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{{infobox television | {{Short description|American children's television show}}
{{pp-vandalism|small=yes}}
| bgcolor = <!--please do not put in a color. it simply makes things hard to read.-->
{{pp-move}}
| show_name = Sesame Street
{{Featured article}}
| image = ]
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2019}}
| caption = Sesame Street title card used since 2002. Here is one from an episode in season 36.
{{Use American English|date=August 2017}}
| format = ]
{{Infobox television
| runtime = 60 minutes per episode
| image = Sesame Street logo.svg
| country = {{USA}}
| image_size = 250
| network = ] (1969 &ndash; 1970),<br>] (1970 &ndash; present)
| genre = {{Plainlist|
| first_aired = ], ]
* ]
| last_aired = present
* ]
| creator = ] <br> ]
}}
| executive producer = ]
| runtime = {{Plainlist|
| starring = ]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br> ]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>(see also ], ])''
* 60 minutes (1969–2015)
| num_episodes = 4,134 (as of season 37)
* 30 minutes (2014–present)
|}}
}}
'''''Sesame Street''''' is an ] educational ] for ] and is a pioneer of the contemporary educational television standard, combining both ]. ''Sesame Street'' is well known for its ] characters, created by the ] ]. More than 4,134 episodes of the show<ref>The first season included 130 episodes, but season 36 only had 25.</ref> have been produced in 37 seasons, which makes it one of the ] television shows in ].
| creator = {{Plainlist|
* ]
* ]
* ] (Muppet characters only)
}}
| executive_producer = {{Plainlist|
* ] (1969–72)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcGQh4_yOfU|title=Sesame Street season 1 End Credits (1969-70)|website=YouTube|access-date=June 18, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMKFsK6Eg8Y|title=Sesame Street season 3 End Credits (1971-72)|website=YouTube|access-date=June 18, 2020}}</ref>
* Jon Stone (1972–78)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWoPI2XVybI| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/LWoPI2XVybI| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Sesame Street season 4 End Credits (1972-73)|website=YouTube| date=October 7, 2014|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hd7f1dpdqAY| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200122183029/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hd7f1dpdqAY| archive-date=2020-01-22 | url-status=dead|title= Sesame Street season 9 end credits (1977-78)|website=YouTube|access-date=June 18, 2020}}</ref>
* Al Hyslop (1978–80) (credited as "producer" in season 10)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wX09Ab-tzwM| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121008093234/http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wX09Ab-tzwM| archive-date=2012-10-08 | url-status=dead|title=Sesame Street season 10 end credits (1978-79)|website=YouTube|access-date=June 18, 2020}}</ref>
* ] (1980–93)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-S9oiQ3MFI| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/c-S9oiQ3MFI| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Sesame Street season 12 end credits (1980-81)|website=YouTube| date=August 24, 2015|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5EU_B8mNZRU| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/5EU_B8mNZRU| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Sesame Street season 24 (#3010) closing & funding credits (1992) |website=YouTube| date=April 3, 2019|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
* Michael Loman (1993–2002)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nL3e08KBkA| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/2nL3e08KBkA| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Sesame Street - Season 25 End Credits (1993-1994)|website=YouTube| date=May 24, 2014|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1YPSS2-zoQ&t=3337s| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/f1YPSS2-zoQ| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Elmo Writes a Story - Sesame Street Full Episode (credits start at 55:37)|website=YouTube| date=May 3, 2019|publisher=Sesame Street|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
* Lewis Bernstein (2003–05)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxanrZZHJOA| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/mxanrZZHJOA| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Sesame Street Season 34 credits & fundings (version #1)|website=YouTube| date=February 4, 2017|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32GKLMu48Cg&t=3170s| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/32GKLMu48Cg| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=Elmo and Zoe Play the Healthy Food Game - Sesame Street Full Episodes (credits start at 52:50)|website=YouTube| date=July 13, 2018|publisher=Sesame Street|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
* ] (2006–17)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4A4DLecscpM| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/4A4DLecscpM| archive-date=2021-12-11 | url-status=live|title=PBS Kids Program Break (2006 WFWA-TV)|website=YouTube| date=January 6, 2017|access-date=June 18, 2020}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
* Brown Johnson (2017–19)
* Benjamin Lehmann (2018–present)
}}
| location = {{Plain list|
* ] (1969–92)
* Unitel Video, Inc. (1987–93)
* ] (1993–present)
}}
| theme_music_composer = {{Plain list|
* ]
* ]
* ]
}}
| open_theme = "]"
| company = ]{{Refn|Known as Children's Television Workshop until 2000.|group=note}}
| end_theme = {{Plain list|
* "Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street?" (instrumental; up until season 45)
* "Smarter, Stronger, Kinder" (season 46 onwards)
}}
| country = United States
| language = English
| network = {{Plain list|
* ] (1969–1970)
* ] (1970–present)
* ] (2016–2020)
* ] (2020–present) <!-- ] -->
}}
| first_aired = {{Start date|1969|11|10}}
| last_aired = present
| num_seasons = 54
| num_episodes = 4701{{Refn|Season 44 (2013–2014) was the first time episodes were numbered in a seasonal order rather than the numerical and chronological fashion used since the show premiered. For example, episode 4401 means "the first episode of the 44th season", not "the 4401st episode" (it is in fact the 4328th episode).|group=note}}
}}


'''''Sesame Street''''' is an American ] ] series that combines ], ], ], and ]. It is produced by ] (known as the Children's Television Workshop until June 2000) and was created by ] and ]. It is known for its images communicated through the use of ]'s ], and includes short films, with humor and cultural references. It premiered on November 10, 1969, to positive reviews, some controversy,<ref name="morrow-3"/> and high viewership. It has aired on the ] national ] provider ] since its debut, with its first run moving to ] ] on January 16, 2016, then its sister streaming service ] in 2020.
''Sesame Street'' is produced in the United States by non-profit organization ], formerly known as the Children's Television Workshop (CTW), founded by ] and ]. It premiered on ], ], on the ] network, and later that year it was moved to NET's replacement, the ].


The show's format consists of a combination of ] production elements and techniques which have evolved to reflect changes in American culture and audiences' viewing habits. It was the first children's TV show to use educational goals and a ] to shape its content, and the first show whose educational effects were formally studied. Its format and content have undergone significant changes to reflect changes to its curriculum.
As a result of its positive influence, ''Sesame Street'' is one of the most highly regarded educational shows for children in the world.<ref>Karen Barss ''et al.'', "", Corporation for Public Broadcasting (accessed ] ])</ref> No television series has matched its level of international recognition and success. The original series has been televised in 120 ],<ref name="presskit"></ref> and more than 30 international versions have been produced, not including ] versions. The series has received 109 ], more than any other television series.<ref name="presskit"></ref> An estimated 75 million Americans have watched the series as children;<ref name=washingtonfile2>Michael Jay Friedman, , ] ].</ref> millions more have watched around the world, as have their parents.


Shortly after its creation, its producers developed what came to be called the CTW Model (after the production company's previous name), a system of planning, production and evaluation based on collaboration between producers, writers, educators and researchers. The show was initially funded by government and private foundations, but has become somewhat self-supporting due to revenues from licensing arrangements, international sales and other media. By 2006, independently produced versions ("]") of ''Sesame Street'' were broadcast in 20 countries. In 2001, there were over 120 million viewers of various international versions of ''Sesame Street''; and by its 40th anniversary in 2009, it was broadcast in more than 140 countries.
== Overview ==
Sesame Street uses a combination of ]s, animation, and live actors to teach young children letter and word recognition, mathematics (numbers, addition and subtraction), as well as geometric forms, and classification. Since the show's inception, other instructional goals have been basic life skills, such as how to cross the street safely, proper hygiene, healthy eating habits, and social skills.


Since its debut, ''Sesame Street'' has garnered praise. It was by then the 15th-highest-rated children's television show in the United States. A 1996 survey found that 95% of all American ]ers had watched it by the time they were three. In 2018, it was estimated that 86 million Americans had watched it as children. As of 2022, it has won 222 ]s and 11 ]s, more than any other children's show.<ref>{{cite news |title=Sesame Street Co-Founder Lloyd Morrisett Dies Aged 93 |url=https://virginradio.co.uk/entertainment/91883/sesame-street-co-founder-lloyd-morrisett-dies-aged-93 |access-date=April 13, 2023 |issue=] |date=January 25, 2023}}</ref><ref name=wallace/> ''Sesame Street'' remains one of the ].
The show displays a subtle sense of humour that has appealed to older viewers since it first premiered; this was devised as a means to encourage parents and older siblings to watch the series with younger children, thus becoming involved in the learning process, rather than having ''Sesame Street'' act as a babysitter. A number of parodies of popular culture appear, especially ones aimed at the ], the network that broadcasts the show. For example, the recurring segment ] once ran a sketch called "Me Claudius". Children viewing the show might enjoy watching ] and ], while adults watching the same sequence may enjoy the spoof of the '']'' showing of '']'' on PBS.
] (above) or ], and real children]]
Several of the character names used on the program are puns or cultural references aimed at a slightly older audience, including Flo Bear (]), ] (a ] parody), H. Ross Parrot (based on Reform Party founder ]), Dr. Feel based on ], Polly Darton (]), and a ] Muppet in a parody of '']''. Over two hundred notable personalities have made guest appearances on the show, beginning with ] on the first episode, and ranging from performers like ] and ], to political figures such as ] and ].<ref name=washingtonfile1>Michael Jay Friedman, , ] ]. Annan was actually on his way to Norway to accept the 2001 ].</ref> By making a show that not only educates and entertains kids, but also keeps parents entertained and involved in the educational process, the producers hope to inspire discussion about the concepts on the show.


==History==
In 1999, the series became the longest running American children's program, taking the title from '']''. The British series '']'' still retains the worldwide record.<ref>Note that '']'' and '']'' were produced longer than ''Sesame Street'', but both ran only in local markets, while ''Sesame Street'' is national.</ref> The series has made many published lists, including greatest all-time show compilations by '']'' and '']''. Nielsen Media Research has found that 99% of American preschoolers recognise the series' characters.<ref name="sslpress">''Sesame Street Live'' Press Kit, Minneapolis MN: Vee Corporation, 2004.</ref> Another study** found that 81% of kids under the age of six own a ''Sesame Street'' toy or game, and 87% own a book based on the series.<ref name="sslpress">''Sesame Street Live'' Press Kit, Minneapolis MN: Vee Corporation, 2004.</ref>
{{Main|History of Sesame Street{{!}}History of ''Sesame Street''}}
''Sesame Street'' was conceived in 1966 during discussions between television producer ] and ] vice president ]. Their goal was to create a children's television show that would "master the addictive qualities of television and do something good with them,"<ref name="davis-8">Davis, p. 8</ref> such as helping young children prepare for school. After two years of research, the newly formed Children's Television Workshop (CTW) received a combined grant of US$8{{nbsp}}million (${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|8|1969}}}} million in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars){{inflation-fn|US}} from the Carnegie Foundation, the ], the ] and the ] to create and produce a new children's television show.<ref name="finch-53">Finch, p. 53</ref>


''Sesame Street'' was officially announced at a press conference on May 6, 1969. ], ]'s ], said that ''Sesame Street'' would use the techniques of commercial television programs to teach young children. Live shorts and animated cartoons would teach young children the alphabet, numbers, vocabulary, shapes, and basic reasoning skills. By repeating concepts throughout an episode, young children's interest would be held while they learn the concepts. Guest cameos would help attract older children and adults. Cooney said that the name ''Sesame Street'' came from the saying "]", which gives the idea of a place where exciting things occur. The show was given an initial six-month run in order to determine whether it was effective and would continue to air.<ref>Subber, Barbara (May 7, 1969). "". ''The Morning Call'' (Allentown, Pennsylvania). p. 51.</ref>
]'', showing much of the main cast of ''Sesame Street''. Left to right, a penguin, ], ], ] (in front of Big Bird), ], ], ], ] (behind Ernie).]]


