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Ready Jet Go!

Release Date:
2016
TV Rating:
TV-Y
Runtime:
60 Minutes

Ready Jet Go! - Vertical TV Show Poster

Synopsis:

Ready Jet Go! follows the adventures of Jet Propulsion, an alien from the planet Bortron 7, who comes to Earth with his family. Jet befriends Earth kids Sean and Sydney, and together they explore the wonders of space and science. The trio, along with Jet's pet Sunspot, embark on exciting journeys to learn about the solar system, stars, and planets. They often visit Jet's spaceship, which is cleverly disguised as a house, to travel to different celestial locations. The show combines fun and exploration, as Jet and his friends use their curiosity and teamwork to discover the universe's mysteries.

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Where To Watch: Ready Jet Go!

Ready Jet Go! Reviews From Parents

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Parental Feedback

Ready Jet Go! is an animated educational TV show for kids that combines elements of science fiction and adventure. Released between 2016 and 2019, it is designed to engage young audiences with its fun and informative content about space and science. Most parents appreciate its educational value and positive messages, though some feel it may not hold the attention of older children.

Why Kids Should Watch Ready Jet Go!

Ready Jet Go! is praised for its educational content and engaging storytelling.

  • Promotes curiosity and learning about space and science
  • Features a strong, relatable character in Jet Propulsion who encourages teamwork and problem-solving
  • Colorful animation and exciting adventures captivate young viewers
  • Incorporates real scientific facts in a fun and accessible way

Why Kids Shouldn’t Watch Ready Jet Go!

Some parents express concerns about the show's pacing and complexity for very young viewers.

  • Occasional scientific concepts may be challenging for younger children to grasp
  • Some episodes may feel repetitive or slow-paced
  • Visuals can be overwhelming for children not accustomed to fast-paced animation

Verdict: Parent Approved

Most parents agree this TV Show is a solid choice for kids because it offers educational content, positive role models, and engaging storytelling.

What Parents Should Know About Ready Jet Go!

Question Answer
Does this TV Show model positive behavior that my child can understand and repeat? Jet and his friends often work together to solve problems, demonstrating teamwork and cooperation.
Does this TV Show include emotional moments my child might find confusing or intense? Some scientific concepts may require parental guidance to fully understand.
Does this TV Show show consequences for unkind or unsafe behavior? Characters learn from their mistakes, and episodes often highlight the importance of making safe and kind choices.
Does this TV Show reinforce helpful social skills like sharing, apologizing, or teamwork? Episodes frequently showcase characters sharing ideas and working together to achieve common goals.
Will my child come away with any clear moral or message? The show emphasizes curiosity, learning, and the value of friendship and teamwork.

The Overall Sentiment From Parental Feedback

Ready Jet Go! is widely appreciated for its educational content and positive messages, making it a favorite among parents looking for quality programming for their children. While some scientific concepts may require additional explanation, the show's engaging format and relatable characters make it a valuable learning tool. Parents can enhance the viewing experience by discussing the scientific topics presented in the show, fostering a deeper understanding and interest in science. For similar educational content, parents might also consider shows like The Magic School Bus or Wild Kratts.

Official Ready Jet Go! Trailer

The Core Values Learned From Ready Jet Go!

Ready Jet Go!'s most common core values include Curiosity, Exploring the world, and Friendship. Kids are encouraged to be curious about the universe, sparking their interest in Science and space. The show highlights the importance of exploring the world around them, whether it's through learning about planets or Understanding how things work on Earth. Friendship is a key theme, as Jet and his friends work together, supporting each other in their Adventures and discoveries.

Curiosity is often highlighted when Jet and his friends ask questions about the stars and planets, leading to exciting discoveries. In one episode, they build a model of the solar system, which not only satisfies their curiosity but also teaches them about teamwork and problem-solving. Exploring the world is evident when the group travels to different celestial locations, learning about the universe's wonders. Friendship shines through as they rely on each other, showing how working together can lead to amazing adventures and learning experiences.

Other Core Values Explored: Teamwork | Problem-solving | Creativity | Environmental awareness | Inclusivity | Science exploration

The 5 Biggest Lessons Learned From Ready Jet Go!

