah.
That one was in there.
I'd actually rather my toddler have a weapon than be strict searched every day.
Yeah.
Fifth one.
If the minor or parent violates the contract, they will, quote, be liable to CBS and shall pay to CBS as liquidated damages and not as a penalty the sum of $5 million, end quote.
$5 million in the aughts?
I don't know.
No.
I'm going to say no.
That one was real.
Like, these parents don't have $5 million.
That's why they're putting their children on TV.
The biggest problem with this is the absolute exploitation.
All of these families probably are like, I don't know, and just sign that without reading it.
They're just like, oh, it's TV.
I'm going to put my kid on TV.
It's just like, this is insanity.
How old are your kids?
Six and three.
Okay, so the six-year-old, would you allow them to be a kid nation?
Olive would rule.
Yeah, Olive would become president and like rule it.
No, I would not let her, but she would be like, I'm going.
And I'd be like, you're not.
She'd be like, I'm sorry, I figured out how to use your computer and I booked a ticket.
I fly away tomorrow.
Well, you know, this seems impossible, but they do it.
And after about a year, Foreman has his cast of, wait for it, 40 kids.
Wow.
And of the 40 children, the average age is 11.
Okay.
The oldest is 15 and the youngest is 8.
No, you cannot have an 8 and 15-year-old competing against each other.
So some of the kids felt like they were definitely typecast. There was 12-year-old Anjay,
the then-youngest person to ever compete in the National Spelling Bee,
later told the AV Club, quote,
I'm sure there was an element of,
oh my God, we found a brown nerd.
We can put him on TV and typecast him so hard.
I mean, I had a bowl cut and transition lenses.
Aww. I know.
And then there was also an eight-year-old
sensitive chubby kid
named Jimmy,
a wise-cracking 14-year-old
with light brown hair
named Sophia,
a 15-year-old
beanie-wearing bad boy
named Greg,
and the eight-year-old
child beauty pageant winner
named Taylor.
No.
We've involved
child beauty pageants already.
I'm surprised it's not all beauty pageant girls.
It should all be the beauty pageants.
Yes, because their parents are like, whatever. Do whatever you want. X-ray her. Give her an MRI. Who cares?
Well, just like that, CBS is ready to go, so they fly the kids from all around the country, and begins appropriately enough on April Fool's Day,
2007. Wow. So if you were on this show back in the day, what kid would you have been? How would
they have typecast you? Because I would have been the Broadway baby, a twinkle toes Misha, for sure.
I would be the little boy from Jerry Maguire who says like, the human head weighs eight and a half
pounds. Like that's who I would be.
Jonathan Lipnicki.
Yeah, I would be Jonathan Lipnicki.
I think I would have been like the girl from Willy Wonka
that's like, I want a golden ticket.
Like I think I would have been in like a sailor dress
and would have kept being like, whatever.
My dad said he'll give me a golden star.
What about you, Chris? vern from stand by me i would
have been like the chubby kid that just barfed a lot all the time how are you chubby if you're
puking all the time i don't know slow metabolism i don't know So that's the backstory to the show.
And before we talk about the, shall we say, critical reception,
I'm going to take you on a journey through the pilot episode.
Are we ready to see Foreman's vision become a reality?
Yes.
Yes. So imagine you're sitting onman's vision become a reality? Yes.
So imagine, you're sitting on your couch, you turn on the TV. The host, Jonathan Karsh,
speaks to the audience from Bonanza City. It's a dusty ghost town that's also an old Western movie set. Things like Independence Day and True Grit were filmed here. A perfect
setting for children, right? It also happens to be where Rust was filmed.
That's the film where Alec Baldwin accidentally shot cinematographer Helena Hutchins.
This place is cursed.
So we cut from Jonathan Karsh to a wide shot of a school bus driving through the desert toward Bonanza City.
And when they cut to the inside of the school bus, you see 40 kids sitting silently,
staring out the window.
It's already very bleak.
Sidebar, in your podcast,
you talked about like the trials and tribulations
of traveling with children.
So how do you think that your kids
would have done in the desert on a school bus
with 39 other kids?
Also like going into something that not only
do they not know what's going to happen,
but no one knows and no one can say like,
look, I've done this before.
It's going to be like this.
They're literally heading into the most terrifying place
of their entire life.
And their parents are like,
you better get a $20,000 gold star.
Yeah.
