The Day Sesame Street Died

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 4 тыс.

  • @EntertainTheElk
    @EntertainTheElk  Год назад +139

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    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Год назад +4

      Sesame Street is the area between buildings without a real road and where the garbage cans are. That is an alley. The reason I dislike Sesame Street because it should be called Sesame Alley because its an alley not a street.

    • @jordancambridge4106
      @jordancambridge4106 Год назад +1

      My Favorite muppet is Gonzo. Yes he is a muppet. He is my favorite because he was weird for the reality that he was weird but that did not change the fact that he was a great alien and fun to hand with and he was goofy but also reliable and smart and funny and friendly but really really weird like me.

    • @Eldorriots
      @Eldorriots Год назад

      2:33

    • @Missjjade
      @Missjjade Год назад +1

      I liked but didn’t sub because you made me cry lol😂

    • @Dowlphin
      @Dowlphin Год назад +1

      _"I am still blown away by how high these desks go."_
      The marvels of modern technology. 😏 They said it cannot be done, that there are physical limits. But then a bunch of fearless engineers proved to the world that only the ceiling is the limit.

  • @pgj1997
    @pgj1997 Год назад +3938

    "You've got to remember that you're not merely writing for children. You're writing for the unfortunate people; mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, grandfathers, grandmothers... who've got to read the children the stories aloud. Not just once, but over and over and over again."
    - The Rev. W. Awdry, Creator of "Thomas & Friends"

    • @itskevinjustkevin
      @itskevinjustkevin Год назад +254

      that reverend is spittin straight facts

    • @CharlesChristinaWH
      @CharlesChristinaWH Год назад +153

      That goes for all genres too
      He definitely was spot on

    • @mrburgess1698
      @mrburgess1698 Год назад +196

      Yep and I’m sure he’d be maddened at how his creation has become so dumbed down and zany for the recent Thomas cartoons!

    • @TiroDvD
      @TiroDvD Год назад +189

      "All architects should be forced to live in houses they designs and all children's authors should be forced to read them every night to hyperactive five year olds for the rest of thier lives" --Bill Waterson.

    • @trevortuominen8233
      @trevortuominen8233 Год назад +88

      It's just a shame the Thomas producers and Mattel failed to heed the Reverend's advice.

  • @Anthonycheesman2024
    @Anthonycheesman2024 Год назад +1260

    If you watch Sesame Street in 2023 it literally feels like the Elmo and friends show . At least in the 90s it felt like the Elmo and big bird show and friends lol.

    • @roberttreacy8271
      @roberttreacy8271 Год назад +119

      At this point, I’m actually surprised they haven’t cancelled Sesame Street and made a spin-off series called Elmo & Friends.

    • @Thomperfan
      @Thomperfan Год назад +49

      @@roberttreacy8271 Sesame Workshop has more dignity than that.

    • @alyssalindsay976
      @alyssalindsay976 Год назад +47

      It's the Elmo and Abby show and the Valentine's episode confirmed they're a couple

    • @Allanapolis83232
      @Allanapolis83232 Год назад +38

      Elmo and Abby are the Mickey and Minnie Mouse to Sesame Street.

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Год назад +11

      @@Thomperfanthey probably also have enough leverage in the industry to keep themselves afloat

  • @googleirl289
    @googleirl289 Год назад +440

    I feel as though Elmo as a character wasn't the root of the issue but was definitely representative of a growing problem of trying to make it more entertaining than educational.The move to HBO was the final nail in the coffin, because finally they were saying the quiet part out loud: it is no longer about education. It is about money.

    • @eatatjoe
      @eatatjoe Год назад +42

      I'll say it again: Elmo isn't the issue. He was an unfortunate victim of it. Like how Arthur haphazardly crammed in smartphones once those blew up to stay relevant.

    • @victorgaminglounge3967
      @victorgaminglounge3967 Год назад +1

      Don't forget Barney as well@@eatatjoe

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +18

      “Staying relevant” always reeks of “how do you do, fellow kids”-ism.

    • @PapperAmate04
      @PapperAmate04 Год назад +8

      ​​@@AttmayI miss when Elemo Actually Had a World and not Just seassme street bein his world

    • @PapperAmate04
      @PapperAmate04 Год назад +7

      ​@@AttmayEven the Word on the street era had life

  • @TheJoemm
    @TheJoemm Год назад +525

    My four year old does not call the show Sesame street, he calls it Elmo. It really shows how dominant the character became.

    • @formerevolutionist
      @formerevolutionist 11 месяцев назад +38

      That's sad. I'd hate for Sesame Street to be renamed Elmo's World or something like that.

    • @tyliekinc.
      @tyliekinc. 10 месяцев назад +25

      That’s how it was when Steve Urkel became the star of Family matters people called it Urkel or the Urkel show

    • @tytar1037
      @tytar1037 8 месяцев назад +7

      My daughter called it Abby lol

    • @jinx18e
      @jinx18e 6 месяцев назад +4

      My 2 year old does the same thing

    • @alansnow1129
      @alansnow1129 6 месяцев назад +7

      Yeah that’s sad and pathetic they did that to all the other characters. Brett Jim Henson wouldn’t like it at all

  • @jvondd
    @jvondd Год назад +1288

    I think Elmo is more of a symptom than a cause of Sesame Street's decline. He's a good character, and I see why the kids like him so much, but the show runners didn't have to make him the focus of nearly every episode.
    To answer your question (which is tough because it's hard to pick just one), my favorite Sesame Street Muppet would probably have to be Cookie Monster.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Год назад +13

      14:57
      If you time it right you can get you a twofer 🤣

    • @fsugnome
      @fsugnome Год назад +13

      Ernie was mine

    • @yoshikitte
      @yoshikitte Год назад +10

      big bird was mine !

    • @princesspikachu3915
      @princesspikachu3915 Год назад +15

      My favorites are Oscar and Cookie Monster. Grover comes in 3rd. I also like The Count and Bert and Ernie. I loved watching Ernie annoy the heck out of Bert.

    • @FigureFarter
      @FigureFarter Год назад +4

      @@fsugnomeSame along with Bert

  • @AishaRaison
    @AishaRaison Год назад +760

    This hit home for me. I'm a 70s baby, so I grew up loving Grover and watching Sesame Street as a poor Black girl from Tennessee. I fell in love with reading, numbers, and music because of this show. When my son was born, it was the beginning of the Elmo years, and I tried to hold on to a bit of what survived from my time. It's sort of sad that the next generation will never have what I had back then.

    • @colleen4ever
      @colleen4ever Год назад +35

      I was always a Cookie Monster girl

    • @ShaneyBright
      @ShaneyBright Год назад +30

      I always wondered what the inside of Oscar's can looks like. Was there a bed? A kitchen?
      I enjoy Sesame Street even more now, and I still watch the 70s and 80s episodes for fun, although my own kids are grown up.

    • @abcdeshole
      @abcdeshole Год назад +7

      @@colleen4ever I was a Bert Boy.

    • @alrighttumbleweed4782
      @alrighttumbleweed4782 Год назад +10

      ​@@ShaneyBrightyou should watch Elmo in Grouchland. Unfortunately there's a lot of Elmo but luckily there's also a lot of Grouchland

    • @gingeralice3858
      @gingeralice3858 Год назад +16

      I remember my dad being so confused when I told him I just didn't like Sesame Street as a small child, but I was a 90's baby growing up in the 2000's. Watching these clips felt like watching a totally different show than what I was familiar with. No wonder my family was so shocked that I didn't like it.

  • @Leron...
    @Leron... Год назад +765

    "Who's your favorite vampire?"
    "Probably that purple dude from Sesame Street."
    "He doesn't count."
    "Oh, I assure you, he does..."

  • @jnb756
    @jnb756 Год назад +122

    Snuffy and the two aliens that had a conversation with a ringing telephone were my favorite characters

    • @Rylosalex
      @Rylosalex 11 месяцев назад +2

      I have always loved the News Report segments "Hi ho Kermit the frog here."
      And the music videos

    • @SA-Bean-Bean
      @SA-Bean-Bean 11 месяцев назад +4

      I LOVED the yip yip yip yip yip yip yips! My 2 yr old is freaked out by them 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂i still try tho! Maybe one day he will see the fun!

    • @justinlloyd2446
      @justinlloyd2446 11 месяцев назад +2

      The Martians! They are my favorite as well.

    • @Yeebok
      @Yeebok 6 дней назад +1

      ...yip

    • @playgroundchooser
      @playgroundchooser 5 дней назад

      Yip yip...
      Cooooooowww...
      Nope nope nope

  • @ericstevendennis3206
    @ericstevendennis3206 Год назад +474

    I was a 3-year-old New Yorker in 1969, and I think that I pretty much discovered the show. I went absolutely crazy over what must have been its very first episodes, and of course what attracted me was that it took place in an urban setting that I recognized and never thought I would see on TV, and the people looked just like people in my neighborhood. Later, in about 1972, my Dad starting writing music for Sesame Street, and the feeling of it was sort of like finding out he was writing poems for Mother Goose.

    • @davidhollenshead4892
      @davidhollenshead4892 Год назад +21

      The idea of having real people in the show was great, something lacking in many suburban American settings. Ann Ann Michigan was allegedly a diverse place and yet I was the only Halfbreed in public school which was not at all easy. I suspect that the show had more impact outside of New York, showing " White America" that diversity means more than just two or three Black Families in the neighborhood. Okay, I had a Native friend for a year until his father completed a contract as a Construction Engineer...

    • @Mezcon2
      @Mezcon2 Год назад +5

      Wow thats incredible!!

    • @ericstevendennis3206
      @ericstevendennis3206 Год назад +7

      People might remember his number painter segments, as well as the "Milk Milk Milk" song@@Mezcon2

    • @proudamerican2133
      @proudamerican2133 Год назад +8

      Same age as you, we are the very first sesame street audiences. Grew up just over the river from you. Got to meet Spinney b4 he passed.

    • @flasquemask
      @flasquemask Год назад +10

      @@ericstevendennis3206so you’re telling me that you’re the son of Robert Dennis
      neat

  • @rosaazure
    @rosaazure Год назад +623

    Sesame Street had adults that were smart and could be trusted. They made mistakes but would own up to their mistakes. Modern children's television either remove the adults or dumb them down.
    I watched the show well into my early teens. It was comforting when I was home sick. Thank you for bringing back some of my childhood memories. You also broke me showing Big Bird at Jim Henson's funeral. I was crying my eyes out.

    • @marchingham
      @marchingham Год назад +15

      Honestly same. I was absolutely not ready to cry that hard.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +7

      I still can’t bring myself to watch the whole thing.

