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Steve Burns, from the popular ’90s children’s show “Blue Clues,” is revealing a surprising detail about his time sitting in the infamous Thinking Chair.

While appearing on the podcast Soul Boom, hosted by player Rainn Wilson, Burns shared candid reflections on his occasion with the beloved series, which he hosted from 1996 to 2001.

“I got ‘Blue’s Clues’ preceding, but every waiter I ever knew made more cash than I did for the first many seasons of that show,” he revealed.

Burns went on to call the show his “side hustle” based on the modest disburse, and credited voiceover work as his main source of income.

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“My real gig was, I was a voiceover guy. I fell into that early,” Burns said.

He explained commercial voiceovers “would kind of sustain him,” though he confessed those early years in New York Urban area were “grim.”

As he tells it, he ended up on “Blue’s Clues” by accident just after finishing theater school.

“I idea it was a voice thing, I went to the audition,” Burns said. “And when I got there, there was a camera in the room. And I consideration, ‘Oh, shit. I better do something.’ And I looked at the script, and, you realize, I figured …

Steve from 'Blues Clues’ shares an awkwardly funny story about his date with a Playboy model

When it comes to intergenerational conflict, you never overhear too much about Gen Z having a hard time with Generation X or the silent generation having beef with the baby boomers. However, there seems to be some problem where baby boomers and millennials just can’t get on the alike page.

Maybe it’s because millennials were raised during the technological revolution and have to help their boomer parents log into Netflix, while the grandparents get frustrated when their adult children don't know how to do basic homemaking and maintenance tasks. There’s also a political divide: Millennials are a reliable liberal voting bloc, whereas boomers are the target demographic for Fox News. Both generations also have differing views on parenting, with boomers favoring an authoritative style over the millennials' gentler approach, which leads to a ton of conflict within families.

A Redditor recently asked Xennials, older millennials, and younger Gen Xers born between 1977 and 1983 to contribute some quirks of their boomer parents, and they created a fun list of habits

Former 'Blue's Clues' host Steve Burns shares 'horror and heartbreak' about 'Quiet on Set'


Steve Burns listened to fans' thoughts on "Quiet on Set," and now, he's sharing his own.

The former "Blue's Clues" host, 50, spoke with Today and expressed his "horror and heartbreak" about the Enquiry Discovery documentary series that explored alleged abuse experienced by Nickelodeon stars.

"It's just terrible to survey it unfold," he said. "I don't know what else to say, other than that it's heartbreaking."

Burns was the original host of the children's TV series "Blue's Clues," which aired on Nick Jr., a Nickelodeon programming block directed at younger kids. Burns, who hosted from 1996 to 2002, told Today that Nick Jr. and Nickelodeon "were so different," so he didn't have "any particular insight" to share.

Still, Burns told the outlet that it has to be "unfathomably painful" for those who are reliving traumatic memories.

"The fact that this is now what everyone’s talking about at the rain cooler, it just breaks my heart," he added.

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Steve Burns' 'Quiet on Set' reactio

Blue's Clues' Steve Burns Shares His Thoughts on Quiet on Set Docuseries

Blue's Clues' Steve Burns Shares His Thoughts on Calm on Set Docuseries

Let's confirm back in with Steve Burns during a harrowing period for many people who grew up watching Nickelodeon programming.

The former host of Nick Jr. preschooler series Blue's Clues has shared his thoughts on Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, weeks after one of his understanding "checking in" videos went viral following its posting days after the release of the docuseries. The project details allegations of past inappropriate habit by others on the sets of several other shows that aired on parent channel Nickelodeon.

"I don't contain any particular insight into any of that," Burns told Today in comments posted April 7. "I'm coming to it much the same as anyone else, with horror and heartbreak. It's just terrible to watch it unfold. I don't know what else to say, other than that it's heartbreaking."

The 50-year-old expressed empathy for those reliving traumatic memories that have resurfaced with Quiet on Set. "It's go