Encouraging Exploration: Kids learn the importance of exploring their surroundings and asking questions about the world. Jet and his friends often venture into space, discovering new planets and stars, which inspires children to be curious and adventurous.

Cultivating a Love for Learning: The show instills a passion for learning by making science and space fun and accessible. Children see how Jet and his friends eagerly absorb new information, encouraging them to enjoy learning about the universe.

Building Friendships: The series highlights the value of friendship as Jet, Sean, and Sydney support each other in their adventures. Kids see how teamwork and cooperation can lead to successful and enjoyable experiences.

Embracing Differences: Jet, being an alien, shows children that differences can be celebrated. The friendship between Jet and his Earth friends teaches kids to appreciate and accept diversity in others.

Working as a Team: The characters often work together to solve problems, demonstrating the power of teamwork. Children learn that collaborating with others can lead to creative solutions and shared success.

Other Lessons Learned: Exploring the World | Supporting Personal Growth | Appreciating the Little Things | Valuing Imagination

Why Kids Love Ready Jet Go!

Ready Jet Go! is a cosmic journey where kids are drawn into the exciting world of space exploration with Jet and his friends. The show is filled with funny characters and silly sidekicks, like Jet's pet Sunspot, who add humor and charm to their adventures. Kids love the cool gadgets and science experiments that Jet and his friends use to solve problems and explore the universe. The spaceship disguised as a house is a fascinating element that sparks imagination and curiosity. With fast-paced action and epic quests, the show keeps kids on the edge of their seats as they discover new planets and stars.

The series is a playground of creativity and teamwork, where kids enjoy watching Jet and his friends build things and tinker with gadgets. The catchy songs and musical showdowns add a fun and engaging element that kids love to sing along to. As the characters embark on their epic quests, they make new friends and learn to work together, which resonates with kids who enjoy making connections and having fun with their own friends. The vibrant adventures and smart problem-solving keep kids entertained, making Ready Jet Go! a favorite for young space enthusiasts.