    • @aval5098
      @aval5098 Год назад +6

      If you do want wholesome content where the adults own up to their mistakes, check out Bluey. Also Hilda the series. Bluey did a great job of displaying complex characters in a short amount of time.

    • @rodneymcdermott5303
      @rodneymcdermott5303 Год назад +5

      As someone who never paid much attention to the series, even as a kid growing up in the 70’s-80’s, I do recognize the cultural and educational significance of this series, as well as Jim Henson. And yes, the scene TOTALLY blindsided me in a way I didn’t expect. Definitely needed to hit the pause button and take a moment.

    • @playgroundchooser
      @playgroundchooser 5 дней назад

      If you want adults acting like adults in a kid's show; check out Bluey. It's the best.

  • @samuelbrock
    @samuelbrock Год назад +482

    As someone who grew up watching Sesame Street during the "new" era, I had no idea the old era was so meditative and deep

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Год назад +86

      Commercialism kills everything. There are so many things that have had their souls stolen out of them... there aren't enough hands to count

    • @kerisaltchannel3817
      @kerisaltchannel3817 Год назад +6

      Same

    • @tlazohtlalia
      @tlazohtlalia Год назад +3

      Same

    • @1Rez_EZ1
      @1Rez_EZ1 Год назад +2

      Same

    • @WeenieHut_Sr
      @WeenieHut_Sr Год назад +9

      I was born in ‘96 and my favorite segment of Sesame Street was Elmo’s World lol

  • @williambranum1392
    @williambranum1392 Год назад +204

    This show started 3 months after I was born in 1969. So I can say that it has literally been running for my entire life. And I started watching it when I was 2-3 years old. It is sad what has become of it. It is directly responsible for me being able to read before I even started school.

    • @wknight5595
      @wknight5595 Год назад +17

      I'm a 60's flower child as well, but seriously what haven't the likes of HBO, Disney, Netflix and Hollywood turned into a steaming mess in the last couple decades.
      My father who grew up in the 50's recently told me, "son i grew up in the best years of the American dream, and you grew up in the tail end of it"
      isn't that the truth, i don't even recognize this country anymore sadly....

    • @nunliski
      @nunliski Год назад +6

      Actually, it has not "literally" been running your entire life. You just explained that it didn't exist when you were born.

    • @yoshiking6027
      @yoshiking6027 Год назад +2

      @@nunliski🤓

    • @DM_Curtis
      @DM_Curtis 11 месяцев назад +2

      Ditto!

    • @jeffrobodine8579
      @jeffrobodine8579 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​​@@nunliskiThe show was incepted the same year the person was born in 1969.

  • @memyname1771
    @memyname1771 Год назад +415

    For me, the loss of Kermit was far worse than anything related to Elmo. Many segments of the show revolved around Kermit doing parodies of regular television shows, such as news reports. These helped children associate Sesame Street with other they might see on television. I watched children learn from the earliest days of Sesame Street to the present. In the early days, letters, numbers, colors, shapes, diversity, and other important life lessons were presented in a way children could relate to. Segments were short, while the show was long enough to repeat the lessons multiple times to reinforce each one. Now the show is too short, and depends far too much on cartoons. The multiple lessons are no longer presented in the way they previously were.
    With the number of choices available on cable and online, Sesame Street no longer attracts and holds the attention of children, as it used to do.

    • @staringatthesun861
      @staringatthesun861 Год назад +18

      When and why was Kermit even removed? I've been watching Sesame Street with my daughter since last October.....it's the first time I've seen the show in ~25 years. What happened?

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield Год назад +21

      @@staringatthesun861 Disney bought the Muppets.
      Used to the Muppet Show Muppets and the Sesame Street Muppets would comingle.
      Now they have different cooperate overlords.
      Because of this we will never get a decent reissue of Muppet Family Christmas.
      It came out on DVD but they were too cheap to pay for the rights to Christmas songs so several performances are cut.
      Since it contains SS Muppets and Muppet Show Muppets it will never be rereleased, not that physical media is still a thing anyway.

    • @geophat75
      @geophat75 Год назад +8

      @@1978garfield dang disney why you doing us wrong?

    • @fawziekefli2273
      @fawziekefli2273 Год назад +19

      I love watching Kermit doing his news skit. He hates his job, it never goes the way he or we expects it (subversion of expectations) and hilarity always ensues.

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield Год назад +19

      @@fawziekefli2273 "Hi Ho, this is Kermit the Frog with another fast breaking news story" will never fail to bring a smile to my face.

  • @zmr3352
    @zmr3352 Год назад +1671

    This video honestly hit me harder than I expected.
    I forgot that Sesame Street isn't even on PBS anymore. That feels so wrong to me. Now, and especially back then, it felt like a show that needed and deserved to be on public broadcasting for any kid to be able to see relatively easily assuming they had a TV at home.
    Edit: Okay, it actually seems that it's still on PBS to a certain degree. Doesn't really change my original comment though. Sesame Street never should have been on anything other than PBS IMO.

    • @eatatjoe
      @eatatjoe Год назад +54

      I'm watching what I think is a rerun on PBS and...yeah, it is utterly sad.

    • @Purplax05
      @Purplax05 Год назад +57

      It actually is still on PBS

    • @icecreamhero2375
      @icecreamhero2375 Год назад +87

      To be fair 1) They still play Sesame Street on PBS. They just play reruns from 9 months ago. You have to get Max to watch the newest episodes and wait 9 months for them to be on PBS 2) Due to the advent of the internet children have more access to knowledge

    • @studio7389
      @studio7389 Год назад +54

      It’s still a PBS mainstay, but much like Curious George (which was actually produced by Universal Pictures, believe it or not), PBS has to wait before it gets new episodes.

    • @TravisNewton1
      @TravisNewton1 Год назад +48

      It's still on PBS... but corporate greed of HBO or Warner Bros Discovery or whatever they're calling themselves today has really ruined it.

  • @BoyNamedSue4
    @BoyNamedSue4 Год назад +253

    I’m at that age where I remember before and after Elmo took off. He definitely took over to the point where it felt less Sesame Street and more Elmo and his amazing friends.

    • @PapperAmate04
      @PapperAmate04 Год назад +16

      Thats like SML before Jeffy

    • @sekovittol3124
      @sekovittol3124 Год назад +8

      I see Elmo as stealing Cookie Monsters limelight, but he actually stole the whole show!

    • @DissertatingMedieval
      @DissertatingMedieval Год назад +2

      I think part of it is that Kevin Clash really advocated for increasing Elmo's role on the show and treated it less like an ensemble than it'd been prior.

    • @sekovittol3124
      @sekovittol3124 Год назад +2

      @@DissertatingMedieval Less labour costs for puppeteers?

  • @DanielleJ-p6u
    @DanielleJ-p6u Год назад +125

    Man, you nailed it. Even watching the segments you presented and observing my emotional response, there was a warmth and 'community' and sense of belonging to those scenes. The modern ones are a 'show', not a community.

    • @KM-zn3lx
      @KM-zn3lx 11 месяцев назад +6

      Yes and Maria and The grocery store guy( Mr. ?) We're my favs! I also loved Bob a lot!

    • @jeffrobodine8579
      @jeffrobodine8579 11 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@KM-zn3lxThe wise Mister Hooper.

  • @papwithanhatchet902
    @papwithanhatchet902 Год назад +443

    I agree. Before Elmo, Sesame Street characters were fun but never made kids feel like they were being talked to in an extremely simplistic and therefor different way than their own parents would communicate with them. Elmo always felt like a form of condescension, even if kids couldn’t identify exactly what that was.

    • @SarahNGeti
      @SarahNGeti Год назад +24

      Having a 3 year old as a leader, what could go wrong? LOL, oh wait, we had Trump

    • @AmandaHugandKiss411
      @AmandaHugandKiss411 Год назад +4

      I agree 💯

    • @jorgecarreras4214
      @jorgecarreras4214 Год назад +24

      @@SarahNGeti And now we have Biden (sarcasm) What a lovely improvement! (/sarcasm)

    • @SarahNGeti
      @SarahNGeti Год назад +10

      @@jorgecarreras4214 It actually is a great improvement over a wannabe Autocracy!!

    • @lavinder11
      @lavinder11 Год назад +15

      ​@SarahNGeti You should have never brought politics into it, but the fact that you experienced both presidencies and can only call one a wannabe autocratic is astonishing.

  • @Bookman230
    @Bookman230 Год назад +889

    This should really be called ‘How HBO ruined Seasame Street’

    • @kootunesscrewy
      @kootunesscrewy Год назад +78

      I agree. It wasn't Elmo that ruined the series.

    • @wendyokoopa7048
      @wendyokoopa7048 Год назад +52

      I agree to a point. The point being that in the 200s before the HBO takeover it was very elmo centric.

    • @joes9954
      @joes9954 Год назад +34

      No. It’s how Sesame Workshop (CTW to us old folks.) ruined Sesame Street. They wouldn’t be on HBO if they did not say yes. Most likely HBO offered more money to the business but that also meant less for the production hence overboard went the expensive human talent. I suspect had Jim Henson survived, I don’t think Elmo would have been the disaster for the show he became because he would not have allowed it.

    • @kootunesscrewy
      @kootunesscrewy Год назад +15

      @@joes9954 I still think Murray crushed Sesame Street's quailty, in which ditched all the old animations.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +24

      Nah, it started going downhill long before its move to HBO.

  • @TheTundraTerror
    @TheTundraTerror Год назад +754

    Elmo is effectively everything Jim Henson didn't want the Muppets to turn into.

    • @ryankelly369
      @ryankelly369 Год назад +39

      That process started years before Henson's death, but you're not wrong.

    • @Schroefdoppie
      @Schroefdoppie Год назад +3

      Pretty much.

    • @edie4321
      @edie4321 Год назад +14

      Yes, I assumed that he was killed so that Hollywood could destroy everything he Loved.

    • @astralclub5964
      @astralclub5964 Год назад +14

      Love the “Stop Touching Me Elmo” toy!

    • @donotdiscard4430
      @donotdiscard4430 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@astralclub5964😶 😲 😱 😭

  • @MrKirby2367
    @MrKirby2367 Год назад +30

    Oh my gosh this brings back memories! I remember watching Sesame street in 1970 and in my retrospectascope. It truly was amazing, I’m not entering the Elmo issue as I stopped watching it mid 70s. However the ‘vibe’ it had back then highlights how much the world has changed since then, I was born in 67’ so I’m 57 this year and old Sesame Street did have an amazing impact on me that I only realise today. Every clip of the early stuff was literally my childhood. Now I’m gonna have a little cry.
    Have a great day.