The program premiered on ] stations on November 10, 1969.<ref name="brooke">{{cite news | last = Brooke| first = Jill | title = 'Sesame Street' Takes a Bow to 30 Animated Years | work = The New York Times | date = November 13, 1998 | url = http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/TV/9811/13/sesame.street/ | access-date = March 11, 2019}}</ref> It was the first preschool educational television program to base its contents and production values on laboratory and formative research.<ref name="palmer">Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 9</ref> Initial responses to the show included adulatory reviews, some controversy,<ref name="morrow-3"/> and high ratings.
The series' music has appeared on music charts around the world, including Ernie's "Rubber Duckie" song, which made #16 on the ] chart in 1970; the song achieved an even higher position in Germany. In 1992, British band ] released ''Sesame's Treet'', a ] dance track which sampled the "classic" version of the ''Sesame Street'' theme. It reached #2 on the ].<ref>David Roberts (Managing Editor) ''et al.'', ''Guinness World Records: British Hit Singles & Albums'' (Eighteenth Edition), 2005, ISBN 1-904994-00-8</ref> Sesame Street has won 11** Grammy Awards, most recently for 2001 release ''Elmo and the Orchestra''.


]. Pictured 1985]]
==History of the show==
], co-creator. Pictured 2010]]
{{Quote box
|width = 30em
|border = 1px
|align = right
|quote = I've always said of our original team that developed and produced ''Sesame Street'': Collectively, we were a genius.
|salign = right
|source = —''Sesame Street'' creator ]<ref>Gikow, p. 26</ref>
}}


According to writer Michael Davis, by the mid-1970s the show had become "an American institution."<ref>Davis, p. 220</ref> The cast and crew expanded during this time, with emphasis on the hiring of women crew members and the addition of minorities to the cast. The show's success continued into the 1980s. In 1981, when the federal government withdrew its funding, CTW turned to and expanded other revenue sources, including its magazine division, book ], product licensing, and foreign broadcast income.<ref name="odell">O'Dell, pp. 73–74</ref> Its curriculum has expanded to include more ] topics such as relationships, ethics and emotions. Many of its storylines have been inspired by the experiences of its writing staff, cast and crew—most notably, the 1982 death of ], who played ];<ref name="hellman-52">{{cite journal | last = Hellman | first = Peter | title = Street Smart: How Big Bird & Company Do It | journal = New York Magazine | volume = 20 | issue = 46 | page = 52 | date = November 23, 1987 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=KOUCAAAAMBAJ&q=sesame%20street&pg=PA48 | issn = 0028-7369 | access-date = March 12, 2019}}</ref> and the marriage of Luis and Maria in 1988.<ref>Borgenicht, p. 80</ref>
:''Main article: ]''
The show's format called for the humans to be intermixed with the segments of animation, live-action shorts and ]s. These segments were created to be like commercials &mdash; quick, catchy and memorable &mdash; and made the learning experience much more like fun. The format became a model for what is known today as ]-based programming.


By the end of the 1990s, the show faced societal and economic challenges, including changes in young children's viewing habits, competition from other shows, the development of cable television, and a drop in ratings.<ref>Davis, p. 320</ref> As the 21st century began, the show made major changes. Starting in 2002, its format became more narrative-focused and included ongoing storylines. After its 30th anniversary in 1999, due to the popularity of the Muppet ], the show also incorporated a popular segment known as '']''.<ref name="goodman">{{cite news | first = Tim | last = Goodman | title = Word on the 'Street': Classic children's show to undergo structural changes this season | url = http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/WORD-ON-THE-STREET-Classic-children-s-show-to-2877849.php | work = San Francisco Chronicle | date = February 4, 2002 | access-date = October 18, 2019}}</ref> In 2009, the show won the Outstanding Achievement Emmy for its 40 years on the air.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Eng |first1=Joyce |title=Guiding Light, Sesame Street to Be Honored at Daytime Emmys |url=https://www.tvguide.com/news/guiding-light-sesame-1009313/ |access-date=October 18, 2019 |work=TV Guide |date=August 28, 2009}}</ref>
CTW aired the program for test groups to determine if the revolutionary new format was likely to succeed. Results showed that test watchers were entranced when the ad-like segments aired, especially those with the jovial puppets, but were remarkably less interested in the street scenes. Psychologists warned CTW against a mixture of fantasy and reality elements, but producers soon decided to mix the elements. A simple dose of cartoon-like characters lets the humans deliver messages without causing viewers to lose interest.<ref name=unpaved>David Borgenicht, '']''. Hyperion, 1998.</ref>


In late 2015, in response to "sweeping changes in the media business"<ref name="movetohbo">{{cite news |last1=Pallotta |first1=Frank |last2=Stelter |first2=Brian |title='Sesame Street' is heading to HBO |url=https://money.cnn.com/2015/08/13/media/sesame-street-hbo/index.html |access-date=April 23, 2019 |work=CNN.com |date=August 13, 2015}}</ref> and as part of a five-year programming and development deal, ] service ] began airing first-run episodes of ''Sesame Street''. The episodes became available on PBS stations and websites nine months after they aired on HBO.<ref name="movetohbo"/> The deal allowed Sesame Workshop to produce more episodes—increasing from 18 to 35 per season—and to create a spinoff series with the ''Sesame Street'' Muppets, and a new educational series.<ref name="steel">{{cite news |last1=Steel |first1=Emily |title='Sesame Street' to Air First on HBO for Next 5 Seasons |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/14/business/media/sesame-street-heading-to-hbo-in-fall.html?_r=0 |access-date=April 23, 2019 |work=The New York Times |date=August 13, 2015}}</ref>
''Sesame Street'', along with several other ] &ndash; produced shows (such as '']'', which was produced when Sesame Workshop was still CTW) are all taped in ]. Originally they were taped at the ] at 81st and Broadway in Manhattan, but the bankruptcy of Teletape's parent company, Reeves Entertainment, forced these productions to move to ] in neighboring ].


At its 50th anniversary in 2019, ''Sesame Street'' had produced over 4,500 episodes, two feature-length movies ('']'' in 1985 and '']'' in 1999), 35 TV specials, 200 home videos, and 180 albums.<ref name="wallace"/> Its ] channel has over 24 million subscribers.<ref name="guthrie">{{cite news|last1=Guthrie|first1=Marisa|date=February 6, 2019|title=50 Years of Sunny Days on 'Sesame Street': Behind the Scenes of TV's Most Influential Show Ever|work=The Hollywood Reporter|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/features/sesame-street-turns-50-how-a-childrens-show-revolutionized-television-1183031|access-date=March 11, 2019}}</ref> It was announced in October 2019 that first-run episodes will move to ] beginning with the show's 51st season in 2020.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/3/20897104/sesame-street-streaming-hbo-max-warnermedia-pbs-disney-apple-streaming-wars|title=HBO Max locks down exclusive access to new Sesame Street episodes|last=Alexander|first=Julia|date=2019-10-03|website=The Verge|language=en|access-date=2019-10-03}}</ref> On December 13, 2024, it was announced that Max would not be renewing their contract to make episodes of ''Sesame Street'', meaning 2025 will be the last year for episodes made with Max. Episodes will be in the Max streaming library until 2027. A spokesperson for Sesame Workshop stated: "We will continue to invest in our best-in-class programming and look forward to announcing our new distribution plans in the coming months, ensuring that 'Sesame Street' reaches as many children as possible for generations to come."<ref>{{cite news|last=Shanfeld|first=Ethan|url=https://variety.com/2024/tv/news/sesame-street-new-episodes-will-not-air-on-max-1236248518/|title='Sesame Street' for Sale: Max Not Renewing Deal for New Episodes|website=]|date=December 13, 2024|access-date=December 13, 2024}}</ref>
The brownstone architecture of ''Sesame Street'', a fictional ] in ], as well as the concept of neighbors from different backgrounds living in the same area and sharing their life experiences, was loosely based on Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn - where several of the founding producers were living at the time.


==Format==
==Broadcast history==
{{Main|Format of Sesame Street{{!}}Format of ''Sesame Street''}}
The show is broadcast worldwide; in addition to the U.S. version, many countries have locally-produced versions adapted to local needs, some with their own characters, and in a variety of different languages. In ], beginning in 1970, 15-minute shows called ''Canada's Sesame Street'' were broadcast, and by 1972 an edited version of the one-hour American program was airing but with specially filmed Canadian segments, which featured the ]. In 1995 the American version was replaced by a half-hour long all-Canadian version of the series entitled '']''. Since the original ''Sesame Street'' was still accessible to Canadians, and more familiar, the format change didn't find acceptance with audiences and was taken off the air in 2002. Broadcasts in ] and ] began in 1971. In the ], the show was first broadcast by various ] regions in the early 1970s, after which it moved to ], where it was a lunch-time fixture for many years through to the early 2000s. Later broadcasts of the show featured the hour-long episodes in a format of two half-hour episodes. 120 countries have aired the show, many of which partnered with Sesame Workshop to create local versions.
From its first episode, ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s format has utilized "a strong visual style, fast-moving action, humor, and music," as well as animation and live-action short films.<ref>O'Dell, p. 70</ref> When it premiered, most researchers believed that young children did not have long ]s, and the show's producers were concerned that an hour-long show would not hold their attention. At first, its "street scenes"—the action recorded on its set—consisted of character-driven interactions. Rather than ongoing stories, they were written as individual, curriculum-based segments interrupted by "inserts" of puppet sketches, short films and animations. This structure allowed producers to use a mixture of styles and characters, and to vary its pace, presumably keeping it interesting to young viewers. However, by season 20, research showed that children were able to follow a story—and the street scenes, while still interspersed with other segments, became evolving storylines.<ref>Morrow, p. 87</ref><ref>Gikow, p. 179</ref>


{{Quote box
In recent years ''Sesame Street'' has made what area educators consider to be critical advances in its international versions. In the late 1990s versions appeared in ] and ] as these countries shifted away from communism. There is also a joint ]i-]-]ian project, called ''Sesame Stories'', which was created with the goal of promoting greater cultural understanding.
|width = 30em
|border = 1px
|align = right
|quote = We basically deconstructed the show. It's not a magazine format anymore. It's more like the ''Sesame'' hour. Children will be able to navigate through it easier.
|salign = right
|source = —Executive producer Arlene Sherman, speaking of the show's restructuring in 2002<ref name="goodman"/>
}}


On recommendations by ], the producers initially decided that the show's human actors and Muppets would not interact because they were concerned it would confuse young children.<ref>Fisch & Bernstein, p. 39</ref> When CTW tested the new show, they found that children paid attention during the Muppet segments, and that their interest was lost during the "Street" segments.<ref>Gladwell, p. 105</ref> They requested that Henson and his team create Muppets such as ] and ] to interact with the human actors, and the Street segments were re-shot.<ref>Gladwell, p. 106</ref><ref>Fisch & Bernstein, pp. 39–40</ref>
The show has also spawned the spin-off series '']'', ] program '']'', the "classics" show '']'', and the segment-only series '']''. '']'' and '']'', both of which are segments of ''Sesame Street'', have been distributed as individual series. Jennifer Monier-Williams, Vice President, Worldwide Television Distribution at Sesame Workshop commented "The expansion of the ''Sesame'' brand through wonderfully interactive shows like ''Play With Me Sesame'' and ''Elmo's World'' give children around the globe new ways to experience fun and learning in the way Sesame does it best."<ref>"", Sesame Workshop press release, 21 August 2006.</ref>