The only reference that my two and a half year old daughter
has to a bus
she's never been on a bus
Shelly knows the songs
The Wheels on the Bus
and The Magic School Bus
so this would be quite
an eye-opening experience
and not what she expected
because it had just been
dropped off
onto basically Mars.
And also the whole
like experience
of being
on a shoot
first off
but then on a reality
TV shoot
is like people are concerned
with the production first.
It's not like a camp
where there's like someone going like,
guys, we're going to have a great time.
It's literally like,
all right, I need to wire you.
Stand still.
Let me wire you.
You know, it's just like,
it's so much stress and terror.
This would be,
oh, I feel so bad for these kids.
I honestly can't get over the fact
that the three of us sitting here
have all sold pilots
and we didn't get to make ours,
but this show got to be made.
Well, notice that I said
the bus is driving toward Bonanza City,
not to Bonanza City,
because suddenly the bus stops
in the middle of nowhere
and Karsh greets the kids as pioneers.
He introduces them to their four leaders
who are just fellow kids
who will make up the town council.
For now, he adds mischievously.
And then he tells the kids
that they have to drag four wagons
with 40 days of supplies to Bonanza City,
which is several miles away.
What?
It sounds like Westworld a little bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All of them are struggling like crazy to pull this cart.
One kid falls down,
and I'm actually going to play some sound from this scene.
Oh, no.
What happened, man?
What happened?
What happened? What happened? What happened?
What do you think happened?
Oh, my God.
I think what happened is a child was being forced to do manual labor.
Well, don't worry.
He just had a leg cramp.
That's Chris.
That's Chris.
That was me.
That was me.
This is what they chose to open with.
Yeah. Soon, the kids start arguing with each other. That was me. That was me. No! This is what they chose to open with.
Yeah. Soon, the kids start arguing with each other.
One kid's optimistic take is that it can't get any worse.
But this is before they've even gotten to Bonanza City.
Cut to they finally make it.
They're exhausted. They're hungry.
So surely someone has food ready for them, right? Wrong.
Nope. Because it turns out the kids are also in charge of making dinner and spoiler alert,
they don't know anything about cooking. There was one scene where a kid is stabbing at a can with a screwdriver. They can't even figure out how to boil water to make pasta. So it is not
going well. And you better believe that throughout Kid Nation, there were cooking accidents like this.
What's that on your face?
I got splattered in the face with oil, but a little grease won't stop me, you know?
What?
Oh, no.
Oh, my God.
This is insane that this was put on TV.
So now, even though Karsh is the only adult that you see in this first episode, there are in fact over 200 adults there
including camera crew, producers,
psychologists, student counselors,
doctors. But
as Jimmy, the sensitive
kid says, the adults weren't
really expected to help much.
Here he is being interviewed on the popular
YouTube show, JonTron
as an adult. One of the interventions
they had, they had people just walk around making sure you're
hydrated.
They couldn't have people passing out.
Okay.
That'd be bad for ratings.
Yeah.
They had this one assistant who was always giving me Gatorade.
Just so we're all on the same page, hot oil in the face is good, passing out is bad.
Wow.
Outside of Gatorade, another thing that some kids drank during the show was bleach.
No!
What?
Well, they didn't do it on purpose, but there are reports that multiple children needed medical attention.
So it turns out there was bleach being stored in an unlabeled soda-flavoring bottle.
That's where we all keep it, right?
Yeah, yeah, of course.
However, someone claiming to be 14-year-old contestant Murphy wrote on Reddit about the incident saying, quote, they had these little
bottles of flavoring to add to the soda and the vanilla or lemon ones looked just like the
containers they used for bleach. It was a total accident and only DK actually drank the bleach.
He puked, an ambulance quickly showed up, and he was fine in a few hours, end quote.
Yeah, a lot of Americans drank bleach by choice in 2021. So I miss the simpler time when we were
discouraging. All right, but we're getting ahead of ourselves or putting the cart before the kids,
as the saying goes. By the end of night one, things are rough, and there's plucky instrumental
music playing, the kids are exhausted, hungry, freezing, and yes, a handful of them are already
crying. But hey, surely a good night's sleep will help, go. Well, it turns out they don't have any beds.
They're going to be sleeping on these mats that have basically the thickness of a sweatshirt on the floor.
Some of the kids bunch up their jackets to use as pillows since they don't have any,
which is a shame because they probably needed those jackets as, I don't know, jackets.
Because in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, where they are filming,
it can drop into the
low 30s on a cold day in the spring.
This is loony tunes.
This is infuriating.