  • @humangarbage6559
    @humangarbage6559 Год назад +103

    I clicked this thinking it would just be someone hating on elmo for a laugh. This actually hit pretty hard, I sort of just stopped thinking about sesame street when I grew up. Seeing Bigbird sing at Jim Henson's funeral is something I never new about and it brought a tear to my eye.

  • @dr.jajabakagah5716
    @dr.jajabakagah5716 Год назад +545

    That’s actually heart breaking to know Sesame Street got moved to HBO, to me that feels like the heart and soul of the show are just completely dead. The main point from the start was to help educate inner city children who might never have access to something like cable, and now the only way to watch it is through a premium subscription

    • @VeggieTalesUnofficial
      @VeggieTalesUnofficial Год назад +48

      The show still airs on PBS, and has hours of free episodes on RUclips.

    • @austinreed7343
      @austinreed7343 Год назад +37

      Not to mention the various woke pandering characters they added shortly after that.

    • @pizzario4986
      @pizzario4986 Год назад +93

      @@austinreed7343What do you mean by that? There’s always been a progressive nature in the show that promoted diversity

    • @austinreed7343
      @austinreed7343 Год назад +33

      @@pizzario4986
      The Muppets used to be color blind, yet nowadays they create all these characters with specific ethnicities.

    • @kieranhair37
      @kieranhair37 Год назад +38

      @@austinreed7343 Citation needed. I've seen a few episodes around the time of the Peter Dinklage episode, and not one muppet talked about their ethnicity. Even if what you're saying is true, I'd just about wager money that it doesn't come up nearly as often as your comment would have people believe.

  • @australiazone3723
    @australiazone3723 Год назад +132

    It felt strange that I - a grown man without children of my own would watch a video about Sesame Street, but I found myself deepening my appreciation for everything Sesame Street achieved and everything children’s entertainment can be.

  • @lflagr
    @lflagr Год назад +23

    I grew up with Sesame Street in the 80s and thought it was funny how Elmo slowly started taking over everything with the show. I always felt like Elmo was the "replacement" for Grover, who basically was disappearing once Elmo became huge.
    I always felt like there was an "old" and "new" Sesame Street, and this video basically nails exactly what I felt but couldn't exactly put my finger on. Great job.

  • @supermariof0521
    @supermariof0521 Год назад +230

    While I don't personally think Elmo was the primary culprit behind "Sesame Street's" downfall, the real downfall to me was the show gearing more towards a strictly preschool sudience shortly after Jim Henson's passing in 1990. Around the same time, Elmo started getting more prominance, so its easy to say Elmo more or less became a scapegoat. Like Elmo at least never outright stopped others from getting episodes to themselves after he became the new mascot. That being said, his movie "The Adventures of Elmo In Grouchland" brings out the worst aspects of his influence on "Sesame Street".

    • @loriki8766
      @loriki8766 Год назад +13

      There's nothing inherently wrong with Elmo - they just commercialized him. The shows producers saw Elmo as a money maker and gave him more and more show time and the show became aimed more and more at toddlers. When I see children's media today, it makes me sick. It's all sloppily illustrated with bight colors and loud noises. Books aren't any better, new children's books have over simplistic illustrations and zero stretch words. Everything is over explained so kids never get a chance to think about things - they are beaten with whatever the "moral of the story" is. No wonder children today have short attention spans, TV, phones, internet and even their books are loud, sloppy, blaring bright, spastic and condescending.

    • @albertocamilomejiaroldan6116
      @albertocamilomejiaroldan6116 9 дней назад

      ​@@loriki8766la única serie buena de hoy en día es bluey y creo que pete el gato

  • @trumpetbob15
    @trumpetbob15 Год назад +776

    A great rundown. I agree with others it may not be Elmo exactly that was the downfall, but i would definitely agree it is what Elmo represented that is the issue. Famously, the original adult cast was purposely treated as equals to prevent anyone from hijacking the show and becoming the "star" of Sesame Street. Unfortunately, they forgot to do the same thing with the Muppets. It became Elmo's World, not Sesame Street!

    • @victorgaminglounge3967
      @victorgaminglounge3967 Год назад +51

      Yeah that's one thing I can agree on. I mean speaking of Elmo's World. Wouldn't it make sense if the OG Elmo's World was its own Show instead of being a segment of Sesame Street, so that way the main show can focus on the other characters as well, while Elmo gets his own show? I mean you could have Season 30 as the Backdoor Pilot to the OG Elmo's World and then making it an actual show after Season 30.

    • @Allanapolis83232
      @Allanapolis83232 Год назад +10

      @@victorgaminglounge3967 I may be thinking the similar thing, but there was Play with Me Sesame, which is basically Elmo’s World, but with Bert and Ernie, Grover and Prairie Dawn and aimed at a much younger audience like 0-3, rather than 2-6.

    • @trumpetbob15
      @trumpetbob15 Год назад +12

      @Allanapolis83232 I don't remember that show but it would definitely be what I would have suggested. Basically, a spin-off dedicated to Elmo but aimed at younger kids while leaving Sesame Steeet for all.

    • @Allanapolis83232
      @Allanapolis83232 Год назад +10

      @@trumpetbob15 There is a SS spin-off called “A Not Too Late Show With Elmo”.

    • @raakone
      @raakone Год назад +31

      The biggest shifts started after Jim Henson's death. Jim Henson specifically DID NOT want this show to be too focused on one character, he didn't want it to be the "Big Bird Show" or the "Bert and Ernie Show" I'm surprised the show didn't end up getting renamed "Elmo's Show." He had the perfect balance. And it seemed they ended up moving towards ideas they speecifically wanted to avoid, became way less spontaneous. And a lot less organic. A lot less...of the show it was intended to be. And sometimes I get the idea that here, the tail is wagging the dog!

  • @coltonk.3086
    @coltonk.3086 Год назад +166

    My favorites were always Ernie and Bert, even as a little kid. They just hung around in their apartment, Ernie cracking a joke or getting into some weirdly charming antics and Bert would be slightly annoyed, but they were always great friends.
    And that was when Elmo's world was in the height of its popularity.

    • @g8807
      @g8807 Год назад +6

      Yeah same! They are not really on much Ernie and Bert.

    • @CharlesChristinaWH
      @CharlesChristinaWH Год назад +12

      Loved their segments and I remember when I found out Jim Henson voiced Ernie I was really excited, I'll always remember seeing him sing "Rubber ducky" while puppeteering Ernie
      It was so awesome to me

    • @albtckl
      @albtckl Год назад +8

      I've never heard it said "Ernie and Bert"...always "Bert and Ernie".

    • @popfanatic1
      @popfanatic1 Год назад +5

      @@albtckl I've always said "Ernie and Bert. All of the Sesame Street albums have them credited as "Ernie and Bert also!

  • @obi-onekenerdi
    @obi-onekenerdi 10 месяцев назад +18

    Poor Frank Oz man. One of the only original muppet performers still working today, has just had to watch it whittle itself away. And he stays all because he feels it’s what one of his best friends would want. And I think that’s true, Jim would want especially this show to continue, but I don’t think he’d want it to continue like this.

  • @danwoodman5505
    @danwoodman5505 Год назад +149

    Glad I got to be a child in the 80's. Elmo as we know him was just beginning when I was 6. He was just another character, not so irritatingly omnipresent. Big Bird will always be the star of the show for me. I really miss the more realistic, working class neighborhood, too.

    • @lukebeakum1316
      @lukebeakum1316 Год назад +1

      Prairie Don wasn't in the new Sesame Street

    • @hgwilt1
      @hgwilt1 Год назад +1

      Me too

    • @barrystewart5946
      @barrystewart5946 2 месяца назад +1

      Old School Sesame Street = Welcoming
      Modern Sesame Street = Woke
      The irony is old school is diverse and not scolding.

  • @homerhat420
    @homerhat420 Год назад +181

    Big bird singing at Jim Henson's funeral makes me cry everytime

  • @rubinhardin4183
    @rubinhardin4183 Год назад +420

    I don't think Elmo ruined Sesame Street, In the earlier seasons he was in he added something different both in age and personality to the other muppets on the show. And he had great comedic and emotional chemistry with the adult characters. The problem is when they decided to make Elmo the star. Because Sesame Street was never supposed to have a star. It's an ensemble show that still manages to have you deeply care about the characters while also being very funny and educational. Which isn't easy. Now Sesame Street still has a lot of characters but they're not evenly fleshed out due to this shift that was never fully formed. I know it was because of Elmo's popularity but Big Bird was also very popular and he never really recieved this same treatment. I like Elmo alot in his earlier seasons because that's when the show was still an ensemble show. I think the problem was once Elmo's World happened and they started to shift the show to be like Elmo's World throughout the whole show. I miss all the other characters. I'm glad they started to bring Grover back more consistently but we barely see a lot of the classic characters. Zoe even barely has any screentime now if it's not to bring back the Rocco conflict. Zoe used to be way more fleshed out besides a source of anger for Elmo. It feels like a lot of the characters now exist because of their relationships to Elmo. And they've have had a lot of their depth removed. Thank you for talking about this in such a thoughtful way.

    • @colleen4ever
      @colleen4ever Год назад +8

      They've really dumbed Grover down!

    • @MrMariosonicman
      @MrMariosonicman Год назад +10

      when I was a kid, I always felt like big bird was the star of the show. I always loved watching the show just to see big bird interact with someone. its a shame to hear that they arnt on the show much anymore due to it being all about elmo.

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +2

      ⁠@@MrMariosonicmanbecause Big Bird really was the star of the show, that’s why you felt that way 😉
      Now, granted I had already grown out of it by the time Elmo became the star. I have to admit that it wasn’t the same even if it was a “positive change” so to speak.

    • @joshuajackson3485
      @joshuajackson3485 7 месяцев назад

      Elmo took over the show since 1999 and that's crazy

    • @rubinhardin4183
      @rubinhardin4183 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@joshuajackson3485 that's not even true. While I agree that the length of elmo's world was ridiculous Big Bird had alot of episodes still focused on him in the late 90s and early 2000s. They started to completely remove Big Bird from significant portions of the season starting in the late 2000s early 2010s. And part of that which Caroll Spinney talked about was that he was getting older and his health was getting worse and while he wanted to be on sesame street the rest of his life being the sole main character with another major puppet was alot on him. He talked about in countless interviews and in the documentary that WAS ABOUT HIM, that he was happy to give the Spotlight to Elmo because it allowed him to still be apart of the show while it being less on his body. Which was entirely reasonable for him to say. While I get that we all grew up with and love Big Bird I wish people would do more research before acting like this was some kind of Hostile takeover that left Caroll Spinney out of a job.. While I personally don't get why they don't give Big Bird more episodes now that Matt Vogel is playing Big Bird I do understand why Big Bird got less focus during that time.