Episode Guide

Season
Season #Episode #Episode Name
11
Celery teaches Jet, Sean, Sydney and Mindy about the planets in our solar system; Sydney, Mindy, Sunspot and Sean help Jet cook for his parents.
12
Jet explains how his family found Earth; the kids turn a treehouse into their own observatory to view the nighttime sky.
13
The kids learn how the planets orbit the sun and rotate on their own axes at the same time; Jet gets surprising results when he attempts to grow a plant from his home planet.
14
The kids learn how Earth is the perfect distance from the sun; Jet, Sean and Sydney learn about solar power.
15
16
17
The kids do a re-enactment of the first moon landing. Jet gives a gift to Mindy, which allows her to defy gravity.
18
Beep is sad because her sister Boop is sick and can't move so the kids fly to Mars to figure out what is wrong; Jet and Sean help Sydney turn her chores into fun science games.
19
The kids join Celery and Carrot on a trip to Mars; and Jet builds a robot version of himself so that he can be in two places at once.
110
Mindy finds out there is more than one moon in the solar system; Sean and Sydney take Jet to meet Sean's mom at the Deep Space Array.
111
Jet and Sydney go away on a mission to Mars; Sean is surrounded by noise while trying to complete his science project.
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
The kids meet up with Uncle Zucchini and start to clean up their space neighborhood; Jet, Sydney, and Sean build paper airplanes.
128
The kids help get Boop over a ravine on Mars, and learn that satellites help scientists communicate with far away rovers; the kids learn about constellations.
129
The Propulsions try out a new dashboard operating system, which only serves to confuse them as their test drive to Mars goes horribly wrong.
130
Sunspot acts strange when Mindy, Jet, Sean and Sydney use a solar panel to try to improve energy efficiency; Sean is excited about NASA's Year in Space program.
131
Sydney, Sean and Mindy plan fun things for Jet's first Halloween, including carving jack-o'-lanterns, dressing up in costumes and going trick-or-treating; Carrot and Celery turn their garage into a haunted house.
132
Sunspot and the kids attempt to build the tallest tower on the moon; Sean and Sydney want to take Jet to the DSA Open House.
133
The kids make their own Valentine's; Sydney directs everyone in a backyard movie.
134
Mindy explores her special zone with her friends; a dig uncovers a special item linked to the wild west past.
135
Celery competes against her brother, Uncle Zucchini, in a race; Jet tests his first experimental time machine.
136
Jet proposes a song to calm Sean's nervousness about flying; the kids plan a surprise party for Jet.
137
Celery, Jet and Sunspot accidentally leave Carrot on the moon. / A loud thunderstorm jolts everyone awake.
138
139
140
Season #Episode #Episode Name
21
Mindy has finally turned five and is super excited that she is now old enough to go to space. But she's planned a tea party in the backyard. The kids convince Mindy to move her tea party to the Moon! In her first trip to space ever, Mindy gets to board the Propulsion family saucer and experience space travel, rounding out their Moon tea party with a quick trip out to Pluto and back.
22
"Endless Summer": Jet is amazed to find out that the entire Earth doesn't have the same season at the same time. So he flies with Sydney and Sean from the northern hemisphere to the southern hemisphere to compare and experience holidays in winter and summer...all in one day! "Jet Shrinks the Kids": Mindy feels bad that she's the smallest kid in the group, so sympathetic Jet and friends use a shrink-ray and become her size. The plan goes awry, and Jet, Sean, Sydney, and Sunspot become the size of mice. Mindy has to follow intricate diagrams to reverse the shrink-ray!
23
"Mindy's Ice Rink": Mindy is impatient for winter, because she wants to ice skate. So Jet, Sean, Sydney, and Celery fly to Saturn's icy rings to gather ice from them and return to build a Saturn-ringed skating rink around Jet's house. "Measure for Measure": Jet, Sydney, Sean, Mindy, and Sunspot decide to make a scaled replica of the solar system using found items in their own neighborhood and in doing so learn that an Astronomical Unit is the distance from the Earth to the Sun.
24
"Mindy and Carrot Bake": While making a cake, Carrot and Mindy find they are one are short one ingredient, so they head to the store. But Carrot accidentally pushes a wrong button on the wagon's newly-updated control panel, and they take off into outer space! Using a diagram, methodical experimentation, and record keeping, Mindy and Carrot figure out how to properly fly the saucer back home, where they finally finish the cake. "Commander Cressida Begins": Mindy has a problem: now that she's been to space with the bigger kids, she realizes how much there is out there to see! How can she decide where to explore next? Sydney asks her mom, Dr. Skelley, who presents them with the very first edition of Commander Cressida comics! In reading the comic book, Mindy comes to appreciate that she, like Commander Cressida, can explore space "one adventure at a time."