''Sesame Street''{{'}}s format remained intact until the 2000s, when the changing audience required that producers move to a more narrative format. In 1998, the popular "Elmo's World," a 15-minute-long segment hosted by the Muppet Elmo, was created.<ref>Clash, p. 75</ref> Starting in 2014, during the show's 45th season, the producers introduced a half-hour version of the program.<ref name="TIME">{{Cite magazine|last=Dockterman|first=Eliana|date=2014-06-18|title=We're Getting a Half-Hour Version of Sesame Street|url=https://time.com/2894617/sesame-street-half-hour/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220113030429/https://time.com/2894617/sesame-street-half-hour/|archive-date=13 January 2022|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-13|magazine=Time|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=2014-06-18|title=PBS KIDS to Add New Half-hour SESAME STREET Program on Air and on Digital Platforms This Fall|url=https://www.pbs.org/about/about-pbs/blogs/news/pbs-kids-to-add-new-half-hour-sesame-street-program-on-air-and-on-digital-platforms-this-fall/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220113093307/https://www.pbs.org/about/about-pbs/blogs/news/pbs-kids-to-add-new-half-hour-sesame-street-program-on-air-and-on-digital-platforms-this-fall/|archive-date=13 January 2022|url-status=live|access-date=2022-01-13|website=PBS Pressroom|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Jensen |first=Elizabeth |date=2014-06-17 |title=PBS Plans to Add a Shorter Version of 'Sesame Street' |language=en-US |newspaper=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/18/business/media/pbs-to-add-shorter-version-of-sesame-street-in-bid-for-more-viewers.html |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140620173544/https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/18/business/media/pbs-to-add-shorter-version-of-sesame-street-in-bid-for-more-viewers.html |archive-date=2014-06-20 |access-date=2022-01-13 |issn=0362-4331}}{{cbignore}}</ref> The new version, which originally complemented the full-hour series, was broadcast weekday afternoons and streamed on the Internet.<ref name="TIME" /> In 2017, in response to the changing viewing habits of toddlers, the show's producers decreased the show's length from one hour to 30 minutes across all its broadcast platforms. The new version focused on fewer characters, reduced pop culture references "once included as winks for their parents", and focused "on a single backbone topic."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Harwell |first1=Drew |title=Sesame Street, newly revamped for HBO, aims for toddlers of the Internet age |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/2016/01/12/9350ec70-b491-11e5-9388-466021d971de_story.html |access-date=15 May 2019 |newspaper=] |date=12 January 2016}}</ref>
===Funding===
] has criticized PBS for allowing ] and ] as sponsors, as they can be linked to ] and ], respectively. In general he dislikes corporate sponsorships, as "'Sesame Street' is not Main Street." He had appeared on the show in the 1988 special '']'', with the character Bob, singing "]".]]


The format will be changed yet again in Season 56, as it was announced on October 30, 2023 by the '']'' that ''Sesame Street'' will be reimagined by completely dropping the half-hour magazine-style format of the long-running children's show in favor of a longer narrative-driven style and more live action Muppet puppet characters. The reimagined format will feature two 11-minute story segments, paired with a new animated series, ''Tales from 123''.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Weprin |first1=Alex |title=Sesame Street Getting "Reimagined" for Season 56 (Exclusive) |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/sesame-street-changing-format-tales-from-123-season-56-1235623888/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |date=30 October 2023 |access-date=31 October 2023}}</ref>
Funding for season 37 of ''Sesame Street'' is provided by a ] grant in partnership with the ], the ], ], ] and EverydayKidz.com from ]. Major funding for ''Sesame Street'' is provided by ] (did not fund from 1972-1992, and from 1998-2000) and by contributions to your PBS stations from "]." Previous donors of funding for ''Sesame Street'' included ], the ], ], ] (2002), ], and the ].


==Educational goals==
Occasionally local businesses and organizations fund local telecasts of ''Sesame Street'' on PBS stations throughout the U.S. For example, the ] underwrites the broadcast of Sesame Street on ] in Los Angeles.
{{Main|Educational goals of Sesame Street{{!}}Educational goals of ''Sesame Street''}}
]
Author ] said that "''Sesame Street'' was built around a single, breakthrough insight: that if you can hold the attention of children, you can educate them."<ref>Gladwell, p. 100</ref> ], the CTW's first advisory board chair, went even further, saying that the effective use of television as an educational tool needed to capture, focus, and sustain children's attention.<ref name="Lesser, p. 116">Lesser, p. 116</ref> ''Sesame Street'' was the first children's show to structure each episode, and the segments within them, to capture children's attention, and to make, as Gladwell put it, "small but critical adjustments" to keep it.<ref>Gladwell, p. 91</ref> According to CTW researchers Rosemarie Truglio and Shalom Fisch, it was one of the few children's shows to utilize a detailed and comprehensive educational curriculum, garnered from ] and ] research.<ref>{{cite book | last = Fisch | first = Shalom M. | author2 = Rosemarie T. Truglio |editor= Shalom M. Fisch |editor2=Rosemarie T. Truglio | title = "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street | url = https://archive.org/details/gisforgrowingthi00shal | url-access = registration | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers | year = 2001 | location = Mahweh, New Jersey | page = | isbn = 0-8058-3395-1 | chapter = Why Children Learn from Sesame Street}}</ref>


''Sesame Street''<nowiki/>'s creators and researchers formulated both ] and ] goals for the show. They initially focused on cognitive goals, while addressing affective goals indirectly, believing it would increase children's self-esteem and feelings of competency.<ref>Morrow, pp. 76, 106</ref> One of their primary goals was preparing young children for school, especially children from ] families,<ref>Lesser, p. 46</ref> using ],<ref>Lesser, pp. 86–87</ref> repetition,<ref>Lesser, p. 107</ref> and humor.<ref name="Lesser, p. 116"/> They adjusted its content to increase viewers' attention and the show's appeal,<ref>Lesser, p. 87</ref> and encouraged older children and parents to "co-view" it by including more sophisticated humor, cultural references, and celebrity guests; by 2019, 80% of parents watched ''Sesame Street'' with their children, and 650 celebrities had appeared on the show.<ref name="wallace">{{cite news |last1=Wallace |first1=Debra |title=Big Bird Has 4,000 Feathers: 21 Fun Facts About Sesame Street That Will Blow Your Mind |url=https://parade.com/840056/debrawallace/big-bird-has-4000-feathers-21-things-about-sesame-street-that-will-blow-your-mind/ |access-date=April 11, 2019 |work=Parade |date=February 6, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|accessdate=2022-08-13|title='Sesame Street' Draws in Adults with Pop Culture Parodies|url=http://yahoo.com/entertainment/news/sesame-street-draws-adults-pop-culture-parodies-180008072.html|website=yahoo.com|date=October 30, 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first1=Rosemarie T.|last1=Truglio|first2=Jennifer A.|last2=Kotler|chapter=Language, Literacy, and Media: What's the Word on Sesame Street?|pages=188–202|chapter-url=https://academic.oup.com/book/12113/chapter/161496302|year=2013|doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199943913.003.0012|title=Societal Contexts of Child Development: Pathways of Influence and Implications for Practice and Policy|editor1=Gershoff, E. T.|editor2=Mistry, R. S.|editor3=Crosby, D. A.}}</ref>
Within the context of the show, and before the actual underwriting announcements, it is announced that "Sesame Street is brought to you by" the letters and numbers of the day, as though they too were sponsors.


] participates with ] in an educational taping of ''Sesame Street'' at United Studios, 1989]]
===Ratings===
] participates in a '']'' and ''Sesame Street'' public service announcement taping with ] in the White House Kitchen, 2013]]
As a result of its success in revolutionizing the standards of children's television, ''Sesame Street'' inadvertently diminished its own audience share. According to PBS Research, the show went from a 2.0 average on ]'s "people meters" in 1995&ndash;96 to a 1.3 average in 2000&ndash;01. Even with this decrease, ''Sesame Street'''s viewership in an average week came from roughly 5.6 million households with 7.5 million viewers. This placed ''Sesame'' at 8th place in the overall kids' charts, as of 2002. The program fares better among mothers age 18&ndash;49 who had children under the age of 3, taking second place.
] meets ] to discuss refugees at the United Nations in New York City, 2016]]
During ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s first season, some critics felt that it should address more overtly such affective goals as social competence, tolerance of ], and nonaggressive ways of resolving conflict. The show's creators and producers responded by featuring these themes in interpersonal disputes between its Street characters.<ref>{{cite book | last = Huston | first = Aletha C |author2=Daniel R. Anderson |author3=John C. Wright |author4=Deborah Linebarger |author5=Kelly L. Schmidt |editor= Shalom M. Fisch |editor2=Rosemarie T. Truglio | title = "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street | url = https://archive.org/details/gisforgrowingthi00shal | url-access = registration | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers | year = 2001 | location = Mahweh, New Jersey | page = | isbn = 0-8058-3395-1 | chapter = "''Sesame Street'' Viewers as Adolescents: The Recontact Study}}</ref> During the 1980s, the show incorporated real-life experiences of its cast and crew, including the death of ] (]) and the pregnancy of ] (Maria).<ref name="hellman-52"/> In later seasons, it addressed real-life disasters such as the ] and ].<ref>Gikow, p. 165</ref>


In its first season, the show addressed its outreach goals by focusing on the promotion of educational materials used in preschool settings; and in subsequent seasons, by focusing on their development. Innovative programs were developed because their target audience, children and their families in low-income, inner-city homes, did not traditionally watch educational programs on television and because traditional methods of promotion and advertising were not effective with these groups.<ref>Gikow, p. 181</ref>
A format change helped the show's ratings, boosting them up 31% in February 2002 among children age 2&ndash;5, in comparison to its ratings in 2001. As of 2005, ''Sesame Street'' and three other PBS shows are in the top 10 shows for children ages 2 to 5.<ref>http://www.azcentral.com/families/articles/1018pbscharacter1019.html</ref> As of season 36 in 2005, there were 8 million viewers daily.<ref name="presskit"></ref>


Starting in 2006, the Workshop expanded its outreach by creating a series of PBS specials and DVDs focusing on how military deployment affects the families of servicepeople.<ref>Gikow, pp. 280–281</ref> Its outreach efforts also focused on families of prisoners, health and wellness, and safety.<ref>Gikow, pp. 286–293</ref> In 2013, SW started Sesame Street in Communities, to help families dealing with difficult issues.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Chandler |first1=Michael Alison |title=Sesame Street launches tools to help children who experience trauma, from hurricanes to violence at home |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/inspired-life/wp/2017/10/07/sesame-street-launches-tools-to-teach-coping-skills-to-children-who-experience-trauma-of-all-kinds-from-natural-disasters-to-violence-at-home/ |access-date=27 June 2019 |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=6 October 2017}}</ref>
==Characters==
]]]
], ], ], ], Biff, and ]]]
{{Main|List of Sesame Street characters}}
:''See also: Characters that are ], ], ]. Also ], ]''