  • @souldeep808
    @souldeep808 11 месяцев назад +20

    That was an AWESOME explanation of the original Sesame St. I grew up with Maria, Bob, and Gordon. Grover is/was my favorite muppet. He is the one who made me laugh the most!!! The "Near and Far" explanation where he runs back and forth STILL makes me giggle. We can't forget Super Grover!! I felt a lot of the songs had actual feeling and warmth to them. They were fun and goofy but still well done. I agree wholeheartedly with your take on old vs new.

    • @silajeep1
      @silajeep1 11 месяцев назад +1

      Same! Near.......huff puff run.....far..... Repeat! Grover was definitely the funniest character in the show. Bring back Grover!!!

  • @OcpCommunications
    @OcpCommunications Год назад +309

    What a phenomenal video. And that big bird clip where he says goodbye to Jim broke me down to tears. What a powerful and poignant moment that was.

    • @EntertainTheElk
      @EntertainTheElk  Год назад +33

      Thank you!

    • @victorgaminglounge3967
      @victorgaminglounge3967 Год назад +7

      Hey Mike I didn't expect to see you in the comment section. And I agree at least that moment where Big Bird says Goodbye to Jim is a much better way of tugging the heartstrings to the audience then what Jason Reitman did with Harold Ramis and Egon in Ghostbusters: Afterlife. Which BTW I'm gonna be uploading my review/rant on that film for your friend Matt AKA Ramboraph4life, and I do mention you in the video regarding one of the points you make in your review/rant on that movie.
      Also have you seen the Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire trailer yet? If so what do you think of it?

    • @syntheticsleep
      @syntheticsleep Год назад +8

      @@EntertainTheElk I had never seen that before and it absolutely wrecked me.

    • @SteveL-qw4rp
      @SteveL-qw4rp Год назад +7

      to me I'm gonna pretend that season 39 is the final season of sesame street

  • @Demonskunk
    @Demonskunk Год назад +104

    My mom is pissed that they removed all those episodes. She's been babysitting, and the kids LOVE sesame street. But all they have is what feels like a small handfull of bite sized episodes.
    I still think it's a lot better than most other children's shows, though, and my parents are even learning things while they watch.

    • @SMA2343
      @SMA2343 Год назад +8

      I honestly believe it’s because Kermit is in the episodes. He’s owned by Disney. And I’m sure Disney doesn’t want to share Kermit, even if it was for Sesame Street.
      Jim Henson fought tooth and nail in the acquisition for only his muppets. No Sesame Street muppets at all.

    • @FortWhenTeaThyme
      @FortWhenTeaThyme Год назад +5

      Yar har fiddle dee dee.

  • @SLagonia
    @SLagonia Год назад +85

    The beauty of the internet is that I have been able to watch classic Sesame Street with my children without needing to deal with the new stuff at all. For anyone who thinks children can't relate to those older episodes - They can absolutely relate to them. They have a harder time with the modern episodes, actually.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +23

      By trying to copy the competition, they threw away the thing that made them unique.
      See also: Walt Disney Feature Animation

    • @assassin8636
      @assassin8636 Год назад

      ​@@Attmaynot really to be honest

    • @marmar3530
      @marmar3530 Год назад +3

      @@assassin8636 Nah they have a point.

    • @staringatthesun861
      @staringatthesun861 Год назад +4

      Where are all the classic episodes? I've found bits and pieces, but where are the complete old seasons?

    • @Maspets
      @Maspets 11 месяцев назад

      @SLagonia That's bull and you know it.

  • @alphaclub1388
    @alphaclub1388 2 месяца назад +6

    He basically became the Main character like Urkel with Family Matters because Elmo overshadowed Big Bird who was on the show since episode 1

  • @sy_alty
    @sy_alty Год назад +319

    Finally someone with an insightful critique on modern Sesame Street. The show is basically unwatchable for adults now. By catering to current day children, there's a need for Elmo and Abby to hog up 80% of the screentime to keep up with their increasingly short attention spans. Can't have slow-paced sketches or educational sections anymore, too boring for kids! Also no more old-school muppets like Kermit, Oscar or even Grover cause kids can't relate to them!
    Bluey is now the new go-to show for both kids and adults imo

    • @colleen4ever
      @colleen4ever Год назад +7

      Grover still has his own segments of the show.

    • @JarrodBaniqued
      @JarrodBaniqued Год назад +40

      I joked to myself watching this that Kermit was a champion of journalistic integrity on the show, and now look where his absence led us misinformation-wise

    • @qwegol1
      @qwegol1 Год назад +9

      all kids shows have a fall, whether they’re educational or not, just look at spongebob and the fairly oddparents to see the gravel they feed to everyone

    • @PamperedDuchess
      @PamperedDuchess Год назад +48

      It's not that kids have shorter attention spans. It's that executives meddle in everything and manufacture shorter attention spans to fuel impulsive consumerism.

    • @racheldobbs2028
      @racheldobbs2028 Год назад +16

      @@JarrodBaniqued He was! And Grover was a hilarious introduction to the pitfalls of working in customer service as a waiter! 😅

  • @fjpoggemann
    @fjpoggemann Год назад +44

    You're seriously making me well up with nostalgia. I watched nearly every day in the late 70s. I learned basic reading from Sesame Street and the Electric Company. The adults were just showing healthy, decent, ethical people who were trying to do the right thing for each other.

  • @BerlinTrainStation1
    @BerlinTrainStation1 Год назад +634

    I think this video reveals what makes Bluey so beloved. It's as much for children as adults, it doesn't avoid difficult conversations, and it has adults making mistakes and owning them. I think Bluey's massive popularity speaks to this generational divide in kids shows.

    • @princesspikachu3915
      @princesspikachu3915 Год назад +64

      And Bluey has an even shorter run time of around 7 and a half minutes per episode. It tackles difficult conversations. And instead of Elmo we get Muffin. 😁

    • @BerlinTrainStation1
      @BerlinTrainStation1 Год назад +25

      @@princesspikachu3915 I've never considered the parallel of Muffin and Elmo but my goodness is that accurate!

    • @Fideothedog2021
      @Fideothedog2021 Год назад +9

      @@BerlinTrainStation1they’re both even the same age!

    • @BadgerOfTheSea
      @BadgerOfTheSea Год назад +11

      But why should a kids show be for adults? Why can't children have something for themselves?

    • @davidhollenshead4892
      @davidhollenshead4892 Год назад +38

      @@BadgerOfTheSea It could be for both adults & children, in the sense that parents learned from the early show too, being young parents perhaps raising their first child. But if "a kids show" isn't educational, then it isn't for children either...

  • @TheColleenDabeanShow
    @TheColleenDabeanShow 8 месяцев назад +8

    I loved the grittiness of old Sesame Street. You could find the same aesthetic in the background of Mad Magazine illustrations. A lot of my 3D sets for my puppet show use a texture on the walls that I called 'grunge wall', trying to keep that funkiness alive.

  • @rirururu4697
    @rirururu4697 Год назад +265

    Elmo's World should've become its own show and left Sesame Street alone. They would've gotten their loud and energetic show for preschoolers while still maintaining their main show aimed at families.

    • @drewt1717
      @drewt1717 Год назад +3

      Heck yea... then at least I would know how long I needed to keep the earplugs in.. 😂

    • @RedCroissantGames
      @RedCroissantGames Год назад +4

      we're all in his world now...
      (tickle me elmo ate my mom btw)

    • @yrooxrksvi7142
      @yrooxrksvi7142 Год назад +4

      What's weird is that outside of the US (I'm from Italy), Elmo's World was basically marketed as a standalone show, like a spin-off to the Muppets.

    • @ShenDoodles
      @ShenDoodles Год назад

      @@yrooxrksvi7142 I remember it being that way.

    • @radfatdaddy4169
      @radfatdaddy4169 Год назад

      ​@@RedCroissantGames My dad, and I used my little sister's tickle me Elmo for target practice. What was really funny, was every time he got hit he would do his whole " Hahaha hahaha That Tickles!"

  • @honesto4696
    @honesto4696 Год назад +112

    Along with Elmo taking most of the spotlight, one of my greatest disappointments with modern day Sesame Street, is the almost complete removal of Herry monster. I loved how as a child, he demonstrated the importance of gentleness. I appreciate him even more today, now that I have matured into a rather large hairy fellow myself, who appreciates not only gentleness, but kindness overall.

    • @Thomperfan
      @Thomperfan Год назад +4

      No, Herry's still around. He's nowhere near as frequent as he used to be, but they haven't completely removed him.

    • @honesto4696
      @honesto4696 Год назад +3

      Considering his past on the show, he should have remained a consistent mainstay.@@Thomperfan

    • @obtusedan
      @obtusedan Год назад +4

      Herry hasn't been a regular since like the 90s dude

    • @Thomperfan
      @Thomperfan Год назад +1

      @@obtusedan Yeah, but he still appears in some 2000 and 2010 episodes.

    • @honesto4696
      @honesto4696 Год назад +2

      @@obtusedan Yep. But they've still maintained Muppets that go all the way back to Sesame Street's premiere in 1969.

  • @joebove4
    @joebove4 Год назад +114

    I’ve got a three year old now myself, and like you, that’s brought me back to Sesame Street. And it’s a shame that what made the show great is all but gone. Too many animated segments, too many Muppets that could have been human performers, and too much focus on Elmo and Abby (sometimes Cookie Monster), leaving the rest of the characters no guarantee that they’ll even be in an episode at all. And no, I don’t count the filler songs that are in every episode as appearances.
    It’s sad to see a new episode of Sesame Street, make it to the credits, and find that Bert and Ernie weren’t there. That Big Bird made a token appearance to say “hey, is that Cookie Monster’s food truck?” to Elmo.
    It’s too focused on marketability, on selling Sesame Street as a product rather than an edutainment program. The goal now seems to be to sell toys and apparel, to keep a brand alive and profitable.

    • @phillipgalan660
      @phillipgalan660 Год назад

      I was 3 in '69 and loved watching Sesame Street. Thanks for the memories.

    • @Tehgj385
      @Tehgj385 Год назад +1

      Yah, most human characters now are very forgettable, dull, and shallow.

