Nominated as Best Pre-School Programme at the 2019 Broadcast Awards, Pablo is now streaming first and only on Showmax in Africa.
Pablo is five-and-a-half and on the autism spectrum. To cope with the challenges he faces, the smart, funny and creative Pablo draws imaginary animal friends which come to life to help him handle situations that make him feel anxious, such as going for a haircut or to the supermarket.
(TOP: A screenshot of the trailer of Pablo. Photo: YouTube).
The groundbreaking CBeebies and RTÉJr series is the first animated TV series to star an autistic character and the first TV programme with an all-autistic core cast. Every episode is grounded in the real-life experiences of autistic children, with autistic young writers and contributors helping to bring ideas and perspectives to life in an honest and humorous way.
“It would have been very easy to go down the road of talking to experts but we wanted to talk to people with autism,” creator Grainne McGuinness from Paper Owl Films told Ireland’s Independent. “We wanted to get under the skin of how they saw the world. We have met some amazing kids as part of this show.”
McGuinness’ nephew Lucas is on the autistic spectrum and she dreamed up the show when he was Pablo’s age.
Pablo’s imaginary animal friends reflect parts of his own personality and, of course, his autism. For example, Mouse is a perfectionist who hates it when things are untidy or out of sequence; Noasaurus is a small dinosaur who can’t read social cues or facial expressions well but is great at recognising patterns or solving maths problems; Tang is resistant to change, which makes him feel very anxious; Wren is very excitable; Draff loves facts; and Llama is a thinker who doesn’t like physical displays of affection and repeats things that people say.
Pablo was nominated for a Children’s BAFTA this year and won the Torc Award for Excellence in Children’s Programming at the 2018 Celtic Media Festival. The biggest reward for the showrunners has been the feedback on social media:
babysitting & have just discovered a show on cbeebies called Pablo, all its characters are created to have autistic traits and the whole show is about life on the spectrum while just going about their lives and do you know what i would have done for a show like that as a kid ???
— art (@transkingarthur) September 11, 2018
'This is so good I could cry' Parents praise CBeebies show Pablo for highlighting realities of autism https://t.co/zOpYPhqpMD
— Susan Bailey (@SusanBailey63) October 4, 2017
Thank you @CBeebiesHQ and the makers of #Pablo it was so amazing to see a cartoon depicting #Autism its adorable and made me cry!
— Nikki Hughes (@NikkiHughes87) October 2, 2017
The kids are introducing me to #Pablo on @CBeebiesHQ. "It's about US!" yells Moo.
We're watching an episode about food and shapes. "Apple juice DOES taste of squares, Mum." says Freckles. #autism #TV
— KizzyLou (@kizletwiggle) December 12, 2017
I love Pablo, it is fantastic for raising autism awareness with younger children. It is on #CBeebies our daughter who we realised is autistic at 16 yo watched CBeebies for many years https://t.co/NidDaLuy56
— Messy Mandy ❄️ (@gardnersrose) July 31, 2018
Pablo on @CBeebiesHQ is really brilliant – a great creative representation of autism, its joys as well as its challenges. Well done!
— Abi Reeley (@MrsReeley) October 2, 2017
https://twitter.com/ASDmumGilly/status/1027224281321750528
Pablo should be compulsory viewing for all children – well done!!! https://t.co/HuYtUKhfh4 via @bbciplayer #autism #inclusion #awareness
— rachael (@rachael1005) October 22, 2017
And now, to ensure that your children watch Pablo during the Christmas and New Year holidays and not miss out on the fun and lessons there in, sign up to a Showmax package of your choice.
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