==Funding==
''Sesame Street'' is known for its ] element and is inclusive in its casting, incorporating roles for disabled people, young people, senior citizens, Hispanic actors, Black actors, and others. While some of the puppets look like people, others are animal or "monster" puppets of different sizes and colors. This encourages children to believe that people come in all different shapes, sizes, and colors, and that no particular physical "type" is any better than another. Jim Henson commented that "The only kids who can identify along racial lines with the Muppets have to be either green or orange."<ref name=all>Phylis Feinstein, ''All About Sesame Street''. 1970."</ref>
As a result of Cooney's initial proposal in 1968, the Carnegie Institute awarded her a $1 million grant to create a new children's television program and establish the CTW,<ref name="davis-8"/><ref name="finch-53"/><ref>Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 3</ref> renamed in June 2000 to ] (SW). Cooney and Morrisett procured additional multimillion-dollar grants from the U.S. federal government, ], ], and the ]. Davis reported that Cooney and Morrisett decided that if they did not procure full funding from the beginning, they would drop the idea of producing the show.<ref>Davis, p. 105</ref> As Lesser reported, funds gained from a combination of government agencies and private foundations protected them from the economic pressures experienced by commercial broadcast television networks, but created challenges in procuring future funding.<ref>Lesser, p. 17</ref>


After ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s initial success, its producers began to think about its survival beyond its development and first season and decided to explore other funding sources. From the first season, they understood that the source of their funding, which they considered "seed" money, would need to be replaced.<ref name="davis-203">Davis, p. 203</ref> The 1970s were marked by conflicts between the CTW and the federal government; in 1978, the ] refused to deliver a $2 million check (equivalent to ${{Inflation|index=US|value=2|start_year=1978|r=2}}&nbsp;million in {{Inflation/year|US}}) until the last day of CTW's fiscal year. As a result, the CTW decided to depend upon licensing arrangements with toy companies and other manufacturers, publishing, and international sales for their funding.<ref name="odell"/>
In harmony with its multiculturalist perspective, the show pioneered the idea of occasionally inserting very basic Spanish words and phrases to help young children become acquainted with the concept of a foreign language, doing so almost three decades before ] made her debut on ]. Perhaps in response to the popularity of Dora, the recently revamped format gives ], the bilingual muppet who "emigrated" in 1993 from the Mexican version of the show, more time in front of viewers, and also introduced the more formalized "Spanish Word of the Day" in every episode.


In 1998, the CTW accepted ] to raise funds for ''Sesame Street'' and other projects. For the first time, they allowed short advertisements by indoor playground manufacturer ], their first corporate sponsor, to air before and after each episode. Consumer advocate ], who had previously appeared on ''Sesame Street'', called for a boycott of the show, saying that the CTW was "exploiting impressionable children."<ref name="brooke"/> In 2015, in response to funding challenges, it was announced that ] service ] would air first-run episodes of ''Sesame Street''.<ref name="movetohbo"/> Steve Youngwood, SW's Chief Operating Officer, called the move "one of the toughest decisions we ever made."<ref name="guthrie2">{{cite news |last1=Guthrie |first1=Marisa |title=Where 'Sesame Street' Gets Its Funding — and How It Nearly Went Broke |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/sesame-street-gets-funding-how-it-went-broke-1183032 |access-date=June 28, 2019 |work=The Hollywood Reporter |date=February 6, 2019}}</ref> According to ''The New York Times'', the move "drew an immediate backlash."<ref name="steel" /> Critics claimed that it favored privileged children over less-advantaged children and their families, the original focus of the show. They also criticized choosing to air first-run episodes on HBO, a network with adult dramas and comedies.<ref name="steel"/><ref>{{cite news |last1=Luckerson |first1=Victor |title=This Is Why HBO Really Wants Sesame Street |url=https://time.com/3996575/hbo-sesame-street/?iid=time_readnext |access-date=April 23, 2019 |magazine=Time |date=August 13, 2019}}</ref>
Each of the puppet characters has been designed to represent a specific stage or element of early childhood, and the scripts are written so that the character reflects the development level of children of that age. This helps the show address not only the learning objectives of various age groups, but also the concerns, fears, and interests of children of different age levels.


===The Muppets=== ==Production==


===Research===
] is an 8-foot&nbsp;2-inch-tall yellow bird who lives in a large nest on an abandoned lot which is located in 123 Sesame Street's garbage heap. Big Bird is often visited by his friend ], who is a very large, brown woolly elephant-like creature and is known more popularly by his nickname "Snuffy". Various other Snuffleupaguses<!--this spelling is correct within SS--> have appeared on the show from time to time, most notably Snuffy's little sister Alice and his unnamed mother. Initially, Snuffy showed up when no one but Big Bird was around, leaving the rest of the neighborhood to think he was imaginary. In the mid-1980s, however, Snuffy was revealed to be "real" and incorporated into the regular cast of the show.
{{Main|Sesame Street research{{!}}''Sesame Street'' research}}


Producer Joan Ganz Cooney has stated, "Without research, there would be no ''Sesame Street''."<ref name="cooney-xi">Cooney in Fisch & Truglio, p. xi</ref> In 1967, when she and her team began planning the show's development, combining research with television production was, as she put it, "positively heretical."<ref name="cooney-xi"/> Its producers soon began developing what came to be called the CTW Model, a system of planning, production and evaluation that did not fully emerge until the end of the show's first season.<ref name="morrow-68">Morrow, p. 68</ref>{{refn|See Gikow, p. 155, for a visual representation of the CTW model.|group=note}} According to Morrow, the Model consisted of four parts: "the interaction of receptive television producers and ] experts, the creation of a specific and age-appropriate curriculum, research to shape the program directly, and independent measurement of viewers' learning."<ref name="morrow-68"/>
] lives with his pet worm ] and his pet elephant ] in a garbage can in the heap.


Cooney credited the show's high standard in research procedures to Harvard professors ], whom CTW hired to design its educational objectives; and ], who conducted the show's formative research and bridged the gap between producers and researchers.<ref name="cooney-xii">Cooney in Fisch & Truglio, p. xii</ref> CTW conducted research in two ways: in-house formative research that informed and improved production;<ref>Mielke in Fisch & Truglio, pp. 84–85</ref> and independent summative evaluations, conducted by the ] (ETS) during the first two seasons, which measured its educational effectiveness.<ref name="palmer"/> Cooney said, "From the beginning, we—the planners of the project—designed the show as an experimental research project with educational advisers, researchers, and television producers collaborating as equal partners."<ref>Borgenicht, p. 9</ref> She characterized the collaboration as an "arranged marriage."<ref name="cooney-xi"/>
], two of the most-recognized Muppets, are roommates who share the basement apartment of 123 Sesame Street, and regularly engage in comic routines which showcase their odd-couple personalities. Ernie's flowerbox was once a hotspot for ], a colorful family of insects.


===Writing===
], which resembles the bears of '']'', resides in ''Sesame Street''. This family, headed by ] and ], welcomed their second child ], and ] became a good friend of the monsters ] and ], Mexico-born ], and the furry, red preschooler ]. Elmo has his own segment near the end of each episode, in which viewers explore topics in '']''. New to ''Sesame Street'' is ], a ]-in-training who attends Storybook Community School with Baby Bear.
''Sesame Street'' has used many writers in its long history. As Peter Hellman wrote in his 1987 article in '']'', "The show, of course, depends upon its writers, and it isn't easy to find adults who could identify the interest level of a pre-schooler."<ref name="hellman-52"/> Fifteen writers a year worked on the show's scripts, but very few lasted longer than one season. ], head writer in 1987, reported that most writers would "burn out" after writing about a dozen scripts.<ref name="hellman-52"/> According to Gikow, ''Sesame Street'' went against the convention of hiring teachers to write for the show, as most educational television programs did at the time. Instead, Cooney and the producers felt that it would be easier to teach writers how to interpret curriculum than to teach educators how to write comedy.<ref name="gikow-178">Gikow, p. 178</ref> As Stone stated, "Writing for children is not so easy."<ref name="gikow-178"/> Long-time writer Tony Geiss agreed, stating in 2009, "It's not an easy show to write. You have to know the characters and the format and how to teach and be funny at the same time, which is a big, ambidextrous stunt."<ref>Gikow, p. 174</ref>


], where ''Sesame Street'' is taped]]
]'s regular segment, '']'', follows the self-described "cute, furry monster" around the world as he explores local cultures and traditions. Grover has had several notable roles over the years, often as a waiter or a superhero (Super-Grover). ] fights with his conscience daily during ], as he tries to control his urges to eat the letters, shown as icing on cookies. ] often attempts to help Cookie Monster refrain from eating the letters, but never succeeds and always leaves frazzled. ] has fewer problems during the ] segment, where he indulges in counting until the mystery number is revealed by his pipe organ.


The show's research team developed an annotated document, or "Writer's Notebook," which served as a bridge between the show's curriculum goals and script development.<ref name="lesser-101">Lesser, p. 101</ref> The notebook was a compilation of programming ideas designed to teach specific curriculum points,<ref>Morrow, p. 82</ref> provided extended definitions of curriculum goals, and assisted the writers and producers in translating the goals into televised material.<ref>Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 10</ref> Suggestions in the notebook were free of references to specific characters and contexts on the show so that they could be implemented as openly and flexibly as possible.<ref>Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 11</ref>
] are a married couple who have a baby named ], and they are the proprietors of the hotel known as '']'', which is located near the Sesame Street Subway station. The hotel's bellhop, ], tends to be easily irritated, but begrudgingly helps out. The ] sounded out words coming together, and the ] aliens discovered telephones and typewriters. For two seasons, ], ], ] and ] hung out in the '']''.


The research team, in a series of meetings with the writers, also developed "a curriculum sheet" that described the show's goals and priorities for each season. After receiving the curriculum focus and goals for the season, the writers met to discuss ideas and story arcs for the characters, and an "assignment sheet" was created that suggested how much time was allotted for each goal and topic.<ref name="lesser-101"/><ref>{{cite book | last = Lesser | first = Gerald S. |author2=Joel Schneider |editor= Shalom M. Fisch |editor2=Rosemarie T. Truglio | title = "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street | url = https://archive.org/details/gisforgrowingthi00shal | url-access = registration | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers | year = 2001 | location = Mahweh, New Jersey | page = | isbn = 0-8058-3395-1 | chapter = Creation and Evolution of the ''Sesame Street'' Curriculum}}</ref> When a script was completed, the show's research team analyzed it to ensure that the goals were met. Then each production department met to determine what each episode needed in terms of costumes, lights, and sets. The writers were present during the show's taping, which for the first twenty-four years of the show took place in ], and after 1992, at the ] in ] to make last-minute revisions when necessary.<ref>{{cite news | last = Murphy | first = Tim | title = How We Got to 'Sesame Street' | work = New York Magazine | url = http://nymag.com/news/intelligencer/topic/61744/ | date = November 1, 2009 | access-date = July 8, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = How to Get to 'Sesame Street' at the Apollo Theater | publisher = New York City Mayor's Office | date = November 19, 2008 | url = http://www.nyc.gov/html/film/html/news_2008/110108_sesame_panel_recap.shtml | access-date = July 8, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Spinney | first = Caroll | author2 = Jason Milligan | title = The Wisdom of Big Bird (and the Dark Genius of Oscar the Grouch): Lessons from a Life in Feathers | publisher = Random House | year = 2003 | location = New York | page = | isbn = 0-375-50781-7 | url = https://archive.org/details/wisdomofbigbirda00spin/page/3 }}</ref>{{refn|Most of the first season was filmed at a studio near ], but a strike forced their move to ]. In the early days, the set was simple, consisting of four structures.<ref>Gikow, pp. 66–67</ref> In 1982, ''Sesame Street'' began filming at Unitel Studios on 57th Street, but relocated to Kaufman Astoria Studios in 1993, when the producers decided they needed more space.<ref>Gikow, pp. 206–207</ref>|group=note}}
] hosted the segment '']''. In other segments, Kermit would play ] to the wacky antics of other Muppets.