  • @formerevolutionist
    @formerevolutionist 11 месяцев назад +7

    I was born in 1972, so I basically grew up watching Sesame Street. That is where I first learned the alphabet, numbers, and even a little Spanish. As a boy from a small Nebraskan town, I almost never saw anyone who wasn't white. This show helped me see blacks and Latinos as just normal people. I also liked the adults. They were friendly, caring, and trustworthy. One of my favorite characters was Ernie. Ernie was nothing without Bert, though. They played the wacky/straight comedy duo very well. I love how the Muppets each had their own voices and personalities. That made them seem less like puppets and more like characters in their own right.

  • @Tolly7249
    @Tolly7249 Год назад +148

    I miss the old Sesame Street. I was a kid in the 80s and the show was a hit with my entire family, especially my parents. I remember that saxophone bit with great love! I watched it all through the 90s and into the 2000s until the series started changing and I couldn't bear to watch everything I'd grown up with being slowly torn away.

    • @Demiurge13
      @Demiurge13 Год назад +6

      same, i would watch a lot of pbs shows back to back like sesame street, reading rainbow, mr rogers neighborhood, square 1, 321 contact. Ah memories

    • @fkoff5150
      @fkoff5150 Год назад

      FUNNY HOW EVERYONE WAS INCLUDED IN THE 80-90S REMEMBER FAMILY MATTERS??
      SAD TO SEE RICH AND POWERFUL DIVIDE US LIKE THIS. RICH OF ALL BACKGROUNDS SIT TOGETHER LAUGH AND TELL US THAT WE HATE EACH OTHER. WHEN IS USA GOING TO WAKE UP??? EXAMPLE: LABRON DONT HATE WHITES AND ASIANS..THATS HOW HE GOT HIS $$.... BUT HE SURE WANTS YOU TOO HATE THEM!! ITS CALLED PULLING THE LADDER UP😘😘

    • @comkver
      @comkver Год назад +3

      Same, I think I was still watching Sesame Street up until Jr High before Elmo took over and then I watched an episode. It's so different from what I had watched it definitely wasn't the smart, musical or exploratory like before. I remember watching the dance group do a type of ethnic dance. I remember watching their music video of Wet Paint. The elevator counting the floors. And this new Sesame Street was Elmo's world which is really cute and all but I can only see Elmo for so long.

    • @solouno2280
      @solouno2280 11 месяцев назад +1

      my favorite elmo shot was the one when Elmo wanted to be THERE instead of HERE

    • @freepilot7732
      @freepilot7732 11 месяцев назад

      I was born in the late 70's. So I agree with you message all the way. Especially the saxophone. Later I Brendan's a player. Interesting.

  • @CrazyMazapan
    @CrazyMazapan Год назад +127

    I still sing "Oh, everyone makes mistakes. Oh, yes they do." in Big Bird's voice everytime I make one. Old Sesame Street was simply fantastic. When I was a baby, my parents moved from Argentina to the US for a few years. My mother didn't know a word of English, but she learned with us, watching Sesame Street. Old Sesame Street was creative, original and so fun to watch. And they didn't baby you. I appreciated that even back then.

    • @socalautisticman1975
      @socalautisticman1975 11 месяцев назад

      I lived in Argentina🇦🇷
      I'm US born mexican race,I grew up there in Argentina (long story), went to school there and perfected my español (they call "castellano") there.
      I still use "che" with spanish speaking people, argentino or not.

  • @SMA2343
    @SMA2343 Год назад +311

    Yeah Frank Oz has a point. It’s no longer a kid’s show based about education. And now it’s a kid’s show based about entertainment that has education.
    I mean, it’s still way better than anything else on TV.

    • @BeyondDaX
      @BeyondDaX Год назад +22

      But that's not saying much these days

    • @EntertainTheElk
      @EntertainTheElk  Год назад +92

      Check out Bluey. Probably the best kid show going right now

    • @EWOODJ
      @EWOODJ Год назад +2

      That's what I thought early Sesame Street was.

    • @rantingrodent416
      @rantingrodent416 Год назад +10

      Bubble Guppies was superior to modern Sesame Street, in my experience, if you're talking about the youngest age range.

    • @SuaNam08
      @SuaNam08 Год назад +18

      I feel like Bluey is the most similar kids show to old Sesame Street now, in terms of it being loved by adults too and teaching children about some more emotionally complex topics.

  • @nisa9327
    @nisa9327 2 месяца назад +5

    I’m only 20. I grew up watching Elmo, Grover as Super Grover and Abby Cadabby gaining more and more importance in the franchise. Elmo’s world was my favorite part of the show, I loved Mr.Noodle, Elmo’s goldfish, and watching Elmo’s emails. Very fun. Also Elmo’s feud with Rocco always was funny too.

  • @kevstacey8639
    @kevstacey8639 Год назад +264

    This sure took me back. I'm old enough to remember Sesame Street pre-Elmo, and the ongoing "There's no such thing as a Snufflupagus" storyline; I can also vaguely remember Mr. Hooper. The older episodes are much more interesting on multiple levels.

    • @tyeishaleisure
      @tyeishaleisure Год назад +14

      I had some of the Mr. Hooper episodes on tape due to that being the version that my brother and sister grew up with. You’re right totally different. The show felt way more genuine as well. This current version of Sesame Street just feels commercial and corporal and just doesn’t have any heart in it. I’m so curious what Jim Hansen would’ve thought if he lived to see this current version. He definitely wouldn’t like that. It’s behind a pay wall.

    • @jeancunha6796
      @jeancunha6796 Год назад +8

      Same, I loved Sesame Street as a kid. I loved watching the weatherman, Kermit, the piano player! Grover was my all time fav.

    • @bnic9471
      @bnic9471 Год назад +6

      I actually saw the pilot of Sesame Street as a little kid and aged out of it way before Elmo showed up. Checking in when my son was little, it was all Elmo and super-annoying. Fortunately, my son didn't like it, either.

    • @johnmanno2052
      @johnmanno2052 Год назад +3

      ​@@bnic9471 Me too!! I remember that

    • @Demiurge13
      @Demiurge13 Год назад +5

      same, grew up watching sesame street in the 80s

  • @Undomaranel
    @Undomaranel Год назад +3493

    So Elmo didn't ruin Sesame Street. The writer's immaturity in helping to curtail a 3yo's attitudes was the issue.

    • @shadow51090
      @shadow51090 Год назад +420

      What's my take away. I think the argument is that the writers used Elmo as a conduit for their shift in writing style. It's sad to see, but not entirely surprising Sesame Street is over 50 years old that this point. The writers room has probably changed fully multiple times and now they're competing in the modern age where people have so much access to all kinds of entertainment educational or otherwise.
      Being on HBO/Warner Bros/Discovery now instead of PBS also means they have to help bring a profit to justify being made. Which means appealing to the lowest common denominator.

    • @BeyondDaX
      @BeyondDaX Год назад +161

      Not just the writers but today's society as a whole including the desire for more money once it moved from PBS to HBO. So yes, in some way Elmo did ruin it but wasn't solely responsible. But yeah what the previous responder already pointed out.

    • @christianryan7207
      @christianryan7207 Год назад +13

      Yup.

    • @Tudomummeum
      @Tudomummeum Год назад +4

      = Boomer parents 😁

    • @xxcoopcoopxx
      @xxcoopcoopxx Год назад

      Actually it's the Ebs and Flows of life.
      Nothing last forever.
      From here to the end of the Universe, Seaseme St. is not going to do well for kids.
      The conspiracy theories are right, the shadow of what it was turns it into a brainwashing device.
      Order the old Seaseme Street and keep those alive. Let the degenerate version die and preserve the golden times and share it with others.

  • @HeyitsBri_
    @HeyitsBri_ Год назад +108

    I love how people are like “Well Elmo didn’t do it exactly, it was the writers/production/whatever” like Elmo isn’t literally a just a puppet

    • @MarvinHartmann452
      @MarvinHartmann452 Год назад +10

      Elmo is very disappointed with your comment.

    • @AhsimNreiziev
      @AhsimNreiziev Год назад +1

      @@MarvinHartmann452 I have to say, that feels more like The Boulder than like Elmo to me.

  • @_Nyx_
    @_Nyx_ 4 дня назад +1

    Grover is my favorite, when I was young I had several golden books staring grover. Two of them in particular were amazing! They were called "There's a Monster at The End of This Book" and "There's Another Monster at The End of This Book" where through out each Grover is terrified of this monster mentioned in the title, and does everything he can to stop you turning pages and getting to the end of the books thus meeting this monster. Stappling, paperclipping, gluing, building brick walls, all manner of crazy 4th wall breaking fun. Only to find out the monster was actually Grover all along, joined by Elmo in the second book (and being the "another monster" in the second title).

  • @M567dk
    @M567dk Год назад +124

    Let me first say that I get what you are saying. Believe me I do. I was born in 87 and looking back on the show now it felt like it has lost some of its edge just to say relevant in the changing times we live in. Honestly, I think Sesame Street needs more human adults in the show to remember us of the unique balance between the human cast and the Muppet cast of characters. Maybe a refocus on what original work and trying to make it work for modern audiences of today.

    • @EntertainTheElk
      @EntertainTheElk  Год назад +12

      Agreed!

    • @colleen4ever
      @colleen4ever Год назад +1

      Yeah, did ya see the Macy's Parade Float this year? I think there were only 2 adults riding on it! That's all we got now, just 2! And they don;t even appear in every ep!

  • @coreyg2177
    @coreyg2177 Год назад +81

    Wow, I am glad they changed Snufffy's eyes. Holy crap those first eyes were terrifying.

  • @thecreatedvoid117
    @thecreatedvoid117 Год назад +169

    I will never forget the Elmo toy craze of the 90’s. I remember my sister desperately trying to find one for my nephew when they were sold out everywhere.

    • @shadowstalker1515
      @shadowstalker1515 Год назад +13

      I had a friend in middle school that was so obsessed with Elmo to the point that he brought his Tickle Me Elmo doll (shudders) to school with him and even talked in the Elmo voice. It was my first experience with cringe and, sadly, ruined the whole image of Sesame Street for me. Now, 30 years later, Elmo is one of my two year old’s favorite muppets and I’m even able to hear the Elmo voice without dying of cringe. I actually think of my son now when I hear the Elmo voice so it’s even become a little endearing.

