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31 Minutos -

The secret weapon of 31 minutos is that the puppets are deeply, hilariously flawed. Tulio is a narcissist. Juan Carlos is a gambling addict (he famously bets on cockroach races). Mr. Manguera (Mr. Hose) is a walking plumbing fixture with a speech impediment. The show teaches a radical lesson: you don't have to be perfect to be lovable. You just have to try, fail, and try again—preferably while wearing a tie.

The show understands a fundamental truth that Sesame Street often forgets: children love chaos. They love the recurring bit where the office’s phone never works. They love the "Polo" segment, a low-budget, dubbed Japanese monster movie parody that makes no logical sense. They love the fact that the "International News" is just a static globe that occasionally catches fire. 31 minutos

"Calcetín con Romero" (Sock with Rosemary) is a psychedelic folk tune about a sock that smells like the herb. It makes absolutely no sense, yet you will find yourself humming it in the shower for a decade. The show’s ability to make you weep over a song about a lonely dog ( "Bailando Sin Salir de Casa" ) is a testament to its writers' emotional intelligence. The secret weapon of 31 minutos is that

On its surface, the premise is simple: a nightly news broadcast hosted by the eternally vain and neurotic Juan Carlos Bodoque (a rabbit with a pillowy red nose and the soul of a beleaguered journalist). Alongside him are reporters Tulio Triviño (a pompous, bow-tied lion), Patana (the competent, long-suffering production assistant), and Mario Hugo (the existentialist, potato-obsessed camera man). The show teaches a radical lesson: you don't