===Media===
Incidental characters include television personality ], construction workers ], the large ] (who does not know his own strength), and ], who is not a terror to the Street. ], a cowboy with a short-term memory disorder, rode his trusty Buster the Horse with his girlfriend Clementine, and ] was an early cowgirl. The ] tries his hardest to amaze with his magic, but his tricks always end up backfiring.
{{Main|Sesame Workshop#Funding sources|Music of Sesame Street{{!}}Music of ''Sesame Street''|Sesame Street international co-productions{{!}}''Sesame Street'' international co-productions}}


Early in their history ''Sesame Street'' and the CTW began to look for alternative funding sources and turned to creating products and writing licensing agreements. They became, as Cooney put it, "a multiple-media institution."<ref>Cherow-O'Leary in Fisch & Truglio, p. 197</ref> In 1970, the CTW created a "non-broadcast" division responsible for creating and publishing books and '']''.<ref>Cherow-O'Leary in Fisch & Truglio, pp. 197–198</ref> By 2019, the Sesame Workshop had published over 6,500 book titles.<ref name="guthrie"/> The Workshop decided from the start that all materials their licensing program created would "underscore and amplify"<ref name="davis-205">Davis, p. 205</ref><ref name="davis-195"/> the show's curriculum. In 2004, over 68% of ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s revenue came from licenses and products such as toys and clothing.<ref name="carvajal">{{cite news | last = Carvajal | first = Doreen | title = Sesame Street Goes Global: Let's All Count the Revenue | work = The New York Times | date = December 12, 2005 | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/12/business/media/12sesame.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print | access-date = July 8, 2019}}</ref>{{refn|See Gikow, pp. 280–285 for a list of many of the show's products.|group=note}} By 2008, the ''Sesame Street'' Muppets accounted for between $15 million and $17 million per year in licensing and merchandising fees, split between the Sesame Workshop and The Jim Henson Company.<ref name="davis-5">Davis, p. 5</ref> By 2019, the Sesame Workshop had over 500 licensing agreements and had produced over 200 hours of home video.<ref name="wallace"/><ref name="guthrie"/> There have been two theatrically released ''Sesame Street'' movies, '']'', released in 1985, and '']'', released in 1999. In early 2019, it was announced that a third film, a musical co-starring ] and written and directed by ], would be produced.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kit |first1=Borys |last2=Sandberg |first2=Bryn Elise |title='Sesame Street' Movie's Writer-Director Reveals Plot Details |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/sesame-street-movies-writer-director-reveals-plot-details-1182692 |access-date=April 18, 2019 |work=The Hollywood Reporter |date=February 6, 2019}}</ref> In November 2019, Sesame Street announced a family friendly ] application produced by Weyo in partnership with ] in honor of the show's 50th anniversary.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/jessedamiani/2019/11/07/sesame-street-launches-50th-anniversary-ar-app/|title=Sesame Street Launches 50th Anniversary AR App|last=Damiani|first=Jesse|website=Forbes|language=en|access-date=2019-11-18}}</ref>
{{seealso|Muppets}}


], the creator of the Muppets, owned the ]s to those characters, and was reluctant to market them at first. He agreed when the CTW promised that the profits from toys, books, ], and other products were to be used exclusively to fund the CTW and its outreach efforts.<ref name="davis-203"/><ref>Gikow, p. 268</ref> Even though Cooney and the CTW had very little experience with marketing, they demanded complete control over all products and product decisions.<ref name="davis-205"/> Any product line associated with the show had to be educational and inexpensive, and could not be advertised during the show's airings.<ref name="davis-204">Davis, p. 204</ref> As Davis reported, "Cooney stressed restraint, prudence, and caution" in their marketing and licensing efforts.<ref name="davis-204"/>{{refn|According to ''Parade Magazine'' in 2019, 1 million children played with ''Sesame Street'' toys daily.<ref name="wallace"/>|group=note}}
===The humans===
], while Luis is the longest running ] character.<ref name=washingtonfile2>Michael Jay Friedman, , ] ].</ref> Gordon and Susan may hold such an honor for longest running African-American characters.]]
:''Main article: ]''


Director Jon Stone, talking about the music of ''Sesame Street'', said: "There was no other sound like it on television."<ref>Gikow, p. 220</ref> For the first time in children's television, the show's songs fulfilled a specific purpose and supported its curriculum.<ref>Gikow, p. 227</ref> In order to attract the best composers and lyricists, the CTW allowed songwriters like ], ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s first musical director, to retain the rights to the songs they wrote, which earned them lucrative profits and helped the show sustain public interest.<ref>Davis, p. 256</ref> By 2019, there were 180 albums of ''Sesame Street'' music produced, and its songwriters had received 11 ].<ref name="wallace"/><ref name="guthrie"/> In late 2018, the SW announced a multi-year agreement with ] to re-launch Sesame Street Records in the U.S. and Canada. For the first time in 20 years, "an extensive catalog of ''Sesame Street'' recordings" was made available to the public in a variety of formats, including CD and vinyl compilations, digital streaming, and downloads.<ref>{{cite web |title=Warner Music Group Sesame Workshop Team up to Relaunch Sesame Street Records |url=https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/warner-music-group-and-sesame-workshop-team-up-to-relaunch-sesame-street-records/ |publisher=Music Business Worldwide |access-date=18 July 2019 |date=27 November 2018}}</ref>
A slate of human regulars pull the zaniness of the Muppets back to reality. They were not always meant to serve this purpose. The show lost test viewers' attention during the Street Scenes, meaning Muppets needed to be added, to hide the fact it was educational.


''Sesame Street'' used animations and short films commissioned from outside studios,<ref name="gikow-236"/> interspersed throughout each episode, to help teach their viewers basic concepts like numbers and letters.<ref>Morrow, p. 89</ref> Jim Henson was one of the many producers to create short films for the show.<ref name="gikow-236">Gikow, p. 236</ref> Shortly after ''Sesame Street'' debuted in the United States, the CTW was approached independently by producers from several countries to produce versions of the show at home. These versions came to be called "co-productions."<ref>Cole et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 148</ref> By 2001 there were over 120 million viewers of all international versions of ''Sesame Street'',<ref>Cole et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 147</ref> and in 2006, there were twenty co-productions around the world.<ref>{{Cite video | people = Knowlton, Linda Goldstein and Linda Hawkins Costigan (producers) | date = 2006 | title = The World According to Sesame Street | medium = documentary | publisher = Participant Productions}}</ref> By its 50th anniversary in 2019, 190 million children viewed over 160 versions of ''Sesame Street'' in 70 languages.<ref name="wallace"/><ref name="leaving">{{cite web |last1=Bradley |first1=Diana |title=Leaving the neighborhood: 'Sesame Street' muppets to travel across America next year |url=https://www.prweek.com/article/1489073/leaving-neighborhood-sesame-street-muppets-travel-across-america-next-year |website=PR Weekly |access-date=July 9, 2019 |date=July 27, 2018}}</ref> In 2005, Doreen Carvajal of '']'' reported that income from the co-productions and international licensing accounted for $96 million. ''Sesame Street the Musical'' opened at ] off Broadway on September 8, 2022.<ref name="musical2">{{cite web |title=Sesame Street the Musical |url=https://sesamestreetmusical.com/ |access-date=November 24, 2022 |website=sesamestreetmusical.com}}</ref><ref name="musical-22">{{cite web |date=November 18, 2022 |title=SESAME STREET MUSICAL - Rumours of a West End transfer |url=https://www.londonboxoffice.co.uk/news/post/sesame-street-london |access-date=November 24, 2022 |website=London Box Office}}</ref>
Music teacher Bob has been on ''Sesame Street'' since its inception. He dated ] the local ] librarian, who was the first regular deaf character on television. Linda owns ], a Muppet dog. ] are an African-American family that includes schoolteacher Gordon, nurse Susan, and adopted son Miles. The Puerto Rican Rodriguez Family include Maria and Luis, who ran the ], which was turned into the ]; Maria gave birth to daughter Gabby in 1986, and her ] was covered on the show.


In 2015, ] acquired the production rights to the show, which included an agreement of exclusive rights for nine months at which point the episodes were to be given away free of charge to other networks (e.g. ]). In December 2024, HBO announced it would part ways with ''Sesame Street''.<ref>CNBC Market Hall segment, archived at<nowiki/>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJGPLD-xcfI</ref>
General store and restaurant operator Harold Hooper, played by actor ], was a mainstay at ]. When Lee died in 1982, the producers opted to help their young viewers deal with the death of someone they loved rather than cast a new actor in the role, and the character's death was discussed in a landmark 1983 episode.<ref>While Mr. Hooper's death is considered by most as a landmark in children's television, this wasn't the first death in a children's program. Upon the 1973 death of ], who played the titular character in the British series '']'', the third season of the show dealt with the character's passing. The series was renamed ''Pipkins'', to reflect the change in cast.</ref> Afterwards, Hooper's apprentice David took over, followed by later owners Gina, Mr. Handford, and Alan. Gina stopped running the store in the 1990s, to earn a PhD and became a veterinarian.


==Cast, crew and characters==
] and his brother and sister, who appear only in '']'' are meant to provide a vaudevillian perspective on subjects, contrary to most of the show's current human characters (though reminiscent of such earlier insert characters as Buddy and Jim, Larry and Phyllis, and The Mad Painter).<ref></ref>
{{Main|List of Sesame Street Muppets{{!}}List of ''Sesame Street'' Muppets|List of human Sesame Street characters{{!}}List of human ''Sesame Street'' characters}}
], creator of ], in 1989]]
] with ]]]
Shortly after the CTW was created in 1968, Joan Ganz Cooney was named its first executive director. She was one of the first female executives in American television. Her appointment was called "one of the most important television developments of the decade."<ref>Davis, pp. 128–129</ref> She assembled a team of producers, all of whom had previously worked on '']''. ] was responsible for writing, casting, and format; Dave Connell took over animation; and Sam Gibbon served as the show's chief liaison between the production staff and the research team.<ref>Davis, p. 147</ref> Cameraman Frankie Biondo has worked on ''Sesame Street'' from its first episode in 1969.<ref>Gikow, p. 15</ref>


Jim Henson and the Muppets' involvement in ''Sesame Street'' began when he and Cooney met at one of the curriculum planning seminars in Boston. Author Christopher Finch reported that Stone, who had worked with Henson previously, felt that if they could not bring him on board, they should "make do without puppets."<ref name="finch-53"/> Henson was initially reluctant, but he agreed to join ''Sesame Street'' to meet his own social goals. He also agreed to waive his performance fee for full ownership of the ''Sesame Street'' Muppets and to split any revenue they generated with the CTW.<ref name="davis-5"/> As Morrow stated, Henson's puppets were a crucial part of the show's popularity and it brought Henson national attention.<ref>Morrow, p. 93</ref> Davis reported that Henson was able to take "arcane academic goals" and translate them to "effective and pleasurable viewing."<ref>Davis, p. 163</ref> In early research, the Muppet segments of the show scored high, and more Muppets were added during the first few seasons. Morrow reported that the Muppets were effective teaching tools because children easily recognized them, they were stereotypical and predictable, and they appealed to adults and older siblings.<ref>Morrow, pp. 94–95</ref>
]<ref>''Sesame Street'' even turned to relative star-wattage for its theme song, "(Can you tell me how to get, how to get to) Sesame Street". Harmonica legend ] wrote the song in 1969, and played a harmonica solo in some versions of the sequence.</ref> and various children from New York schools and day-care centers are a constantly changing part of the cast, including children who would later become celebrities, like actor ], and rapper ].