    • @thecreatedvoid117
      @thecreatedvoid117 Год назад +9

      @@shadowstalker1515 that’s what it was - Tickle Me Elmo.
      Hey I’m glad you were able to find a way to have a positive link to the voice. 🙂

    • @supme7558
      @supme7558 Год назад +4

      Thats when it died in my book

    • @papabird4425
      @papabird4425 Год назад +3

      This is what happens when you don't explain to children what marketing propaganda is.

    • @Zizumia
      @Zizumia Год назад

      I got a Tickle Me Elmo the year it dropped. Apparently my aunt dedicated a lot of time to get it. My mom still has it and it still works.

  • @bandicootcollector
    @bandicootcollector 3 месяца назад +4

    The Count Von Count will always be my favourite. He's hilarious, quirky, and he has such a gorgeous aesthetic. HA HA HAA!

  • @benjaminkellog7311
    @benjaminkellog7311 Год назад +88

    Cookie Monster was the one I gravitated to early on. The voice, the fixation, the subtle marketing of a healthy diet through a convincing Trojan horse, he had it all. Count von Count is also a personal fave, and I'm glad to see he's still pushing early numeracy to this day.
    I didn't think Elmo was a bad character (and really, reaching three year olds as well as sixes helped the show serve a much bigger audience), but I do remember being a bit miffed when "Elmo's World" took over the last half-hour in '98, then caused the rest of the show to be divided into short character-specific chunks a few years later, which the HBO shortening greatly exacerbated. The show really lost its original voice once every segment started sounding like badly written "Blue's Clues."
    Also, as a viewer woth autism, it's been nice to see Julia be such a prominent character, but she has a whole host of problems related to how she was introduced and marketed that are a fascinating rabbit hole of wrongness.

    • @NitroIndigo
      @NitroIndigo Год назад

      What were the issues with Julia?

    • @tamagotchiplanet27
      @tamagotchiplanet27 Год назад +8

      Elmo was my favourite as a baby, but Blue's Clues became my favourite show (and still is) since I was just old enough to be aware of things. As an autistic person, the introduction of Julia made me interested in Sesame Street again, although it's incredibly upsetting how they partnered with Autism Speaks. Also, as much as I think Elmo is adorable, it seems he made the target audience shift from Kindergarten/primary school down to babies/toddlers.
      Edit: Regarding Blue's Clues, wasn't Blue's Room basically Nick Jr.'s attempt at making something similar to Elmo's World? I know that many Steve-era fans didn't like Blue's Room, but I still love it and was upset when it ended after 2 seasons.

    • @raydgreenwald7788
      @raydgreenwald7788 Год назад +6

      @@NitroIndigoshe became a mascot for Autism Speaks

    • @CharlesChristinaWH
      @CharlesChristinaWH Год назад

      Cookie monster was my favorite as a kid , I even had my bed design of him and every type of action figure and including stuffed animals
      Then Tully, Grover, Oscar, Big Bird and Snuffy
      And I loved the sarcastic green bald puppet with the mustache that always broke the fourth wall with his mouth smushed in lol😂

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +2

      I hate to say this, but I lost a lot of respect for the show after they partnered with Autism Speaks.
      We also need to talk about the six years that Buffy Sainte Marie was on the show in light of her claim to be a Native American being called into question along with her claims of being a CSA survivor. Nobody who lies about something like that belongs on a children’s television show. Her family told Children’s Television Workshop she was a pretendian, but she threatened her brother with that scurrilous lie, and they believed her!

  • @punkysnarks
    @punkysnarks Год назад +32

    As a 2000's kid, I remember when Sesame Street was an hour long and full of content. Seeing it chopped down to twenty minutes, majority of it taken by Elmo, no classic segments recycled, full of stock pop culture parodies, and not even on PBS anymore, is really disheartening. And it's a cold feeling to think I was the last generation to have entertainment that was more than all stimulation, no substance.

  • @Ciborium
    @Ciborium Год назад +22

    But seriously... When I was a kid, Sesame Street and The Electric Company ("HEY YOU GUYS!") were staples of my childhood. I don't remember much at all from those early years, but I know I watched them.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +3

      The fact that they helped enable Bill Cosby to do terrible things should have come back to haunt them more than it did once those terrible things came to light.

  • @enigmalfidelity
    @enigmalfidelity Год назад +7

    Lol
    Just gonna skip right past the Elmo puppeteers arrest?
    When you said "all was safe on set..."
    Yeah.. no it wasn't.
    Lol.

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield Год назад

      The guy who played David bit someone on set.
      This happened years after he caved in a woman's skull with an iron.

    • @josephwright5921
      @josephwright5921 11 месяцев назад

      @@1978garfieldWhat are you talking about?

    • @sarahpalmer411
      @sarahpalmer411 11 месяцев назад

      @@1978garfieldDavid?

    • @1978garfield
      @1978garfield 11 месяцев назад

      @@sarahpalmer411 search northern calloway wikipedia
      Sorry for ruining your childhood.
      I like to think David didn't do anything wrong, just the actor that played him.

  • @patrickwilliams3108
    @patrickwilliams3108 Год назад +104

    I was 16 in 1969 and found Sesame Street to be a relaxing way of winding down after school. My fave is, and always was, Grover.

    • @danielprietog
      @danielprietog 11 месяцев назад +3

      I love him as well. There are two very important reasons: 1. He plays the guitar in the park. 2. He does not use abbreviations.

    • @metaltwister2536
      @metaltwister2536 11 месяцев назад +3

      Haha, that was my secret mental hideaway. It felt welcoming and safe. My favorite was The Count. Even a sinister character can grow into a benevolent and useful member of the community. No one was evil just misunderstood. Patience, empathy and caring played integral roles in developing healthy behavior where even a vampire was an accepted part of the community.

    • @reverbscherzo7850
      @reverbscherzo7850 11 месяцев назад

      Grover was my favorite, too. I only experienced Elmo through my niece, but I was so disappointed, because I thought they had replaced Grover with Elmo.

    • @formerevolutionist
      @formerevolutionist 11 месяцев назад +3

      I loved most of the characters, but my favorites were Bert & Ernie. They were a great wacky/straight comedy duo. Ernie's antics would not be as funny without Bert's irritated reactions to them.

    • @lit3home
      @lit3home 6 месяцев назад

      I love that. I'm 19 and I still watch sesame street for that exact reason.

  • @mk_wizard
    @mk_wizard Год назад +127

    The sad part is... I love Elmo and don't blame him. It's the fault of the execs for milking him for all he was worth.

    • @answerman9933
      @answerman9933 Год назад +2

      How can an inanimate object be blame?

    • @SarahNGeti
      @SarahNGeti Год назад +5

      Blame Canada

    • @corvus1970
      @corvus1970 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@SarahNGeti "It's not even a real country anyway!"

  • @cerrida82
    @cerrida82 Год назад +135

    Elmo started the downward trajectory, sure, but his early appearances weren't all bad. There are plenty of times there characters interact with him as a 3yo, teaching him some skills like the song One Fine Face.
    What really did it for me was Abby. Once they decided to create a literal fairy to appeal specifically to the girls and solves all of her problems with magic, they showed they cared more about marketing to children than teaching them

    • @assassin8636
      @assassin8636 Год назад +2

      This is not true they still do teaching right?

    • @marmar3530
      @marmar3530 Год назад +3

      Imagine disliking Abby.

    • @jhillst
      @jhillst Год назад +3

      My most hated character is Baby Bear.

    • @garblegarble8065
      @garblegarble8065 Год назад +12

      Have you actually watched an episode with Abby? Typically her magic BACKFIRES, and the characters need to use real world skills to solve the mess she made.

    • @101jir
      @101jir Год назад

      After thinking about what character I particularly dislike, I am really curious whether anyone actually does have an issue with Grover. I can see how Oscar could be off-putting, Ernie can be a bit of a bully, Bert is a bit of a stick in the mud, this video of course is about Elmo, but I can't think of any reason a person would take issue with Grover, and now I am curious if there is a reason.

  • @cloverburn
    @cloverburn 4 дня назад +1

    What you said about it being based on an actual New York street setting gives new meaning to that shirt they have with sesame Street character that says "raised on the street" ngl

  • @missingaria2503
    @missingaria2503 Год назад +42

    Old school Sesame Street is the reason why I'm 37 and STILL can't get that gd "If I could only paddle like a doggy" song out of my head.
    In all seriousness though, watching all the old clips you put in here really sparked some great memories. I was only ever allowed to watch PBS as a kid.

    • @WTFG78
      @WTFG78 Год назад +1

      No river too wide, or lake too deep...

    • @noonesishome
      @noonesishome Год назад +1

      I'll paddle my way to youuuu, I grew up near the ocean, that's my go-to swimming song when I go to the beach, while doggy paddling

    • @spiderjeranimo4992
      @spiderjeranimo4992 Год назад +2

      I still get the pinball number count song pop into my head, its quite a tune.

  • @PuppetsByPalmieri
    @PuppetsByPalmieri Год назад +130

    Big Bird is one of the primary reasons I became a puppeteer. The idea that puppets could really be there with you and live alongside us in our world. It’s kept me loving the art form ever since.

    • @Mutski1579
      @Mutski1579 Год назад +1

      Remember "Who Framed Roger Rabbit"?.
      We need to make that movie, but also add puppets. 3 species film. :)

    • @claytonbouldin9381
      @claytonbouldin9381 Год назад +3

      If you're ever in Atlanta you need to visit the Puppetry Museum. They have a Big Bird there along with many others from Jim Henson's creature shop. You won't be disappointed.

    • @PuppetsByPalmieri
      @PuppetsByPalmieri Год назад

      @@claytonbouldin9381 I’ve actually performed there a couple times as part of a guest company of artists! It’s a beautiful exhibit and I always love visiting that city in general.

    • @youtubecensors5419
      @youtubecensors5419 Год назад +1

      Punch and Judy fan checking in! I have a set of the puppets, can talk with a swazzle, and have attended May Fayre in London multiple times. Never performed though. So rare to meet a puppeteer, thanks for keeping the art alive!

  • @arthurdurham
    @arthurdurham Год назад +112

    I didn't expect to see a takedown of a beloved fictional children's TV show character today, but here we are.

  • @thatrandomredengine9430
    @thatrandomredengine9430 4 месяца назад +2

    “Elmo didn’t kill Sesame Street, WOKENESS killed Sesame Street!”

  • @Shorty_Lickens
    @Shorty_Lickens Год назад +30

    God damn i'm old.
    Elmo wasnt even there when I left Sesame Street.

  • @michaelmaurer6923
    @michaelmaurer6923 Год назад +36

    Don't forget just how integral Joe Raposo's music was to the early years of Sesame Street!

