Former Blue's Clues Host Launches Alive, a Podcast About Growing Up

Authored by yahoo.com and submitted by dresdenologist

Steve Burns, the beloved original host of Blue's Clues, is back in front of a camera and microphone with Alive, a new podcast from Lemonada Media that premiered Wednesday.

Two decades after he left children's television, Burns now aims to take the sensibilities of his old show-curiosity, calm, and connection-and grow it up for an adult audience.

The title itself is a reflection of Burns' newly mature approach. He was moved by the viral reaction to a 2021 anniversary video where he reconnected with fans.

"When people discovered I was still alive, they were happy about it," Burns said. "That connection seemed to endure, and this podcast is my way of continuing it."

Alive feels unlike most podcasts on the market.

Burns records largely from home, handling not only the hosting but also writing and composing original music. He wants the show to feel handmade, invoking the aesthetic of public access television and the intimacy of a childhood friend.

Episodes feature unexpected structural choices: long silences, open-ended questions, and interactive listening moments where the audience is invited to reflect. Burns sees those pauses not as empty space but as "active silence" that allows listeners to feel like participants.

Arielle Nissenblatt, founder of the consultancy EarBuds Podcast Collective, said those pauses could resonate deeply with adults who once watched Blue's Clues.

"It lets listeners stop for a minute and feel that comfort wash over them," she said. "You get relaxation and thoughtfulness without fully tuning out."

That meditative quality makes Alive stand out in a market where podcasts are often designed to maximize pace and efficiency.

"Some people want to learn something new, others want to recap the news or get entertainment," Burns said. "This is about being together in the weirdness of life, not about racing to the next fact or joke."

For Lemonada, Alive represents both a creative bet and a commercial opportunity.

Chief executive Jessica Cordova Kramer described the partnership as "full on," with Burns serving as executive producer and creative visionary while the network provides infrastructure, marketing, distribution, and sales.

"Steve is beloved across so many sectors of society, and his show is talking about universal experiences-failure, dying, finances-that marketers want to engage with," she said. "Our job is to package that in a way that feels authentic to him and valuable for them."

Founded in 2019, Lemonada has grown quickly into one of the most prominent independent podcast networks, now boasting more than 100 shows.

The company has built a reputation on socially conscious storytelling, with titles that span mental health, politics, and culture. Its in-house teams handle everything from production and social distribution to sales and branded content campaigns.

Advertisers including ZipRecruiter and BetterHelp have already signed on to Alive, while interest is also coming from financial services firms, meal kit companies, and wellness brands. Those sponsors see alignment in the show's themes of middle-aged resilience and everyday problem-solving.

The bet is that Alive can deliver not just one-off buzz but sustained listenership. The challenge for Lemonada will be to ensure Alive isn't just a short-lived experiment but a repeatable franchise, according to Nissenblatt.

While Alive is rooted in audio, Lemonada sees it as a video-first property.

The network has seen triple-digit growth in video consumption across its portfolio, and Burns' TikTok experiments-short clips where he simply asks "What's up?" and then listens silently-have already shown viral appeal.

That momentum reflects a larger industry shift. The line between podcasting and video has blurred as creators increasingly think in terms of multiplatform distribution. A show might have an RSS feed, a YouTube channel, and a TikTok presence simultaneously, each feeding into the others.

For Alive, the plan is to distribute full episodes via podcast apps while using YouTube and TikTok to surface shorter, visual riffs.

Episodes will run weekly, with a plan to publish around 30 across the first year, broken into seasonal arcs. Burns retains full control over guest selection, balancing celebrity interviews with everyday voices that underscore the show's ethos of human connection. Guests include Jamie Lee Curtis and Tig Notaro, as well as a hospice nurse with whom Burns has a frank conversation about death.

For the generation that grew up with Blue's Clues, Burns' presence offers a dose of nostalgia and continuity. But Alive is pitched just as much at listeners who never watched the kids' show, framing its host less as a former TV star than as a companion navigating adulthood.

The aim of the intimate feel is to tap into one of podcasting's defining strengths: parasocial connection.

Listeners form one-sided bonds with hosts, often feeling like they're in conversation with a close friend. Burns subverts that convention by deliberately inserting silence, turning the format back on the audience. Instead of passive consumption, listeners are invited to pause, think, and participate.

That inversion, paired with Lemonada's marketing muscle and sales infrastructure, positions Alive as both a creative experiment and a commercial play. For Burns, though, the motivation is simpler.

"I just want to make something that feels real and respectful," he said. "This isn't about nostalgia. It's about being alive, together, in all its weirdness."

GreasyPeter on September 20th, 2025 at 16:15 UTC »

If this man wants to slowly mold himself into a modern Mr Rogers, I would absolutely listen. I don't think anything could be more beneficial for the USA right now than a cool, calm, and well-intentioned person who reminds of the importance of being kind to others. There are TONS of people out there who are similar to Fred Rogers but we never see them because they don't want the spotlight. Find those people and highlight them, or as Mr Rogers would say, "look for the helpers".

nilyro on September 20th, 2025 at 13:39 UTC »

Omg I love you Steve 😍

dresdenologist on September 20th, 2025 at 13:39 UTC »

I know that this was reported here back in June, but I thought I'd post here because the podcast just launched 3 days ago. I saw the trailer show up 2 weeks ago and knew I had to give it a try.

I'm a little too old to be in the age group that was raised on Blue's Clues but I do remember watching it with younger family members and saw how important it was to them.

I was excited to give the first episode a listen/watch and it was powerful. Steve went right at it, with the first episode being one about what death and dying is with a hospice nurse. That might not seem very uplifting, but the tone of the episode, where it seems Steve is learning from his guest, and sharing his own views/experiences with death in his life through caring for his father who died from cancer...well, it oddly made me feel better, as someone who's experienced similar personal loss. It was like I didn't have to feel like I was alone worrying or wondering or pondering death. I think lots of us need that right now.

Obviously, disclaimer that there are ads as lots of podcasts have them. Not too keen on Steve's choice of Betterhelp, which has had its own issues, but I think in this case, it's the intent that counts and it's a minor quibble in the face of what I thought was, well, therapeutic and a reclamation of one of the core shows of my younger years.

If you instead want something on a slightly lighter note you can check out the other episode he had with Jamie Lee Curtis about liking yourself and keeping it real.

The audio is great but the video has some of the classic Blue's Clues elements, like heading into the house, Steve stopping to listen to us and reflecting on what was learned. Definitely going to keep listening/watching - it really is Blue's Clues with adulting topics and I encourage folks to give it a try.