Well, Sesame Street is 40 yrs old. I can't believe I started watching it at the beginning. Who was your favourite? I always loved the chef. I was always gleefully surprised when he fell. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fzCnTg3kkA My kids love Grover. I read this book continually. Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
Elmo wasn't around when I was little. I have to admit I cried when Mr Hooper died. Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
There is little in the history of my life I have warmer memories, more admiration or greater respect for than Sesame Street. I coudn't begin to explain how important it was for me or how much it meant and means to me.
I feel that way about Captain Kangaroo. He was the first man I ever wanted to marry Did you have a favourite character One Raven?
LOL, I just didn't want to ruin it for you. Maybe you would never look at him the same again. It was Sid before he ate his first cookie. He sang it in one of his songs. I don't know exactly when but I think my daughter was about 6 (5 yrs ago)
Same, and Cookie Monster. Although I now have a fondness for Bert and Ernie. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86i7LQg9PVQ
I was already an adult (at least chronologically) when Sesame Street debuted, so I didn't really get into it. But my wife and I have always been huge Muppet fans. From their skits on the first seasons of Saturday Night Live to the Muppet Show, Fraggle Rock, Dinosaurs!, their other short-lived TV series, one-offs like "Emmet Otter's Jug Band Christmas," Muppetry on other shows like Farscape, and the Muppet movies. One of my top three all-time favorite films is "The Dark Crystal." Some people just don't have the sense of wonder to appreciate it, but I'm sure all of you who are posting on this thread do. If you haven't seen "The Dark Crystal," run out to the video store and get it right now! Nonetheless we have watched a great many episodes of Sesame Street. My favorite Muppet is Junior Gorg on Fraggle Rock, but how can you not love Kermit? There was a Muppet exhibit at the Smithsonian a year or two ago and I was there. We cried when Jim Henson died. His alma mater, the University of Maryland, has a bronze statue of him sitting on a park bench talking to Kermit--who appears as a distinct character rather than a puppet. We have photos of each of us joining the conversation. The Washington Post did a very nice article on the anniversary of Sesame Street. The people who launched it started with a very simple idea: "There's no reason why television can't be a good influence on children." It's shown all over the world. In some countries they dub it into the native language, in others they produce entirely new shows domestically with a whole different cast and their own sets and stories. And alphabets.Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
some of the nation's (uh, the u.s. that is) finest arbiters of taste and wholesomeness (up there with tipper gore) have deemed the recent releases of the early seasons of sesame street on dvd as "unsuitable viewing" for young, impressionable minds. (link? just google it. i think the story was in the new york times some months back.) you know, all those black folk milling about in an as-yet-ungentrified neighborhood; a fuzzy green guy who lives in a trash can and suffers from untreated major depressive disorder; two fellows of dubious sexual orientation sharing a flat and prone to argumentation; and a big bird who frequently hallucinates encounters with a long extinct giant furry mammalian critter. and no, i'm not making this up.
What about Oscar? Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image! Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!