    • @CSGraves
      @CSGraves Год назад +4

      Yes!
      Old school Sesame Street was also the first exposure many of us had to Philip Glass via the 'Geometry of Circles' animated segments.

    • @Deviantygr
      @Deviantygr Год назад

      AND Bud Luckey! "The Alligator King - #7" and "The Ladybugs Picnic - #12" were 2 of my favorites

  • @drockwell1583
    @drockwell1583 Год назад +23

    So basically sesame Street went through gentrification and the government uses Elmo as a figure head.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +1

      Pretty much.

  • @ddoyle11
    @ddoyle11 Год назад +19

    To me, Elmo reduced what was a vehicle for children to explore and understand a big and complex world into a medium for the satisfaction of infantile self will. He wasn't the only one, but the first in a string of characters who represented the show's shift from an educational tool into something that validated the mindset of doting parents and placated children.

  • @MTech74
    @MTech74 Год назад +81

    Sesame Street in the 70s and 80s was fantastic and unforgettable. The same certainly cannot be said of today’s version.

  • @danieldean8953
    @danieldean8953 Год назад +42

    I was born in ‘79, and I’m so glad I lived the classic years of Sesame Street. This video hit me in the nostalgia…got kinda teary if I’m being honest

    • @nailsarecruel
      @nailsarecruel Год назад +1

      Same birth year, same sentiment. Worse yet, the first two Sesame Street grownups shown in the video aren't with us anymore. Tears were shed.

    • @TravelingBibliophile
      @TravelingBibliophile Год назад +4

      Same age and feelings here. I remember watching it as a kid, I always laughed at how Grover the waiter never got the poor guy’s order right. I started tearing up both at the Mr. Hooper death explanation, but even more so at the clip of Big Bird singing at Jim Hanson’s funeral.

    • @zacharyfindlay-maddox171
      @zacharyfindlay-maddox171 Год назад +2

      I was born in '81, and I totally agree!

  • @cacadodo666
    @cacadodo666 Год назад +18

    This is a wonderful evaluation Ive tried to convey to people. So great. There was a sense of gravitas to old SS.
    Im 50 and grew up with kermit as kind of SS’s emissary. He was like a dad, silly, sarcastic, kind, frustrated, pensive, serious, wise, empathetic, level headed, but always comforting and someone to look up to, especially towards maturitty. Elmo totally engrained infantalization in the show.

  • @yellowSmileyFacee
    @yellowSmileyFacee Год назад +2

    The beauty contrast between white kids and black kids is stark and absolute.
    Putting them side by side as this video does makes that shockingly clear. 4:24 - 4:30 and 4:39
    It's amazing we've expanded human rights and moral standards, but we should not forget that beauty is also one of the highest values of humanity, and that should be one of the main goals to achieving a world utopia. We're going backwards, not forwards by abandoning the pursuit of human beauty. Abandoning Eugenics was a mistake.

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob 2 дня назад

      Pin this comment this person neees to be publicly shamed because ain't no way you just said some wack garbage like that in public

    • @yellowSmileyFacee
      @yellowSmileyFacee 2 дня назад

      @@zyaicob Say one thing about my statement that was wrong. Being offended is not an argument. Our goal should be the pursuit of perfect goodness, and beauty is an aspect of that perfect goodness that inspires, awes, and gives life vibrancy.

  • @gewhiz1494
    @gewhiz1494 Год назад +106

    I grew up with early seasame street. My parents didn’t and I think it shows a lot about how our world views differ. The educators who made this show possible were ground breaking and being a father myself I have yet to see another show that teaches kids numbers and letters or how to treat others better. Even Bluey (which we all love here) falls short of the benchmark Seasame Street set.

  • @timfischer
    @timfischer Год назад +37

    As a kid growing up in a tiny town in rural Iowa, the "city street" setting was more foreign to me than all the crazy monsters lol.

    • @mariecarie1
      @mariecarie1 11 месяцев назад +1

      Haha same! I had no concept of a city block or apartment building as a kid, so I never really knew where everyone lived 😂

  • @jamie1602
    @jamie1602 Год назад +43

    Elmo does have segments where he has a lot more depth to him. Yes, it's on a young child's level, but it's always done well. Elmo does get a moment to express his confusion when his uncle dies and honestly, I felt like that was fantastic. When paired with Big Bird's heartbreak over Mr. Hooper, I think both segments show two ways children can perceive death. But then we have the sudden whiplash where Elmo is back to where he is again. Sure, three year olds can give you whiplash, but if you have a three year old or you've spent copious amounts of time with them, it's a specific kind of whiplash they give you. This kind? It's uneven writing, and the kind that says that you're underestimating your demographic either on purpose or because you have someone breathing down your neck.
    This is why, even as a child, I hated Elmo. He feels like he's insulting my intelligence at every step. As an adult he's just a painful reminder of being insulted as a child. He can't keep his own personality together. Is he a brat? Is he the original Calliou? Or is he just a three year old learning? Pick one and stop making my head hurt. It's why I preferred Big Bird and Grover. Even when Big Bird had moments, it was meant as a moment to grow and learn. And even the parents watching with a child could also learn something, too. It's great to look back on Big Bird centric segments and watch the human cast help him learn how to manage his emotions and explain what he's feeling and why. Honestly we could use this today. They tell you why you shouldn't take your emotions out on a person (or in this case I'm thinking of, a baby) but changes are hard and you're going to feel pretty crappy!
    I also loved the human cast. Luis and Maria were couple goals, but I also loved Gordon and Susan. Miles made me feel normal because I was adopted. Linda helped me learn a few signs so I could communicate with my cousin when he was still non verbal. It's why I'm partial to Alan these days. He's all we have left of what the old days were and I fear what might happen when he's taken from us. We wouldn't just have the humans leading the "children" muppets, sometimes Oscar, Count, and Tellie would lead as well... even if they failed miserably. And I miss having that, too. I miss Grover giving the worst advice he could to the younger cast, muppet or human children. I could write many paragraphs about all of the people I miss on Sesame Street that have gone away.
    Sesame Street should not be locked into nostalgia... but it should also grow and change. And it should not ever underestimate its audience. Sesame Street once had that in common with Mr. Rogers. We can go back to that. We absolutely can. Don't take Elmo away. Make him learn and grow. He can still be fun and silly and comforting. But he's going to experience things and change. Big Bird changed after Snuffy was revealed to the audience. He changed after Mr. Hooper died. He was constantly growing and changing.
    That is not happening for Elmo, despite the fact he keeps experiencing milestones. It has to happen, even with his limited emotional control and grasp of memory. If he can remember beefing with a rock, he better remember more stuff.
    Sorry for the essay but... if Bear in the Big Blue House can make me care about a raccoon who has limited speech skills and give that raccoon emotions and carry over some plot points, Elmo is OVERDUE for a little plot reckoning, what little plot Sesame Street has.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Год назад +1

      Newer vision (this applies to so much more than just sesame street unfortunately) is also missing the nuances. As mentioned, the original was very thought out to explicitly target multiple audiences and engage them.
      Comparing the old to the new, to me, is night and day. It's like they got rid of Einstein and replaced him with a valley girl.
      There's no question which one is superior.

  • @carlaird
    @carlaird 7 дней назад +2

    This is fantastic! How about the DVD sets that came out with a warning label?!? That the old episodes are not appropriate for “children today”

  • @roxanneweichinger9318
    @roxanneweichinger9318 Год назад +103

    I remember watching Sesame Street back in the early 1970’s, it really was a fun and educational program for kids. I liked Grover, Burt&Earnie, and the Cookie Monster.🥰

    • @twiceshy9773
      @twiceshy9773 Год назад +5

      Super Grover was the best!!!

    • @roxanneweichinger9318
      @roxanneweichinger9318 Год назад +1

      @@twiceshy9773 🥰He sure was!

    • @supme7558
      @supme7558 Год назад

      The 80s was its peek

    • @papabird4425
      @papabird4425 Год назад +1

      When I was watching Sesame Street back in the 1790s, that's when it was the real deal

    • @johnmanno2052
      @johnmanno2052 Год назад

      Hear, hear! I was quite amazed looking at contemporary Sesame Street. Much preferred the wry, knowing , and even gritty, older version. And I saw the pilot episode.

  • @darthbeggus8202
    @darthbeggus8202 Год назад +45

    Sesame street had a rule that they wouldn’t have kids on who were actors, but now almost every kid is an actor on the show

    • @alansnow1129
      @alansnow1129 6 месяцев назад

      Definitely send fake the past, what 20 years?

  • @JStryker47
    @JStryker47 Год назад +53

    I couldn't agree more, with Frank Oz. I was born in 1983 and I still remember so much greatness that I used to enjoy on the show - Kermit the frog on Sesame Street News, Guy Smiley's game shows, Robin Williams just... being there, Cookie Monster just... being there, it was great. Even my oldest brother, who was in his late 20s at the time, loved the hell out of the Big Bird's Birthday special too. How it is that nobody can even try to make such great quality entertainment anymore, I'll never know.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад +3

      Look at how many endorsement deals and product placement deals they have in place for the characters. That obviously has something to do with influencing the creative direction of the show, or lack thereof. Perhaps that is also another factor in the gentrification of the show, for lack of a better word.

    • @guysmiley4830
      @guysmiley4830 Год назад

      😄👍

  • @pherftheclown2631
    @pherftheclown2631 7 дней назад +3

    I've taken to jokingly calling Sesame Street "The Elmo and Abby Show," since they seem to be the characters that get the most screentime anymore.

  • @Kitunekld
    @Kitunekld Год назад +66

    I don’t have kids, so I haven’t seen Sesame Street in decades. But I’m very sad to see what’s happened to it. I have so many fond memories growing up watching it. It’s sad to think kids now get a watered down version and can’t enjoy the older episodes. My favorite muppet was Grover

    • @dcocz3908
      @dcocz3908 Год назад +4

      Todays letter isLGBTQ and the number +0, clap of thunder, diversity, haha ha haaaa

    • @KM-zn3lx
      @KM-zn3lx 11 месяцев назад +3

      My kids mainly watched it from 1987-1993 or so. I was born in 1962 but never watched it as a child.

    • @arjovenzia
      @arjovenzia 11 месяцев назад +1

      Im in the same boat, I also havnt had a TV antenna plugged in, nor was I ever watching TV at Kid appropriate times. so I missed that whole transition in the kids tv space. I was appalled when I saw the new CGI Thomas the Tank Engine, I felt something inside me die (mum knew if she wanted to leave the house it must be either before or after thomas, as I simply would not leave otherwise, apparently I didnt tantrum much but that was one way to do it).