{{Quote box
==Cast and crew==
|width = 30em
Over the 37 seasons of ''Sesame Street'' hundreds, if not thousands, of people have worked on the show's cast and in their crew, producing Street scenes or segments, or working behind the scenes.
|border = 1px
* ]
|align = right
* ]
|quote = ''Sesame Street'' is best known for the creative geniuses it attracted, people like Jim Henson and Joe Raposo and Frank Oz, who intuitively grasped what it takes to get through to children. They were television's answer to Beatrix Potter or L. Frank Baum or Dr. Seuss.
* ]
|salign = right
|source = —Author ], '']''<ref>Gladwell, p. 99</ref>
}}


Although the producers decided against depending upon a single host for ''Sesame Street'', instead casting a group of ethnically diverse actors,<ref>Lesser, p. 99</ref> they realized that a children's television program needed to have, as Lesser put it, "a variety of distinctive and reliable personalities,"<ref>Lesser, p. 125</ref> both human and Muppet. Jon Stone, whose goal was to cast white actors in the minority,<ref name="hellman-52"/> was responsible for hiring the show's first ]. He did not audition actors until Spring 1969, a few weeks before the five test shows were due to be filmed. Stone videotaped the auditions, and Ed Palmer took them out into the field to test children's reactions. The actors who received the "most enthusiastic thumbs up" were cast.<ref name="Borgenicht-15">Borgenicht, p. 15</ref> For example, ] was chosen to play ] when the children who saw her audition stood up and sang along with her rendition of "]."<ref name="Borgenicht-15"/><ref>Davis, p. 172</ref> Stone stated that casting was the only aspect of the show that was "just completely haphazard."<ref name="davis-195">Davis, p. 195</ref> Most of the cast and crew found jobs on ''Sesame Street'' through personal relationships with Stone and the other producers.<ref name="davis-195" /> According to puppeteer ] in 2019, longevity was common among the show's cast and crew.<ref name="guthrie"/>
==Regional variations==
{{mainarticle|Sesame Street internationally}}
], in a knight's armour. The puppet, as well as most of the series cast, is displayed at the ].]]
Some countries have co-produced their own unique versions of ''Sesame Street'', in which the characters and segments represent their country's cultures. Other countries simply air a dubbed version of ''Sesame Street'', or a dubbed version of '']''. Among various other countries, Australia has and still does broadcast the American version on the ABC and the ] had broadcast the American show, on ] until 2001 when it was replaced with Henson production '']''.


According to the CTW's research, children preferred watching and listening to other children more than to puppets and adults, so they included children in many scenes.<ref>Lesser, p. 127</ref> Dave Connell insisted that no child actors be used,<ref name="morrow-84">Morrow, p. 84</ref> so these children were non-professionals, unscripted, and spontaneous. Many of their reactions were unpredictable and difficult to control, but the adult ] learned to handle the children's spontaneity flexibly, even when it resulted in departures from the planned script or lesson.<ref>Lesser, pp. 127–128</ref> CTW research also revealed that the children's hesitations and on-air mistakes served as models for viewers.<ref>Gikow, p. 123</ref> According to Morrow, this resulted in the show having a "fresh quality," especially in its early years.<ref name="morrow-84"/>
Dubbed versions include ''Seesamtie'' in Finnish, ''Boneka Sesame'' in Indonesian, ''Sesam Opnist Þú'' in Icelandic, ''Sesamo Apriti'' in Italian, ''Sezame, otevři se'' in Czech, and Malay ''Taman Sesame''. In 2004, one Japanese network cancelled the dubbed American ''Sesame'', while another created a local version. In ], locally produced segments entitled "Korero ]" (in English: "let's speak Māori") were inserted into episodes to educate children in the ]. Spanish program '']'' also includes segments from ''Sesame Street''.


==Reception==
] of ''Sesame Street'' include:
{{Main|Influence of Sesame Street{{!}}Influence of ''Sesame Street''}}
{|
|
* 1972: '']'', Brazil
* 1972: '']'', Mexico
* 1973: '']'', Germany
* 1973: ''Canadian Sesame Street'', Canada (reformatted as '']'' in the 1990s)
* 1976: '']'', Netherlands<ref>Note that people in the Dutch-speaking area of Belgium, called ], also watch the program.</ref>
* 1978: '']'', France
* 1979: '']'', Kuwait
* 1979: '']'', Spain
* 1981: '']'', Sweden
* 1983: '']'', Israel
* 1984: '']'' (''Batibot''), Philippines
* 1986: '']'', Turkey
* 1989: '']'', Portugal
* 1991: '']'', Norway
* 1996: '']'', Russia
* 1996: '']'', Česká republika (Czech Republic)
* 1996: '']'', Poland
* 1998: '']'' and '']'', Israel and Palestinian Territories
|
* 1998: '']'', China
* 1999: '']'', Taiwan, China, Italy, Poland
* 2000: '']'', South Africa
* 2000: '']'', Egypt
* 2002: '']'', Great Britain
* 2003: '']'', Australia
* 2004: '']'', Afghanistan
* 2004: '']'', Japan
* 2005: '']'', Bangladesh
* 2005: '']'', France
* 2005: '']'', Cambodia
* 2006: '']'', ]
* 2007: ''] (as announced by ] during her visit to Indonesia in 2006)
* 2007?: '']''
* 2007?: '']''<ref> and </ref>
* '']'', Jordan, '']'', Palestinian Territories, '']'', Israel
|}
<small>Note that dates solely refer to the year production on the series began.</small>


===Ratings===
{{seealso|List of characters from international versions of Sesame Street}}
When ''Sesame Street'' premiered on November 10, 1969, it aired on only 67.6% of American televisions, but it earned a 3.3 ] rating, which totaled 1.9 million households.<ref name="Seligsohn">Seligsohn, Leo. (February 9, 1970). "Backstage at Sesame Street". ''New York Newsday''. Quoted in Davis, p. 197.</ref> By the show's tenth anniversary in 1979, nine million American children under the age of 6 were watching ''Sesame Street'' daily. According to a 1993 survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, out of the show's 6.6 million viewers, 2.4 million kindergartners regularly watched it. 77% of preschoolers watched it once a week, and 86% of kindergartners and first- and second-grade students had watched it once a week before starting school. The show reached most young children in almost all demographic groups.<ref name="zill-117">{{cite book | last = Zill | first = Nicholas | title = "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers | year = 2001 | location = Mahweh, New Jersey | pages = | isbn = 0-8058-3395-1 | chapter = Does ''Sesame Street'' Enhance School Readiness? Evidence from a National Survey of Children | chapter-url = https://archive.org/details/gisforgrowingthi00shal/page/117 }}</ref>


The show's ratings significantly decreased in the early 1990s, due to changes in children's viewing habits and in the television marketplace. The producers responded by making large-scale structural changes to the show.<ref name="weiss">{{cite news | last = Weiss | first = Joanna | title = New Character Joins PBS | work = The Boston Globe | date = October 19, 2005 | url = http://www.azcentral.com/families/articles/1018pbscharacter1019.html | access-date = October 12, 2019}}</ref> By 2006, ''Sesame Street'' had become "the most widely viewed children's television show in the world," with 20 international independent versions and broadcasts in over 120 countries.<ref name="friedman">{{cite news|last=Friedman|first=Michael Jay|date=April 8, 2006|title=Sesame Street Educates and Entertains Internationally|work=America.gov|publisher=U.S. Department of State Bureau of International Information Programs|url=http://dhaka.usembassy.gov/uploads/images/l1XvaDkUC8Hy7OGZIc2Nbw/pre2apr06_06.pdf|url-status=dead|access-date=March 11, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070815105719/http://dhaka.usembassy.gov/uploads/images/l1XvaDkUC8Hy7OGZIc2Nbw/pre2apr06_06.pdf|archive-date=August 15, 2007}}</ref> A 1996 survey found that 95% of all American preschoolers had watched the show by the time they were three years old.<ref name="growing">{{cite book | last = Truglio | first = Rosemarie T | author2 = Shalom M. Fisch | editor = Shalom M. Fisch | editor2 = Rosemarie T. Truglio | title = "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street | url = https://archive.org/details/gisforgrowingthi00shal | url-access = registration | publisher = Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers | year = 2001 | location = Mahweh, New Jersey | page = xvi | isbn = 0-8058-3395-1 | chapter = Introduction }}</ref> In 2008, it was estimated that 77 million Americans had watched the series as children.<ref name="friedman"/> By the show's 40th anniversary in 2009, it was ranked the fifteenth-most-popular children's show on television, and by its 50th anniversary in 2019, the show had 100% brand awareness globally. In 2018, the show was the second-highest-rated program on PBS Kids.<ref>{{cite news | last = Guernsey | first = Lisa | title = How Sesame Street Changed the World | work = Newsweek | date = May 23, 2009 | url = http://www.newsweek.com/2009/05/22/sesame-street.html | access-date = October 12, 2019}}</ref><ref name="leaving"/> In 2021, however, the Sesame Street documentary "50 Years of Sunny Days," which was broadcast nationally on ABC, did not fare well in the ratings,<ref name=lowratings>{{cite news|url=https://www.thewrap.com/sesame-street-50-years-of-sunny-days-ratings-abc/|title=Ratings: 'Sesame Street' Documentary Does Not Bring Sunny Days to ABC|first=Tony|last=Magilo|publisher=The Wrap|date=April 27, 2021|access-date=April 28, 2021}}</ref> scoring only approximately 2.3 million viewers.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.showbuzzdaily.com/articles/showbuzzdailys-top-150-monday-cable-originals-network-finals-4-26-2021.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210427201251/http://www.showbuzzdaily.com/articles/showbuzzdailys-top-150-monday-cable-originals-network-finals-4-26-2021.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=April 27, 2021|title=UPDATED:SHOWBUZZDAILY's Top 150 Monday Cable Originals and Network Finals|first=Mitch|last=Metcalf|publisher=Showbuzz Daily|date=April 27, 2021|access-date=April 28, 2021}}</ref>
It should also be noted that popular, long-running ] children's series '']'' was originally conceived as a British equivalent of ''Sesame Street'',<ref>{{cite book|last=Evans|first=Jeff|title=The Guinness Television Encyclopedia|publisher=Guinness|id=ISBN 0-85112-744-4|year=1995}}</ref> however it holds no official affiliation with Sesame Workshop.


