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Baby Einstein 3PK
List Price: $39.98Our Price: $14.00You Save: $25.98 (65%)Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Category: VHS Video See more movie releases
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Product detailsActor: Soupy Sales Edition: VHS Tape Format: Color, NTSC Release Date: 2001-08-22 Audience Rating: Unrated Publisher: Family Home/Discovery Video Studio: Family Home/Discovery Video
VHS Movie Reviews of Baby Einstein 3PKMovie Review: Baby Mozart rocks! Summary: 5 StarsFirst time mother of a 3 month old: I started my daughter on baby Mozart at 1 1/2 months and she loved it! Her eyes about sprung out of her head and her bouncy seat went-a-bouncin away! She was very quiet and absorbed every bit of it. I think it is the bright colors, music and action she loves about it. I just last night bought her baby Van Gogh and she seemed to like it. Her eyes were glued to the tv but she made a lot of noises so I assumed she did not care too much for the music and voices. As for baby Einstein- HATED IT! She cried till I turned it off and believe me I keep trying her on it and she will not budge. I have not given up yet! I am sure when she gets a little older she will enjoy it. Great tapes! Baby Doolittle is my next purchase along with baby Shakespeare. If you want a little time to yourself or to take a shower or to even eat, buy these tapes! Very stimulating and entertaining for a baby!
Movie Review: Baby Einstein Video's Summary: 5 StarsThese video's are a life saver! I received these videos as a shower gift and thought at first they were a silly present. I put one in when my daughter was four months old and could not believe her reaction to it! She loves them! She will sit and watch these videos the whole 30 minutes that they play for! She will cry when it is over and I have to put in a new one. It gives me a little free time to get things done around the house! I feel the first review for the videos, by american working mom, sums it up perfectly! The Erin girl that wrote the review has no clue what she is talking about. Wait till she has kids she will buy every video they make for her children! I now give these videos as shower gifts to people too. My daughter is one now and still enjoys them! These videos deserve 10 stars!!
Movie Review: THE BEST VIDEOS FOR YOUR BABY Summary: 5 StarsMy best friend gave me the baby Mozart video when my son was just 2 months old. Believe it or not he actually sat through and watched the whole entire video. The older he gets the more he loves it. He can be really fussy and I put in baby Mozart and he is at peace. I love the fact that it is classical music and teaching him shapes and colors. I just added baby Doolittle, baby Bach, baby Einstein and baby Santa to our collection. My son who is now 4 months adores all of them! I would reccomend them for anyone!
Movie Review: Please be cautious in allowing young children to view these Summary: 3 StarsMoms and Dads, I have been browsing the Internet and came upon this item and decided to read the reviews. While I am not a parent yet, I have babysat for many years and was curious to see what people thought of these videos as I watched them with the one year old I babysat for and was not that impressed.
Movie Review: Wonderful! Summary: 5 StarsThese videos are all wonderful! I purchased Baby Mozart for my child when he was about 2 1/2 months old and he loved it the first time he watched it. Now 13 months old, he still loves Baby Mozart and continues to get very excited when he watches it. Although he is less enthusiastic about Baby Einstein (not as much music, which he really responds to), he has loved every video we have purchased in the series. My new favorites (and his) are the Baby Dolittle videos (one is about neighborhood animals and the other more exotic ones). He starts clapping and stomping the minute they come on. They are very educational and teach various animals and the sounds they make. When he was very little we turned on Baby Mozart every night during dinner so he could watch and we could listen to the really quite delightful classical music and have a peaceful dinner. Now, I turn them on sometimes during the day and he plays while watching them, which is a great way to keep him in the den without wandering through the entire house or climbing up and down the stairs. All in all, money very well spent.
Summary of Baby Einstein 3PKBaby Einstein If you've been around babies in the last few years, you've seen these newfangled toys that are abstract in color (or just black, white, and red) and make curious, crunching noises. Studies have shown that these types of toys stimulate newborns, expanding the capacity of their little sponge-like minds. That concept comes to the video age in Baby Einstein. This 30-minute tape is called a "video board book" and the creators instruct parents of 1- to 18-month-olds to use it that way: huddle around the TV often pointing out objects and interacting with the child as you would with a book. Bright toys, patterns, blocks, and the like move across the screen accompanied by natural sounds, music, and voices. English, Japanese, Russian, German, and other languages are heard telling nursery rhymes or counting to 20. Now the creators don't expect your baby to recite "Humpty Dumpty" in Spanish by the end of the tape, but, as they state in the introduction, hearing different languages invigorates a baby's mind. These educators went on to combine classical music with their program on Baby Mozart and Baby Bach. --Doug Thomas Baby Mozart It's called "the Mozart Effect," the notion that exposing youngsters to the melodies of the maestro can improve verbal ability, spatial intelligence, creativity, and memory. It's a pretty big leap of faith to understand that effect unless you personally see a toddler react to the stimulation. The Baby Einstein folks have a series of tapes (Baby Einstein, Baby Bach) that add visual stimulation to the bouncy recordings (using vibraphone, Rhodes electric piano, and even a glockenspiel). The melodies are heard against colorful imagery of spinning tops, wave machines, soft baby toys, mobiles, and the like. Several parenting groups and magazines have heralded the tapes for children 1 to 36 months, but the Orwellian aspect of introducing babes in arms to the TV screen may cause many to just pick up the CD. --Doug Thomas Baby Bach Designed for infants and toddlers (1 to 36 months), Baby Bach is a nicely produced video that features recognizable, familiar toys and colorful objects, moving to the complexly beautiful music of Johann Sebastian Bach. According to the video producers, "Bach's music has been shown to enhance creativity, improve academic achievement, reduce anxiety and heighten mental awareness." Any parent will embrace this theory. Not only did this video completely captivate a 22-month-old for its entire 30-minute run-time, but it's easy on the parents, too. The images are lively, clean, and sharp, and producers The Baby Einstein Company have a firm handle on what interests babies and toddlers. The extraneous segments with two pretty little blonde girls is silly, but forgivable. Given that most children elect to watch a video repeatedly, this is one that parents won't mind in the slightest. The music, available on CD, is simply lovely. --N.F. Mendoza
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