Do you and dh have the tv on if baby is in the room with you? Aap I know says to not have kids watch any tv at all until they are 2 I think. Just seems like a long time to not be able to watch any tv (our lo doesn't sleep until around 10 pm) but of course I will do what's best for lo.
Re: Tv time
That said, I believe everything in moderation, and we try not to let LO stare at our phones, iPad, etc. I let him watch a bit of tv, but DH and I moved his tummy time gym to where he can't see it and let him play on that while we watch a show.
The stuff I read stated there were concerns over tv affecting certain skills like depth perception; for example, a ball rolling towards LO never actually gets to them like a real ball would...so in that sense tv could potentially slow those learning skills, but it wasn't anything concrete. There were no studies to back that idea.
My oldest nephew hardly ever watched tv as a baby and has severe ADHD as well. Meanwhile a couple of his younger brothers watch tv all. Day. Long. And are fine
I don't think there is anything wrong with it in moderation.
DD loves Mickey and Super Why too. I don't see anything wrong with that either.
"Happiness is like a butterfly; the more you chase it the more it will elude you but if u turn your attention to other things it will come & sit softly on your shoulder."
BFP! 04/26/11 - DS born 12/28/11 - BFP #2! 04/02/13 - DD born 12/11/13 -
My Ovulation Chart
Also, I never watched any kids programming until DS was 18 months-ish and knew what the heck was going on. I figured when they are babies they don't care if it's a cartoon or the Today Show. (Which also has bright colors btw, which I hate to break it to you...is all they care about)
CP: 01/2011 | MMC: 01/2012 | MMC: 10/2012 | DS: 11/2013 | MMC: 11/2014 | DD: 01/2016
BFP: 06/2018 - EDD: 02/09/2019
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/mental-wealth/201402/gray-matters-too-much-screen-time-damages-the-brain
This link gives a quick overview of the research with links to the scientific articles if you are interested further.
In addition, baby Einstein videos have been actually linked to poorer performance than children who have never watched them. I can't find the actual article that would be the scientific research though I remember seeing it at the time (2007/08 ish). Here is a link to the synopsis from Time magazine:
https://content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1650352,00.html
I'm only commenting because you asked. My daughter (2 1/2) watches tv some days for up to 2 hours. As others have said I would never be able to pump otherwise. We use a laptop for tv so it is on the coffee table and she has to sit on the couch so the baby isn't able to see it. She started watching at 18 months (I didn't have much of a choice as she was in a cast from her armpits to her toes so could not move so there wasn't much to keep her busy). My son (almost 5 months) has not watched tv and I "plan" to keep it that way until 2 but to each their own.
I don't judge other parents for their screen time decisions but they should know the facts at least.
Exact same situation going on at our house. I just make sure LO is never positioned where she can actually see the TV.
However, I did find this shortly after I asked (there's a summary without purchasing the article)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022347607004477