==Research== ===Influence===
{{Main|Sesame Street research#Summative research{{!}}''Sesame Street'' research#Summative research}}
], filmmaking of ] and his ] dogs, Big Bird conducting the ], or simply Telly Monster playing a triangle.]]
{{As of|2001}}, there were over 1,000 research studies regarding ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s efficacy, impact, and effect on American culture.<ref name="cooney-xii" /> The CTW solicited the ] (ETS) to conduct summative research on the show.<ref name="mielke-85"/> ETS's two "landmark"<ref>Mielke in Fisch & Truglio, p. 88</ref> summative evaluations, conducted in 1970 and 1971, demonstrated that the show had a significant educational impact on its viewers.<ref name="palmer-20"/> These studies have been cited in other studies of the effects of television on young children.<ref name="mielke-85">Mielke in Fisch & Truglio, p. 85</ref>{{refn|According to Edward Palmer and his colleague Shalom M. Fisch, these studies were responsible for securing funding for the show over the next several years.<ref name="palmer-20">Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 20</ref>|group=note}} Additional studies conducted throughout ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s history demonstrated that the show continued to have a positive effect on its young viewers.{{refn|See Gikow, pp. 284–285; ''"G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street'', pp. 147–230.|group=note}}


{{Quote box
''Sesame Street'' has operated with a rigorous research standard since its foundation, to ensure that programming addresses its viewers' needs. The Education and Research (E&R) department of Sesame Workshop is currently headed by ], Ph.D. and ], Ed. D. Truglio states that the level of interaction between E&R, Content, and Production is "ntimately·hand-in-hand. They are not creating anything without our knowledge, our guidance and our review. We are involved in content development across all media platforms."<ref name="Q&A"></ref> This close-knit organizational structure has been an integral part of Sesame Workshop since it began.
|width = 30em
|border = 1px
|align = right
|quote = ''Sesame Street'' perhaps the most vigorously researched, vetted, and fretted-over program on the planet. It would take a fork-lift to now to haul away the load of scholarly paper devoted to the series...
|salign = right
|source = —Author Michael Davis<ref>Davis, p. 357</ref>
}}


Lesser believed that ''Sesame Street'' research "may have conferred a new respectability upon the studies of the effects of visual media upon children."<ref name="lesser-235">Lesser, p. 235</ref> He also believed that the show had the same effect on the prestige of producing shows for children in the television industry.<ref name="lesser-235"/> Historian Robert Morrow, in his book ''Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television'', which chronicled the show's influence on children's television and on the television industry as a whole, reported that many critics of commercial television saw ''Sesame Street'' as a "straightforward illustration for reform."<ref name="morrow-122">Morrow, p. 122</ref> Les Brown, a writer for '']'', saw in ''Sesame Street'' "a hope for a more substantial future" for television.<ref name="morrow-122"/>
Writers create plots for ''Sesame Street'' scenes and segments, and the content is reviewed by the E&R team, which has authority to reject a script and force rewrites if the content is not acceptable. When a script is factually correct, but includes gray areas that may not be comprehensible to children, the writers and E&R work together to tweak everything. "A balance between content and humor"<ref name="Q&A" /> is always pursued, according to Truglio.


Morrow reported that the networks responded by creating more high-quality television programs, but that many critics saw them as "appeasement gestures."<ref>Morrow, p. 127</ref> According to Morrow, despite the CTW Model's effectiveness in creating a popular show, commercial television "made only a limited effort to emulate CTW's methods," and did not use a curriculum or evaluate what children learned from them.<ref>Morrow, p. 130</ref> By the mid-1970s commercial television had abandoned their experiments with creating better children's programming.<ref>Morrow, p. 132</ref> Other critics hoped that ''Sesame Street'', with its depiction of a functioning, multicultural community, would nurture racial tolerance in its young viewers.<ref>Morrow, p. 124</ref> It was not until the mid-1990s that another children's television educational program, '']'', used the CTW's methods to create and modify their content. The creators of ''Blue's Clues'' were influenced by ''Sesame Street'', but wanted to use research conducted in the 30 years since its debut. Angela Santomero, one of its producers, said, "We wanted to learn from ''Sesame Street'' and take it one step further."<ref>Gladwell, p. 111</ref>
In a national study of American mothers with children under age six, 64% responded that they strongly believe ''Sesame Street'' is a leader and innovator in educational methods.<ref name="sslpress">''Sesame Street Live'' Press Kit, Minneapolis MN: Vee Corporation, 2004.</ref>


Critic ] said that perhaps one of the strongest indicators of the influence of ''Sesame Street'' has been the enduring rumors and urban legends surrounding the show and its characters, especially speculation concerning the sexuality of ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Roeper | first = Richard | title = Hollywood Urban Legends: The Truth Behind All Those Delightfully Persistent Myths of Film, Television and Music | year = 2001 | publisher = Career Press | location = Franklin Lakes, New Jersey | isbn = 1-56414-554-9 | pages = | url = https://archive.org/details/hollywoodurbanle00rich/page/48 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-45566451|title=Bert and Ernie sexuality debate rages|date=September 18, 2018|work=BBC News|access-date=October 16, 2019|language=en-GB}}</ref>
Since 1998 Sesame Workshop has provided a great deal of content on its website<ref></ref> and others such as ].<ref></ref> The content is targeted at parents and children ranging in age from birth to school-age, and includes information on dozens of topics, such as appropriate parenting techniques, dealing with children's fears, development of literacy, and maintenance of good health.


===Critical reception===
Research is funded by government grants, corporate and private donations (including, recently, The Prudential Foundation for the Sesame Beginnings program), and the profits gained from the sale of Sesame Workshop merchandise.
''Sesame Street'' was praised from its debut in 1969. ''Newsday'' reported that several newspapers and magazines had written "glowing" reports about the CTW and Cooney.<ref name="Seligsohn"/> The press overwhelmingly praised the new show; several popular magazines and niche magazines lauded it.<ref>Morrow, pp. 119–120</ref> In 1970, ''Sesame Street'' won twenty awards, including a ], three Emmys, an award from the ], a ], and a Prix Jeunesse.<ref>Morrow, p. 119</ref> By 1995, the show had won two Peabody Awards and four ]s. It was the subject of a traveling exhibition by the ],<ref>{{cite news|first1=Laurel|last1=Graeber|accessdate=2022-04-30|title=And a Frog Shall Lead Them: Henson's Legacy|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/19/arts/design/jim-hensons-fantastic-world-at-museum-of-the-moving-image.html|newspaper=The New York Times|date=18 August 2011|issn=0362-4331|via=NYTimes.com}}</ref> and a film exhibition at the ].<ref>{{cite news|accessdate=2022-04-30|title=WEEKENDER GUIDE|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/10/arts/weekender-guide.html|newspaper=The New York Times|date=10 November 1989|issn=0362-4331|via=NYTimes.com}}</ref>


{{Quote box
===Healthy Habits for Life===
|width = 30em
In 2005, ''Sesame Street'' launched its ] programming, to encourage young viewers to lead more active and nutritious lifestyles. A major catalyst for this was data published by the US ] regarding ] in children.
|border = 1px
|align = right
|quote = ''Sesame Street'' is ... with lapses, the most intelligent and important program in television. That is not anything much yet.
|salign = right
|source = —], '']'', 1972<ref>Lesser, p. 165</ref>
}}
], Executive Vice-president Terry Fitzpatrick, and puppeteer ] (with ]) at the 69th Annual ] in 2010]]


''Sesame Street'' was not without its detractors, however. The state commission in ], where Henson was from, operated the state's PBS ]; in May 1970 it voted to not air ''Sesame Street'' because of its "highly integrated cast of children" which "the commission members felt ... Mississippi was not yet ready for."<ref>"Mississippi Agency Votes for a TV Ban on 'Sesame Street'". (May 3, 1970). ''The New York Times''. Quoted in Davis, p. 202</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/05/03/archives/mississippi-agency-votes-for-a-tv-ban-on-sesame-street.html|newspaper=]|title=Mississippi Agency Votes for a TV Ban On 'Sesame Street'|date=May 3, 1970 }}</ref> According to '']'', Lesser's account of the development and early years of ''Sesame Street'', there was little criticism of the show in the months following its premiere, but it increased at the end of its first season and beginning of the second season.<ref>Lesser, pp. 174–175</ref>{{refn|See Lesser, pp. 175–201 for his response to the early critics of ''Sesame Street''.|group=note}} Historian Robert W. Morrow speculated that much of the early criticism, which he called "surprisingly intense,"<ref name="morrow-3">Morrow, p. 3</ref> stemmed from cultural and historical reasons in regards to, as he put it, "the place of children in American society and the controversies about television's effects on them."<ref name="morrow-3"/>
Health content has existed on ''Sesame Street'' for years, but to a limited extent. In one instance press kits for a project were made available, news wires latched onto the story, and literally hundreds of newspapers reported that ] was "going on a diet". In actuality there was no change to Cookie Monster's character. The new season featured a new segment with rapper ] singing the praises of fruits and vegetables, similar to segments in the 1990s which featured Cookie doing nearly the same.


According to Morrow, the "most important" studies finding negative effects of ''Sesame Street'' were conducted by educator Herbert A. Sprigle and psychologist ] during its first two seasons.<ref>Morrow, pp. 146–147</ref> Social scientist and ] founder ] criticized the show for being too wholesome.<ref>{{cite news | last = Kanfer | first = Stefan | title = Who's Afraid of Big, Bad TV? | magazine = Time | date = November 23, 1970 | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943327,00.html?iid=digg_share | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110604050817/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,943327,00.html?iid=digg_share | url-status = dead | archive-date = June 4, 2011 | access-date = October 17, 2019}}</ref> Psychologist ] saw ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s urban setting as "superficial" and having little to do with the problems confronted by the inner-city child.<ref>Morrow, p. 98</ref> Head Start director ] was probably ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s most vocal critic in the show's early years.<ref>Morrow, p. 147</ref>
According to people from Sesame Workshop, {{cquote|Health has always been a part of our Sesame Street curriculum, therefore we will always be committed to ensuring kids are given information and messages that will help them become healthy and happy in their development. For season 36, we have turned up the dial in health, but it will always be part of our curriculum.<ref>, accessed ] ].</ref>}}


In spite of their commitment to multiculturalism, the CTW experienced conflicts with the leadership of minority groups, especially Latino groups and feminists, who objected to ''Sesame Street''{{'}}s depiction of Latinos and women.<ref>Morrow, pp. 157–158</ref> The CTW took steps to address their objections. By 1971, the CTW hired Hispanic actors, production staff, and researchers, and by the mid-1970s, Morrow reported that "the show included Chicano and Puerto Rican cast members, films about Mexican holidays and foods, and cartoons that taught Spanish words."<ref>Morrow, p. 155</ref> As ''The New York Times'' has stated, creating strong female characters "that make kids laugh, but not...as female stereotypes" has been a challenge for the producers of ''Sesame Street''.<ref>Gikow, p. 142</ref> According to Morrow, change regarding how women and girls were depicted on ''Sesame Street'' occurred slowly.<ref>Morrow, p. 156</ref> As more female Muppet performers like ], ], ], ], ], ], and ] were hired and trained, stronger female characters like ] (1991) and ] (2006) were created.<ref>Gikow, p. 143</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Olivera |first1=Monica |title=Carmen Osbahr, the talented puppeteer behind Sesame Street's "Rosita" |url=http://nbclatino.com/2013/09/20/sesame-streets-rosita-latina-puppeteer-makes-a-difference/ |access-date=October 17, 2019 |work=NBC Universal |date=September 20, 2013 |archive-date=October 20, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191020170237/http://nbclatino.com/2013/09/20/sesame-streets-rosita-latina-puppeteer-makes-a-difference/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>
The Workshop formed an Advisory Board consisting of experts such as ], M.D., M.P.H., the Assistant ]. This board examines the research of other organizations, and also conducts pilot studies to determine which areas of research should be expanded, based on social, ethnic and socio-economic sections of the population.


