Gransnet forums

Ask a gran

Janet and John books trigger warning 😳

(70 Posts)
NanKate Sun 14-Jun-26 10:51:33

How many of you remember the hilarious readings by Terry Wogan of the DIFFERENT VERSION of the Janet and John books ? I still listen to them on the internet and am in Hysterics.

Well the original children’s version of these children’s books have now got a trigger warning, how absolutely ridiculous in my opinion. Winnie the Pooh better watch out!

undines Mon 15-Jun-26 15:49:57

Thank goodness for gender stereotypes! As long as there's room within them for personal choice and discussion, I'm all for old fashioned male and female!

Peaseblossom Mon 15-Jun-26 16:05:12

Wyllow3. We all loved the Faraway Tree books. My mum read them to us and I read them to my own children who are 52, 47 and 40. I loved EB books.

suelld Mon 15-Jun-26 16:05:17

Galaxy

What do those of us do whose trigger is trigger warnings.

Exactly! All ridiculous. Noddy/ Enid Blyton already has been sanitised, along with Ronald Dahl etc etc!
You could actually have a trigger warning against almost anything really! Woke and stupidity turned rampant!

Dreadwitch Mon 15-Jun-26 16:35:10

Sarnia

It's only a matter of time for anything in the 1940'-1960's era to have a trigger warning. It's incredible that all of us have managed to reach our ages as well balanced, educated and all round lovely people when we were exposed to such distressing things on a daily basis. smile

All of us? I know plenty of people my age and older who are far from any of those things. In fact I wouldn't call myself well balanced or particularly lovely lol

Wyllow3 Mon 15-Jun-26 16:41:47

As for the Poster who wants me to be men and women to be women, may I introduce you to the man who Sexually Assaulted me last October (police guilty), but he thinks it was just a hug and "natural" or the many other women who have gone through far worse?

It's fine to read books from the past,

and see them for what they were,
of their time,
but please think of consequences and the big come-back of Andrew Tate and his brother.

Lemonred Mon 15-Jun-26 20:20:17

What a wonderful memory, I remember laughing till I cried, listening with my MIL. The books I learned to read with were Dick and Dora, and later Wide Range Readers. I was a right swot, and reading before school age.

Deedaa Mon 15-Jun-26 22:10:47

It didn't require a trigger warning but I was amused watching Hitchcock's Dial M For Murder this weekend. One of the things that aroused the detective's suspicions was that the villain had been buying things with one pound notes!!! I can dimly remember fivers being unusual, buy pound notes?

Babsbada Mon 15-Jun-26 22:43:42

Just watched the Terry Wogan, Janet and John. Wonderful stuff and thanks so much for the link. Very funny and cheering.

Wyllow3 Mon 15-Jun-26 23:45:24

Lemonred

What a wonderful memory, I remember laughing till I cried, listening with my MIL. The books I learned to read with were Dick and Dora, and later Wide Range Readers. I was a right swot, and reading before school age.

Yes, my mum was a trained teacher, and didn't get back to work till I was 5, so you can be sure she was busy practicing her skill on us very early. I could write a bit too, and tho I grumble at Janet and John had only a brief acquaintance - the teacher just left a few of us alone who could read - classes were big in those days, us baby boomers, weren't they?

Kartush Tue 16-Jun-26 00:52:31

These days just being alive comes with a trigger warning

WithNobsOnIt Tue 16-Jun-26 03:41:34

In contrast to all this nonsense.I think that the Paddington Bear story, should hold the banner. And be the Poster Boy for PC, Wokeness, Pro Immigration and Virtue Signallers and Duffle Coats.

Paddington seems to have the lot. An orphan whose mother dies when he was young. In a far away country. Has a difficulty dangerous journey to England. Then he is adopted and seemingly has a good life and lives happily after ever.

Also read on Google that Neuro Diverse Community really like him
because of his lack of facial expressions and awkward body movements.

🐻🌐⛴️🇲🇽🇬🇧👍
X

Nanny27 Tue 16-Jun-26 05:54:25

Doesn't it seem strange that some people are so worried about books promoting gender stereotype and yet toy shops still have girls' and boys' aisles for toys? Equally damaging in my opinion.

Whiff Tue 16-Jun-26 05:55:25

When I was at school it was Dick and Dora books we learnt to read. The original Grimms fairy tales are very dark and nothing like the censored versions Ladybird put out.
No idea what a trigger warning is ?
What did make me laugh years ago apparently someone decided Noddy and Big ears where gay. Why can't older books be left alone they where written in a different time. Not sure this is correct but think they altered Enid Blyton books so they wouldn't be so middle class. I remember reading them just as books, class didn't come into it they where just fun stories.

Rosiebee Tue 16-Jun-26 07:27:16

When I was a young teacher the 70s, reading was taught using J&J books. I remember a page that kept repeating Mummy must wash/dust etc and I always had to have a conversation about Mummy and Daddy sharing jobs. Wishful thinking

MaggsMcG Tue 16-Jun-26 09:07:24

Grantanow

Trigger warnings might be needed for Noddy, Rupert Bear and The Coral Island and tales from the Arabian Nights not to mention Tess of the d'Urbervilles but only for those of a nervous disposition (as Auntie BBC advised).

Trigger warnings for Noddy have been inplace for years because the baddies were gollies.

MissAdventure Tue 16-Jun-26 09:11:04

They're goblins, now, aren't they?
I can actually see the issue with gollies.
For a start, we're tiptoeing around whst they were called...

keepcalmandcavachon Tue 16-Jun-26 09:20:58

MissAdventure

They're goblins, now, aren't they?
I can actually see the issue with gollies.
For a start, we're tiptoeing around whst they were called...

Someone informed me very angrily that houses in London were so expensive because of all the Russian Golliwogs buying the upshock

MissAdventure Tue 16-Jun-26 09:23:47

Wow! Shocking!

Labradora Tue 16-Jun-26 14:20:56

Sarnia

It's only a matter of time for anything in the 1940'-1960's era to have a trigger warning. It's incredible that all of us have managed to reach our ages as well balanced, educated and all round lovely people when we were exposed to such distressing things on a daily basis. smile

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

Cripes....
What is it , precisely, that would be triggered by reading Janet and John ??
Boredom , possibly , in the minds of a probably more sophisticated group of children.................