This is my question at this exact moment. I mean, it's like, if I was a producer on the show,
certainly I would pull the plug at this point.
Or like get like five minutes of footage of kids being like,
brr, and then give everybody blankets.
Yes.
This is also the most disgusting American idea I've ever heard.
Let's fabricate struggle and pretend we're in the Sudan, but it's freezing at night.
That is maddening.
What?
Well, we're all in the entertainment business, so you know the saying, the show must go on.
So the next morning, the kids wake up bright and early and run out of food before everyone has breakfast.
Thankfully, the host, Jonathan Karsh, is there to intervene and feed them.
Yeah.
Right?
No, he's there to introduce the rules of some twisted game.
He explains to the group of only partially fed children that on top of fetching water and cooking food,
they'll also have other jobs,
like running stores. But how will these jobs be decided? Well, through competitions and
challenges, of course. And the outcomes of these challenges will determine the kids'
quote, rank in the society and the jobs that they're given.
Does someone made like the town wino?
It's like, you've got the lowest rank, Jimmy.
You're the town wino. You sleep in the gutter. I think that's the highest rank.
Yeah. So the council, which remember is made up of children, they try to hold an orderly meeting
to organize the kids, which obviously devolves into chaos because as it turns out, nobody knows
how to wrangle a room of 40 children, especially not other children. So the council is there to
vote on tough decisions. For example, in one episode, they vote on whether to kill some of
their chickens for meat, which they do. One little girl is super against killing it, but then is swayed by the
council. And beanie-wearing bad boy, Greg, does the deed with a hatchet and a stump. And all of
the children are gathered around him to watch. No. Listen here. You're going to stretch its neck out.
I can't believe we're about to do this. All right, guys.
You ready?
Hold it, hold it.
It was flopping around, running in circles,
cloking on me.
It was dead.
It's not alive.
It's reflexes, okay?
No. Oh, my God. It's reflexes. Okay. No.
Oh my God.
40 future vegans.
So this scene really is as horror movie as it sounds.
A kid just chopped the head off a chicken.
It still moves around after it's dead.
There is screaming. I'm imagining blood.
I mean, how many kids do you think still talk about this event
in therapy? I don't know. This is day one stuff for Latino kids. So I don't know why anyone would
be a therapist about this, to be honest with you. Okay. Well, every white kid is in therapy and very
upset by this. And there's one kid who just does this every day and doesn't eat the chicken? He just loves it.
And speaking of animals, in another episode, some of the kids wandered off and found themselves face to face with a wild bull.
Of course. Yeah, well, luckily, 10-year-old Colton charges at the bull and somehow manages to scare it away.
And the camera crew did absolutely nothing to stop it.
Whoa.
So the pilot episode keeps teasing this question.
Is eight-year-old Jimmy going to go home?
He should.
Or is he going to tough it out?
But it's the kind of through line that feels exciting in a show with adults,
but kind of feels like watching a kidnapping when the person's only in third grade.
But some of the kids are kind of nice,
and we actually have a clip of another contestant trying to
console Jimmy. Have a listen.
I know you're really upset because you don't have
your mother here to tuck you in, and you really miss your family.
And my dad. And your dad.
I'm going to try to substitute for them.
Just for a little while, and just make you
feel a lot more comfortable here. Just give me a chance.
Can you do that? Yeah.
And my dad. Is she from
Boston? Is she from Boston?
Did she own a pizzeria?
What an amazing voice this child has.
That was 12-year-old Laurel trying to be mom and dad to little Jimmy.
I love her.
Later on that second day, the kids are divided up into their teams and compete for their social rank.
The first challenge is a race to see who can pump water the fastest. But since all four
teams finish the challenge in under an hour, the kids get a reward. They do have to pick
between two options. Here's a clip. So which reward will you choose? Seven more outhouses or this?
A TV that you can watch whenever you want,
outhouses,
or a television set.
So what do we think?
Outhouses or a TV?
They're choosing the TV.
They're like, well, shit on the TV.
Who cares?
All right. Well, before I tell you the TV. Who cares? All right.
Well, before I tell you the answer, let me give you a little context I've hidden up until now.
You ready for it?
Have a listen.
Was there really just one outhouse for 40 kids?
Yeah.
So it was actually right outside my room.
And the funny thing was, if I woke up, there was a line of like 20 kids waiting to use the outhouse.
And I looked back, I don't know who would ever empty it.
So it would literally just pile up.
So nobody emptied it?