  • @electrojones
    @electrojones Год назад +8

    Elmo is the answer to, "What if the entire cupcake was just frosting and sprinkles?"

  • @EricAllerton
    @EricAllerton Год назад +24

    I really liked the retrospective about old Sesame Street. I was born in 1980 and the first 5 or so years of my life were dominated by it. I still get misty-eyed whenever a video like this shows Henson's funeral. I agree that it is all Elmo, all the time now but the good thing is that my newborn LOVES Elmo. We live in Japan so it is hard to get Sesame Street here but thankfully their RUclips channel does a good job. I think that may be thanks to HBO, so it ain't all bad.
    This video feels a little incomplete and I would love to see it picked back up again either on this topic or a similar. It feels like we jumped from 1985 to 2015 in less than 30 seconds. However, I loved watching this. Thank you for making it.

  • @treyjohnson4035
    @treyjohnson4035 9 месяцев назад +3

    Initially,SS also catered to all ages.The humor during the animated sequences and jim Henson knew that you would have to have 2 levels of humor so watching the show wouldn't be torturous

  • @redangelsophiasvideoproduc92
    @redangelsophiasvideoproduc92 Год назад +15

    My favorite Sesame Street muppet is Count von Count. He is a vampire - but seems to be unfazed by sunlight -- and he is more interested in teaching kids to count than in drinking blood.

    • @shameikasmith2910
      @shameikasmith2910 11 месяцев назад +1

      MY FAVORITE AS WELL.....❤❤❤

    • @catreecemacleod7556
      @catreecemacleod7556 11 месяцев назад

      Clearly The Count was was used to stealthily prepare for a vampire uprising if it ever occurred.
      The thing is, the whole counting thing is a legitimate part of the mythology of vampires, that if you scatter grains of sand or something similar before them, they have to obsessively count each grain of sand one at a time, giving you time to escape or deal with them otherwise. Someone obviously knew this, and it's why it makes perfect sense for him to be a play on that aspect of the mythology, and "Count" Dracula as two fairly obvious connections to vampires.
      You may already know all this, but someone somewhere will learn about the counting thing and suddenly Sesame Street will make a bit more sense.
      Also, millions will be saved during the vampire apocalypse. Obviously.

  • @wstine79
    @wstine79 Год назад +40

    I can imagine a segment where Big Bird is trying to figure out how to use this Flexispot table in his bird nest.

  • @jonathanross2304
    @jonathanross2304 Год назад +102

    I completely forgot how deep and authentic sesame Street was. Honestly, I probably never realized it in the first place. At the time, it just seemed... Right. And it was.

    • @bluemyst42
      @bluemyst42 Год назад +4

      Same here. My favorite educational shows as a kid were Sesame Street and Mr Rogers Neighborhood. It never really struck me as weird that adults were on the show or anything, I think it reinforced that adults are figures we learn from, but they also made mistakes occasionally. Watching an episode now just feels weird because its just a bunch of kids and muppets running wild.

    • @midoribookstore
      @midoribookstore Год назад

      It was done so, so right.

  • @jen7834
    @jen7834 11 месяцев назад +3

    Born in 69! Grew up with it. Loved it! Looking back seeing those Characters- Susan, Bob , Mr Hooper , Maria - thanks for the memories! Never watched after Elmo arrived , I grew up and never had kids. Really a special part of my childhood hood.

    • @formerevolutionist
      @formerevolutionist 11 месяцев назад

      Same here. I was born in 72 and saw almost all the episodes, some with just a black & white TV. Simpler times...

  • @ShilohAmore
    @ShilohAmore Год назад +16

    In 1969 I was three and living in Va.
    Some people came door to door about a new television show made for children. They wanted my mom to encourage me to watch and fill out a questionnaire about how I responded to the show.
    I LOVED IT and to this day accredit Sesame Street to giving me the building blocks to read at a very early age.

    • @danielprietog
      @danielprietog 11 месяцев назад

      That was a very important part on the development of the show. I've read a lot about it as an educational revolution, even subversive to some. ♥

  • @celestialnubian
    @celestialnubian Год назад +38

    Anyone with kids should get DVDs or downloads of all the classic Sesame Street episodes as well as other CTW classics like The Electric Company and 3-2-1 Contact. Can't rely on streaming because platforms will make media disappear to save a dollar.

    • @cmc5394oparva
      @cmc5394oparva 11 месяцев назад

      Or because the content doesn't reflect Current Year sensibilities.

    • @donnamariefarrell533
      @donnamariefarrell533 11 месяцев назад

      Most were removed from the library of episodes by HBO 😞

    • @bringbackpbskidsgo4562
      @bringbackpbskidsgo4562 7 месяцев назад

      Children's Television Workshop/Sesame Workshop of course.

  • @russellharrell2747
    @russellharrell2747 Год назад +22

    I was already crying at the typewriter, but then you had to make me sob like a baby with big bird singing it’s not easy being green.
    Thank you

  • @johnparsons9294
    @johnparsons9294 9 месяцев назад +7

    You took most of this from an article on Kotaku, "How Elmo Ruined Sesame Street" by Kevin Wong, some of it verbatim

    • @GenuinelyGamingRn
      @GenuinelyGamingRn 9 месяцев назад +3

      Oof. Plagiarism is never ok

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob 2 дня назад

      I see people aren't scared of Hbomberguy anymore. Maybe they need something bigger

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob 2 дня назад

      Also I just read the article and now I see why despite trying to be all zen and reflective this video's writing has such a pissy quality. Wong was just whining in his article- but at least he wrote it himself instead of stealing an 8 year old piece.

  • @WTFG78
    @WTFG78 Год назад +41

    "God save us... the Elmo Era." -Robert California, "The Office"
    To say that I was a fan of Sesame Street when I was a kid in the 1980s is a massive understatement. Back when I started watching as a toddler, the show retained some of the sketches and segments they produced in the 70s (I distinctly remember songs like "Me Left Me Cookie at the Disco" and "Born to Add"), so I was able to watch segments from before I was born in repeats. When Jim Henson died in 1990, it affected me more than I anticipated for two reasons- 1) it was my first real cognizant exposure to death, and 2) Henson's work on Sesame Street (and other shows) were pivotal memories of my childhood, and at that point, his contributions would end forever.
    I continued to watch Sesame Street some years after the show's target age at the time because I appreciated the stories of the monsters, Muppets, and humans on the show, and also because of its humor. I was teased by my classmates for talking about a show made for kindergarteners in later grades, but I still watched... that is until Elmo essentially took over the show.
    There's a Sesame Street 20th Anniversary special that understandably couldn't be featured in this video because of the host, Bill Cosby. In it, Bill talked (with Elmo, coincidentally) about Sesame Street having a curriculum that is constantly changing. "In the first year [of the show], the children counted to 10. Now they're counting up to 40." However, after the popularity of "Tickle Me Elmo" and the increased competition from children's television options from cable, the curriculum was adjusted dramatically from early elementary school children to Teletubbies levels of infants and toddlers. Any classic sketches that were included in these newer episodes had extra sound effects to keep this new audience's attention, and the aforementioned "Elmo's World" took up a large chunk of the show. The move to HBO sealed its fate, and as you mentioned, the show became sanitized in both its setting and its content.
    Sesame Street used to be an ensemble show that had different characters getting their time in the spotlight. While there were always Street segments with Big Bird and the human characters (and probably an Ernie and Bert sketch) in each episode, they didn't have their own theme song aside from the main theme, and other characters would rotate throughout the series. Elmo's World could have been spun off to its own show, but instead it became a daily departure from the rest of the show and its characters. It really demarcated a drop in quality in the show overall.
    Thanks for bringing this to the Internet's attention.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay Год назад

      Was this how boomers felt when Walt Disney died?

    • @WTFG78
      @WTFG78 Год назад +4

      @@Attmay I don’t think so. Uncle Walt was already approaching the life expectancy of a man born around the turn of the 20th Century, and he also smoked like a chimney. Plus, his involvement with movies and theme parks at that point had been minimized so that he could focus on his EPCOT project in Florida, so he personally wasn’t really working on anything new for audiences.
      Henson passed quite unexpectedly from what was later determined to be a treatable disease that he simply didn’t take care of in time, and he still had a lot of irons in the fire with the Muppets.
      Maybe if a ten year old who grew up watching Walt from infancy found out about his passing, it would have a similar effect.

    • @BrendanJSmith
      @BrendanJSmith Год назад +2

      I honestly think the 20th Anniversary Special is the perfect place to stop watching Sesame Street. It was right before Jim's passing and before Elmo took over the show. Right in that sweet spot where everything was working in perfect balance.

    • @WTFG78
      @WTFG78 Год назад +1

      @@BrendanJSmith Honestly, yeah. 1989 to early 1990 is a perfect jumping off point for the series. A lot of the major modern plot points of the show (like the reveal of Snuffleupagus, the marriage of Luis and Maria, the adoption of Miles by Gordon and Susan, etc.) were also complete at that point. That was probably the peak.

    • @WTFG78
      @WTFG78 Год назад +2

      And to answer the question, my favorite Sesame Street Muppet depends on what age I was. In my very early years, I loved Big Bird. It also helped that when my mom helped me read the credits as I was learning to read, I would remember the credit "And Caroll Spinney as Big Bird and Oscar"- the idea that one guy could play two diametrically different characters floored me. When I finally got to meet Mr. Spinney decades later, I got a flood of nostalgic memories on the way back to my car that admittedly brought me to tears.
      As I got older, the favorite title was in a bit of a tie between Ernie, Grover, The Count, and Cookie Monster depending on my mood (or if I was hungry).
      Now... I don't think I can pin down which of the pre-Elmo Sesame Street Muppets as a favorite. They were all special in their own way. Though I probably do Cookie Monster impressions more than any other character. Especially around actual cookies. OMMM NOM NOM NOM NOM

  • @clemdane
    @clemdane Год назад +59

    The depth of my loathing of Elmo and new Sesame Street is so great that I can't even bring myself to watch this, even though I am excited to see that you have made it. I am sure I would agree with every word. It's just too painful to think about how much we have lost.

    • @vickibarbosa5641
      @vickibarbosa5641 11 месяцев назад +5

      You should watch it. It focuses on what made SS great back in the beginning and for years after that, there's not much about Elmo.

  • @Not_Always
    @Not_Always Год назад +26

    Watching Sesame Street was one of my first introductions into sign language. They made it seem so natural and it made me want to learn it. I still remember a book I had of basic signs with that lady from the show.