25
"Mindy's Bedtime": Mindy has to go to bed when the Sun goes down, but she's having such a fun day with her friends. She asks Jet and the others to help her keep the Sun from going down. The older kids humor Mindy and try to help "slow down the Sun." All their efforts make Mindy so sleepy that she decides to go home and sleep. "Galileo, Galileo!": Sydney and Jet are having a hard time explaining to Mindy that the Sun doesn't move - the Earth is moving around the Sun, so the Sun seems to move. Then Sean comes over dressed as his science hero Galileo, getting ready to do a school report. Mindy asks "Galileo" to explain why the Sun seems to move, and Sean practices for his report by explaining how the planets move, in character as Galileo!
26
"Eye in the Sky": Sean is planning his first sleepout under the stars with his Space Scouts troop, but the weather is threatening and it looks like his sleepout will be rained out. The kids get help from Mitchell, building a weather observation station to make a weather prediction, and visit the DSA for further help by tracking the weather with satellites. "Total Eclipse Block Party": A total eclipse of the Sun is coming to Boxwood Terrace! The kids prepare a Total Eclipse song and dance to perform at the DSA, where the whole town is gathered for the event. Meanwhile, Sunspot attempts to explain the eclipse to all the local animals so they won't think it's night and sleep through it.
27
"Souped-Up Saucer": Celery has souped-up the family saucer, adding new features for the kids to use, including a robot arm. They test drive it with a trip to the Moon. "Pet Sounds": Jet takes care of Mitchell's dog Cody for the weekend, and attempts to teach him some new tricks.
28
"I Feel the Earth Move": When the kids experience an earthquake in Boxwood Terrace, Celery takes them up into space to study the Earth's plates and fault lines from above. "Zerk Visits Earth": Jet's overactive cousin Zerk comes to Earth for a visit, and the kids show him around the neighborhood.
29
"Asteroid Belt Space Race": The kids join Celery in a space race with Uncle Zucchini, Auntie Eggplant and Zerk. "Sydney 2": Sydney designs and builds a robot companion for Jet 2.
210
"Earth Wind & Flyer": Jet is fascinated by the effects of wind on his saucer. He and the kids study how wind works, ending with Sean going on a wild saucer ride. "Mini-Golf At The DSA": Jet is fascinated by Earthie golf, and Sean and Sydney try to teach him the rules. When the DSA builds a new mini-golf course, the kids team up against the grownups, and Jet gets to apply his new knowledge of force.
211
"Water, Water Everywhere": Celery takes the kids on a saucer tour all around the Earth to discover all the ways that water can be found. They visit Antarctica to look at the ice, and then compare that extreme to the icy surface of Jupiter's moon Europa. "Commander Cressida Story Contest": Sydney wants to enter a Commander Cressida story contest, but can't think up a good enough story. The other kids help, and they come up with a story about lassoing a comet to bring water to Venus, and then Mars.
212
"Try and Try Again": Jet's robot Jet 2 needs new wheels if he's going to be able to rove over the surface of Mars. Jet and the kids try a bunch of different wheels, without success. In the end, they borrow the wheels from Mitchell's scooter, so Jet 2 can successfully navigate on Mars. "Racing on Sunshine": The kids enter their karts in the big kid-kart derby, but this year they all have to design solar powered karts. Jet learns how solar panels work, and how batteries save up the energy so you can race even when clouds cover the Sun.
213
"You Can Call Me Albedo": It's evening at the cul-de-sac, and the kids are looking at two asteroids through Sean's telescope - one is light-colored and one is dark. Meanwhile, Mitchell's dog Cody seems to have run away because he doesn't like the black sweater Mitchell put on him. The kids learn about how, just like asteroids, some things are easier to see in the dark than others, like a white card is easier to see than Cody's black sweater. This amount of brightness is called 'albedo'. "The Tide is High": The kids go to their local beach to surf, but notice that the beach looks completely different from the last time they stood there. There's way more sand, and the ocean is far away! They decide to be detectives and study what has happened, and learn that the larger and smaller beach is caused by the tides - the rising and falling of the ocean.
214
Jet is impatient and uses Bortronian technology to grow a pumpkin. However, the pumpkin becomes enormous and is too big to carry to the local Pumpkin Contest. Jet and his friends need to figure out a way to get it to the contest in time. At the same time, Mindy is going trick-or-treating with her two BFFs: Lillian and Mitchell. Mindy and Lillian think that Halloween is magical. Mitchell, on the other hand, has different opinions. Mindy tries to convince him that it is.
215