I don't think so.
Because when I went in, it was kind of a tower.
It was a tower.
Ew.
So if we missed that, that's one outhouse for 40 kids and a tower of poop.
Oh my God.
This is inhumane.
So what do we think the kids are going to pick?
Do you think they pick the outhouses or the TV?
I bet they still pick the TV.
Yeah, I still think they pick the TV.
Thankfully, the kids are smarter than every adult who has worked on this show,
and they do choose the outhouses.
Good for these kids.
So we finally get to the end of the episode,
and we finally get to find out whether eight-year-old Jimmy,
who we heard crying earlier, will decide to stay or leave the show.
And turns out he is wiser than his years because he gets the hell out of there.
This pilot episode airs in September of 2007. CBS is hoping for a survivor repeat.
They want a hit, but what they get are, drumroll please, lawsuits.
Yes!
They get lawsuits.
Yes!
Nice.
I'm so happy.
This is the first time I've been happy about lawsuits.
The twist is that they can only be represented by children. So Foreman and his CBS colleagues are super excited about their new show.
They're pretty sure it's going to be a hit when it airs in September. But before we talk about its critical reception,
we got to talk about the buzz before the show even airs.
And the buzz is not good.
As early as the announcement of the show,
there are concerns about alleged child abuse,
which was discussed on shows like Star Jones.
Here is one of her guests weighing in.
A girl drank bleach. Someone else got grease splattered on her face. Where were those adults
trying to stop that from happening? No one notified any hospital. Nobody notified any
child protective services. Clearly, they're not willing to intervene because money trumps
responsibility when it comes to television. Yep. Yep. Yep. Money trumps responsibility
on television. And so are the parents bringing the lawsuits? The ACLU? Like Child Protective Services? Who are the lawsuits coming from?
Definitely one of those lawsuits was from the parents of the girl who got burned in the face with oil.
Makes sense.
It makes you wonder, like, how did they get away with this? And the way they did that was producer Foreman and CBS.
It seems like they think they've beaten the system
because they filmed in New Mexico,
because New Mexico had much more lax rules
than California and New York about child labor on film sets.
Cool.
In fact, a law limiting kids to eight to nine hours a day on sets
was signed during the Kid Nation shoot, but the law only went into effect the summer after filming ended.
Wow.
And nine hours is a lot.
Still a lot, right?
So it was like loosey-goosey.
Mm-hmm.
But technically, Foreman and CBS say they're fine.
And hey, the kids weren't technically employed by CBS anyway, so it's all moot.
They also did state that a Labor Department inspector visited the set on the show unannounced during the production,
but a spokesman for the state Labor Department said that the inspector was not allowed on the site and left without inspecting anything.
So how do we feel about Foreman? Because he seems like a little Disney villain to me.
I want the kids to beat him up.
Like 40 on 1.
So the reviews are in.
The show consists of 13 episodes.
And now I want to play a game where you all try to guess whether this is a real review or a fake review.
First one, the Boston Globe.
Quote,
There is just something grotesque and creepy about seeing children being deployed on reality TV,
a genre that we all know thrives on conflict,
tears,
humiliation,
and exhibitionism.
End quote.
True.
Real.
True.
Yep.
All right.
The Detroit Free Press.
Quote,
Would the creators of Kid Nation
please go to their room for a timeout
and come up with something more original?
End quote.
Fake.
Could be fake.
It's kind of a kooky newspaper to use.
Yeah, I just think Detroit would be like,
you idiots.
So I'm going to say fake.
No, that one was real.
All right, BuzzFeed.
Quote, honestly, I was on the fence until the bleach part, and then I was all in.
Fake.
Fake.
That one's fake.
All right.
And one last one.
Ad age.
Quote, heavy on tears, light on ads.
That's real.
All we do is talk about ads.
All we do is talk about ads.
Well, overall, a lot of critics, they couldn't quite shake the ick factor of watching these poor kids.
All that being said, the ratings were all right.
The show averaged about 8 million viewers, which is half of the viewership performance Extreme Home Makeover,
but still in the ballpark of shows that have a decent chance of getting renewed.
There's no 8 million viewed show now.
No Yellowstone and that's it.
IMDB gives it a 7 out of 10, which is pretty solid.
No.
Yeah.
And Foreman and CBS are feeling pretty good about this.
I mean, what's a little bit of grease burns and trauma when you have ratings like that?
So they even start holding casting sessions for season two.
Season two.
So do we think we're going to get a season two?
