Posts Tagged ‘Ruby’

14

Check out clips from our first show!

VIDEO — This is The Mother Company version of the couples-on-the-couch interviews in “When Harry Met Sally.” Young children speak unscripted about feeling frustrated in humorous and honest ways. These clips are from our first DVD, entitled “RUBY’S STUDIO: The Feelings Show,” which will be available for the Holidays, 2010.

0

Fox Business News

Ruby’s Studio: The Feelings Show” fills a hole in the children programming void!

2

Halloween — Ban the Booty?

Robin Miller, best-selling cookbook author, nutritionist, and star of The Food Network television show “Quick Fix Meals with Robin Miller”, shares her advice on how to deal with all the tootsie rolls, milky ways, and smarties coming our way.

1

Huffington Post

TMC’s casting call for their new DVD gets press in the Huffington Post.

2

In Search of the Holiday Spirit

A personal essay from parenting expert Jennifer Waldburger, who describes her journey to reclaim the Holiday magic of childhood.

6

Integrating Work and Home Life

By Sam Kurtzman-Counter – I was a career girl. Raised by two full-time professional parents in the dizzyingly ambitious ‘burb of Los Angeles, I always focused on career first. I always imagined I’d have a family “one day,” after I crossed A, B, C, D, E, F measures of professional success. But unfortunately, the alphabet kept going, and so did that clock associated with my biology…

3

Introducing… Ruby!

We knew from the get-go that we wanted the host of our show to be a magical hero who would help our children learn all the social and emotional lessons they were tired of hearing from us. After an exhaustive search for just the right person to fill those shoes, we could not be happier with the result. It is our honor to introduce you to Kelsey Collins, the host of “Ruby’s Studio.”

5

Kids and Restaurants: Parents Duke It Out

Where do you stand on the debate about banning kids from certain restaurants? Sam Kurtzman-Counter, Exec VP of The Mother Company, shares a couple shocking restaurant experiences and investigates the culture of rabid judgment among parents.