"Freebird": Some snow geese start to invade Jet's backyard. Jet and the gang are confused at first, but eventually learn that they are using the backyard as a stopping place while they migrate. "Sean's Robotic Arm": Mindy the mary-sue knocks Sean's prized Neil Armstrong action figure out of his hands and it ends up falling into a narrow Crevasse. Sean is very sad because of this. Luckily, Jet, Sydney, Mindy, Mitchell, Sunspot, and Cody all help him out by constructing a robotic arm made out of various items that will get Neil out of the hole. Also, in this episode, Mindy hugs Mitchell.
216
"Ain't No Mars Mountain High Enough": Sunspot wants to join an elite society called the Space Summit Society, so he needs to climb Mt. Sharp, on Mars. The other kids accompany him on his quest to climb Mt. Sharp. At first, he rejects help from them, but he eventually learns the value of working together. "Treasure Map": Sean, Sydney, and Mindy are all going away, leaving Jet with Mitchell. Mitchell, inspired by Treasure Island, wants to dig for buried treasure in his backyard. Wanting to do something nice for Mitchell, Jet makes a treasure chest for Mitchell to find, and also makes a map, unbeknownst to Mitchell.
217
"Moon Face": Mindy thinks there's a face on the moon. The kids investigate to see what causes the 'face' on the moon. "Lone Star 2 - Rocket Kids!": In this sequel to season 1's "Lone Star", the kids design a foot rocket while Sydney tells them about how Lone Star engineered and built the first rockets.
218
"Astronaut Ellen Ochoa": When Astronaut Ellen Ochoa comes to visit the DSA and review an engineering project, she runs into the kids, who are running Sean's lemonade stand to raise money for a rocket to Mars. They end up hanging out with her before her DSA meeting. They solve an engineering problem together, which inspires Ellen to use the same solution with the engineering project at the DSA.
219
"Potatoes on Mars": Jet is fascinated by the Earthie potatoes that the kids have grown in the backyard garden. Now he wants to try to grow potatoes on Mars! They take several plants to Mars and try, but learn that potatoes need the right air, temperature, water, and even the right soil. "Bortron Leprechaun": Jet is fascinated by his first Earthie rainbow. He wants to know all about them! Sydney tells Jet about the mythical Leprechauns that keep a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, and even though they explain that it's only a story, Jet insists on following the rainbow to its end and meeting a magical leprechaun.
220
"Who Messed Up the Treehouse?": The kids do a bunch of projects in the treehouse. Sean makes paper airplanes, Jet has a picnic with Sunspot, Sydney makes Commander Cressida comics, and Mindy makes a puppet show. However, they leave a lot of trash there. No one wants to take responsibility for it. They try to find other places to play, but they don't work out. In the end, they learn to share the responsibility and keep the treehouse clean. "Fact or Fiction": Mindy tells Jet that clouds are made out of cotton balls. Jet, of course, believes this, but Sean and Sydney don't. Mindy says she learned this from Lillian. Lillian later clarifies that she thinks clouds are made of cotton candy, which Jet and Mindy also end up believing, much to Sean and Sydney's annoyance. The kids go to Dr. Rafferty and Dr. Skelley, who teach them what clouds are really made of and how to find correct information.
221
"Moon Circus": It is Carrot's 250th birthday. The kids make a circus to celebrate. They tell Jet not to tell Carrot, but Carrot ends up finding out anyway. The kids can't do their stunts on Earth because of the high gravity, and Carrot strains his back while trying to do a famous flip of this. In the end, the decision is made to transfer the circus to the moon, where everyone can do their circus tricks due to the low gravity. "Every Day is Earth Day": Today is Earth Day. The kids are making posters to celebrate. The kids travel around the Earth to find out what makes Earth so special. Then they use a Bortronian hot air balloon to get to the local DSA Earth Day celebration. Mitchell performs a poem about Earth. Carrot mixes up "toaster" and "poster" and presents a toaster, much to Mr. Peterson's annoyance. The kids arrive in their hot air balloon, and Jet leads everyone in a big song about Earth.
222
"My Three Suns": The kids play shadow tag, but then the clouds cover the sun, making it so that they can't play shadow tag. Then, the kids learn about a planet with 3 suns, Proxima B. They are glad to live on a planet with just one sun. Meanwhile, Face 9000 tries to take up comedy. "Magnet, P.I.": Sean becomes a magician called the Great Seanzo and dazzles the other kids with magnet tricks.
223
"Sunspot's Sunspot": Sunspot is sick and acts weird. This is because of a big sunspot on the sun. He gets cured when he gets closer to the sunspot. "Our Sun is a Star!": Lillian has a sleepover with Mindy planned, but it's too cold to have a sleepover outside. The kids learn about stars.
224
"Mars Rock for Mom": On Mother's Day, Jet realizes that he left Jet 2 on Mars and he and his friends travel there to recover him. "Sean Has a Cold": Sean gets sick on the first windy day of Spring and misses out on kite flying with his friends.