What do we think?
No.
No.
Well, this is called the big flop.
So surprise, Kid Nation does not get a season two.
Probably because the network isn't sure they could find a state whose laws wouldn't prevent them from doing the show.
Season two, Siberia.
The Tundra.
So even though Kid Nation
didn't renew, what did continue
on were some long-lasting effects
on some of the kids for being on the show.
Poor Jimmy went home after
four days. Months later, when
an episode aired, he was
bullied by kids in his school who saw him
on the show. No.
No.
Like, it's like Jimmy's the hero, actually.
He's the smartest one.
All right, but it wasn't all bad.
So here on The Big Flop, we like to talk about some silver linings.
So to be clear, decades after the show, most of the kids are doing just fine.
Okay.
So let's do a little where are they now for some of the kids that we've mentioned.
Spelling bee winner Anjay went to work at Microsoft. Okay. So let's do a little where are they now for some of the kids that we've mentioned. Spelling bee winner
Anjay went to work at Microsoft.
Okay. Beanie bad boy
Greg works as a mechanic. Okay.
Wisecracker Sophia went
to Fordham School of Law.
Pageant Queen Taylor became an
occupational therapist. Okay.
And little Jimmy went from
crying alone behind a barn to
medical school.
Great.
Yay.
What a glow up.
The host, Jonathan Karsh, has gone on to do a lot of executive producing on TV shows,
including Police Women of Broward County, Catfish, the TV show, and The Hunt for the Trump Tapes.
Okay. So high quality TV.
Some high quality TV.
Okay, so high quality TV.
Some high quality TV.
Executive producer Tom Foreman is still producing a ton of television shows, including The Great Food Truck Race.
All right.
Sounds good.
Continues his legacy.
So you would think that after all of the issues surrounding Kid Nation that he would stay away from doing anything like the show again. But in 2017, he told Variety, every couple of years, I pick up the phone and lob in a call to CBS to see if we should do it again. That's so crazy. He's sick. What a sick
person. Another silver lining, after the show, it does seem like New Mexico did close up some of
those child labor loopholes. That's maybe a benefit for the world in general. And during Kid Nation,
the kids are shown to have some good takeaways from being on the. And during Kid Nation, the kids are shown to have
some good takeaways from being on the show. At one point, the kids were introduced to some Native
Americans who lived nearby, which albeit a little cringy for the producers to do, the kids did seem
to gain some newfound cultural appreciation. So here's a clip. In life, it's very easy to be mean. It's very easy to be selfish.
But it's very hard to live well.
It's the longer road.
It's the rougher road.
But in the end, you feel better about yourself.
What goes around comes around.
Right.
The chief told us to go beyond our boundaries.
And I was thinking that we could do that with the gold star.
Wasn't enough to exploit children.
You have to exploit the Navajo Nation and the Tid Nation.
Yeah, cringy for those producers to do.
We took what we've learned from our native brethren,
and now we're applying it to getting a $20,000 gold star
taken away from one of the other children in town.
Oh, America.
Well, now that you know all about Kid Nation,
would you consider this show to be a flop, not a flop, or a mega flop?
Mega.
Mega flop, yeah.
Mega flop and a side sauce of pure evil.
Yes.
Inhumane.
Inhumane! Inhumane. Well, thank you
to our wonderful guests,
Megan Gailey, Chris Garcia,
and Kurt Braunohler, and
thanks to you for listening to
The Big Flop. Come back next
week to find out what happens when a
country megastar goes
emo. It's the story
of Garth Brooks' ill-fated alter ego,
Chris Gaines, with guests Dusty Slay and Sarah Tiana.
You know, like the old saying,
if it ruins your career, double down.
If you like The Big Flop, you can listen early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey
at wondery.com slash survey.
The Big Flop is a production of Wondery and Atwill Media, hosted by me, Misha Brown,
produced and edited by Levi Sharp, Written by Marina Templesman.
Engineered by Zach Rapone.
Our executive producers are Rosie Guerin, Will Malnati, and Samantha Story for At Will Media.
Developed by Christina Friel.
Legal support provided by Carolyn Levin of Miller, Korzenik, Summers, Raymond.
Producers for Wondery are Matt Beagle and Grant Rutter.
Senior producer is Lizzie Bassett.
Senior story editor is Phyllis Fletcher. Managing producer is Ricky Wiebe. And executive producers are Morgan Jones and Marshall Louis for Wondery. sinking ship We are on
a sinking
ship