In 2002, ''Sesame Street'' was ranked number 27 on ].<ref>{{cite news | title = TV Guide Names Top 50 Shows | work = CBS News | date = February 11, 2009 | publisher = Associated Press | url = https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tv-guide-names-top-50-shows/ | access-date = October 17, 2019}}</ref> Sesame Workshop won a Peabody Award in 2009 for its website, sesamestreet.org,<ref>{{cite web |title=2009 Sesame Workshop |url=http://www.peabodyawards.com/award-profile/sesamestreet.org |publisher=Peabody Awards |access-date=9 October 2019}}</ref> and the show was given Peabody's Institutional Award in 2019 for 50 years of educating and entertaining children globally.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Turchiano |first1=Danielle |title='Barry,' 'Killing Eve,' 'Pose' Among 2019 Peabody Winners |url=https://variety.com/2019/tv/awards/peabody-awards-winners-2019-barry-killing-eve-pose-good-place-americans-sesame-street-1203191869/ |access-date=9 October 2019 |work=Variety |date=18 April 2019}}</ref> In 2013, ''TV Guide'' ranked the show number 30 on its list of the 60 best TV series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvguide.com/news/tv-guide-magazine-60-best-series-1074962/|title=TV Guide Magazine's 60 Best Series of All Time|last1= Fretts |first1=Bruce |last2=Roush| first2= Matt |date=23 December 2013|access-date=9 October 2019}}</ref> As of 2021, ], more than any other television series.<ref name="CooneyBio2021">{{cite web |title=Joan Ganz Cooney: Co-Founder and Lifetime Honorary Trustee |url=https://www.sesameworkshop.org/who-we-are/our-leadership/joan-ganz-cooney |publisher=Sesame Workshop |access-date=May 4, 2022}}</ref> In 2023, ''Variety'' ranked ''Sesame Street'' #12 on its list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/lists/greatest-tv-shows-of-all-time/|title=The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time|publisher=Variety|date=December 20, 2023}}</ref>
Characters Elmo and Rosita filmed ]s with various U.S. Governors in 2006.<ref>, ] ]; Governors Mike Huckabee (R-AR), Frank Murkowski (R-AK), Felix Perez Camacho (R-GU), Dirk Kempthorne (R-ID), Kathleen Sebelius (D-KS), Kathleen Blanco (D-LA), Jennifer Granholm (D-MI), Kenny Guinn (R-NV), John Hoeven (R-ND), Ancibal Acevendo-Vila (D-PR), Bob Taft (R-OH), Don Carcieri (R-RI) with his wife, Sue Carcieri, Jon Huntsman (R-UT), Jim Douglas (R-VT) and Joe Manchin III (D-WV).</ref>


==See also==
==Merchandising and endorsement==
]'' shows several of Sesame Street's muppet characters]] * ]
* ]
] (left) with Grover, in '']''. Over the course of the show, many hundreds of Muppet skits have been accumulated, allowing the Workshop to release full-length collections of skits, like the aforementioned.]]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* '']''
* ]
* '']''
*'']''


==References==
''Sesame Street'' is known for its extensive merchandising, which includes many books, magazines, video/audio media, and toys. A percentage of the money from any Sesame Workshop product goes to help fund ''Sesame Street'' or its international co-productions.<ref name="presskit"></ref>
=== Informational notes ===
{{Reflist|group=note}}


=== Citations ===
Current licensors include ], ], ] (Build-An-Elmo and Build-A-Cookie Monster), ] (]), ], ] (Elmo Fruit Snacks), ] (air freshners) and ]. Former liscencees include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and the ]. ] (a partnership between ] and ]) produced Sesame Street software for the Macintosh, since at least 1995 & on the PC since 1996<!--1994?-->; ] produced ''Sesame Street'' games in 1983. Before going bankrupt, ] was to release a line of deluxe series action figures, for adults, as part of Sesame Workshop's push to expand into retro products for teens and adults.
{{Reflist}}


=== General and cited references ===
] was one of the fastest selling toys of the 1996 season. That product line was and still is one of the most successful products Mattel has ever launched. Both it and its most notable successor, TMX, have caused in-store fights. Elmo starred in a ] that year, in which he wished every day of the year was Christmas.<ref>{{cite news | last=Gliatto | first=Tom | title=Elmo Saves Christmas | date=] ] | publisher=People | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rch&an=9612201526}}, accessed in EBSCOhost.</ref>
{{refbegin|30em}}
* Borgenicht, David (1998). ''Sesame Street Unpaved''. New York: Hyperion Publishing. {{ISBN|0-7868-6460-5}}
* Clash, Kevin, Gary Brozek, and Louis Henry Mitchell (2006). ''My Life as a Furry Red Monster: What Being Elmo has Taught Me About Life, Love and Laughing Out Loud.'' New York: Random House. {{ISBN|0-7679-2375-8}}
* Davis, Michael (2008). . New York: Viking Penguin. {{ISBN|978-0-670-01996-0}}.
* Finch, Christopher (1993). ''Jim Henson: The Works, the Art, the Magic, the Imagination''. New York: Random House. {{ISBN|9780679412038}}
* Fisch, Shalom M. and Rosemarie T. Truglio, Eds. (2001). ''"G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street''. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. {{ISBN|0-8058-3395-1}}
** Cooney, Joan Ganz, "Foreword", pp. xi–xiv.
** Palmer, Edward and Shalom M. Fisch, "The Beginnings of ''Sesame Street'' Research", pp.&nbsp;3–24.
** Fisch, Shalom M. and Lewis Bernstein, "Formative Research Revealed: Methodological and Process Issues in Formative Research", pp.&nbsp;39–60.
** Mielke, Keith W., "A Review of Research on the Educational and Social Impact of Sesame Street", pp.&nbsp;83–97.
** Cole, Charlotte F., Beth A. Richman, and Susan A. McCann Brown, "The World of Sesame Street Research", pp.&nbsp;147–180.
** Cherow-O'Leary, Renee, "Carrying ''Sesame Street'' into Print: ''Sesame Street Magazine'', ''Sesame Street Parents'', and ''Sesame Street'' Books", pp.&nbsp;197–214.
* Gikow, Louise A. (2009). ''Sesame Street: A Celebration— Forty Years of Life on the Street''. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. {{ISBN|978-1-57912-638-4}}.
* Gladwell, Malcolm (2000). ''The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference''. New York: Little, Brown, and Company. {{ISBN|0-316-31696-2}}
* Lesser, Gerald S. (1974). ''Children and Television: Lessons From Sesame Street''. New York: Vintage Books. {{ISBN|0-394-71448-2}}
* Morrow, Robert W. (2006). ''Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television''. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. {{ISBN|0-8018-8230-3}}
* O'Dell, Cary (1997). ''Women Pioneers in Television: Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders''. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. {{ISBN|0-7864-0167-2}}.
{{refend}}


==External links==
Its fiction books are published on five continents, primarily by ] in North America. Over 18 million ''Sesame Street'' books and magazines were purchased in 2005.<ref name="presskit"></ref> The books often mention that children do not have to watch the show to benefit from its publications.
{{Sister project links|v=no|s=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|species=no|d=Q155629|n=Category:Sesame Street|b=no}}
* {{Official website|https://www.sesamestreet.org}}
* {{IMDb title|0063951}}
* {{Muppets}}
* on PBSKids.org
* {{EmmyTVLegends title|sesame-street}}
* {{Cite web |last1=Abdelfatah |first1=Rund |author2=Ramtin Arablouei| display-authors=etal |date=15 September 2022 |title=Getting to Sesame Street |url=https://www.npr.org/2022/09/12/1122499583/getting-to-sesame-street |work=] |publisher=] |access-date=25 September 2022}}


{{Sesame Street|state=uncollapsed}}
Live touring show '']'' presents costumed actors and dancers as characters from the series, in original plots. In recent years, VEE has had four touring casts, each performing a unique multi-million dollar budget show. Each season, the tours reach 160 different cities across North America, reaching 2 million people annually. Since the first production of ''Sesame Street Live'' on ] ], 48 million children and their parents have seen the show performed, across the world.<ref name="sslpress">''Sesame Street Live'' Press Kit, Minneapolis MN: Vee Corporation, 2004.</ref>
{{Sesame Street international}}
{{Sesame Street Characters}}
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{{The Muppets}}
{{The Jim Henson Company}}
{{Daytime Emmy Award Lifetime Achievement}}
{{Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Series}}
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{{Grammy Award for Best Children's Album}}
{{Kennedy Center Honorees 2010s}}
{{Producers Guild of America Award for Outstanding Children's Program}}
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]
Langhorne, Pennsylvania, United States, is the long-time home to ''Sesame Street'' theme park ]. New to the park for summer 2006 are three new rides themed to the popular ''Elmo's World'' segments. Another theme park, '']'', exists in ], ], and ] includes a three-dimensional movie based on the show.
]

]
The ] line, launched in mid-2005, consists of apparel, health and body, home, and seasonal products. The products in this line are designed to accentuate the natural interactivity between infants and their parents. Most of the line is exclusive to a family of Canadian retailers that includes ], ], and ].
]

]
Although ''Sesame Street'' characters occasionally endorse non-educational products, they rarely appear in their puppet form, to limit the suggestion to children that the characters are formally endorsing the product. The Muppets do appear in puppet form to endorse select causes. Big Bird has promoted safe seating practices and the wearing of seatbelts, for the ],<ref>{{cite news | first=Thomas L. | last=Bryant | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rch&an=9706193803 | title=Big Bird and Ford | publisher=Road & Track | pages= | page= | date=July 1997 | accessdate=2006-03-02}}, accessed through EBSCOhost.</ref> while Grover promoted a new course on children's informal learning, created by ] with Sesame Workshop.<ref>{{cite news | first=Debra | last=Viadero | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&an=16357051 | title=Grover Promotes Harvard Course | publisher=Education Week | pages=1/5th | page=6 | date=] ] | accessdate=2006-03-02}} The course itself was developed by professor Joseph Blatt, who told Education Week "it focuses on how to harness the positive power of the media to improve children's health, particularly problems that stem from alarming levels of obesity among youngsters nationwide." Guests to the course include Sesame Workshop staff. Students are required to pitch media projects to promote healthy behaviors among 6- to 9-year-olds to Sesame executives at the end of the course.</ref> Elmo has appeared before the US Education Appropriations Subcommittee to urge more spending on music in schools.<ref>Bruce Morton, "Mr. Elmo goes to Washington". Atlanta, GA: ''CNN'', ] ]. Note that the characters of ''Sesame Street'' have a major presence in Washington. ]'s 1997 inaugural guests included ]. ({{cite news | last=Roberts | first=Roxanne | title=For inauguration celebration, a group of diverse diversions | date=] ] | publisher=Washington Post | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rch&an=9702032910}}, through EBSCOhost.)</ref>
]

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===Internationally===
]

]
''Plaza Sésamo'', ''Sesamstraße'', ''Sesame English'' and ''Sesamstraat'' have all had merchandise of their local characters. ''Shalom Sesame'' videos and books have also been released.
]

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In 2004, ] (CPLG) became Sesame Workshop's licensing representative for ],<ref></ref> adding to their United Kingdom representation.<ref>Previously ] held the British rights to ''Sesame Street''. Its licensees included ] for books. ({{cite news | title=Reed to publish Sesame Street Books in the UK | date=] ] | publisher=Publishers Weekly | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rch&an=9705091134}})</ref>
]

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===Web site===
]

]
Sesame Street's Web site was one of the first to include educational materials, for both parents and children. "There are downloadable games plus number- and alphabet-coloring pages for the children. Their parents can consult references covering everything from how to comb their baby's hair to how to play with their 4-year-old."<ref>{{cite news | last=Shaw | first=Russell | title=Click me Elmo: Kids TV goes online | date=] ] | publisher=Electronic Media | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=rch&an=9706265184}}, accessed through EBSCOhost.</ref> The Web site has been recommended by academic journals.<ref>{{cite news | title=Teaching Day-by-Day A Cornucopia of Activities. | date=November /December 2005 | publisher=Teaching PreK-8 | url=http://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&an=18721256}}, accessed through EBSCOhost.</ref> It receives over 1 million visitors daily.<ref name="presskit"></ref>
]

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==Movies, videos, and specials==
]

]
]'' scene with ] (in garbage can) and ] at the 86th Street ] station]]
]
A series of ''Sesame Street'' telefilms have featured the characters on day trips or in foreign countries. '']'' (1983) saw the cast locked in the gallery overnight; Big Bird and Snuffy help a cursed boy pharaoh. NBC's '']'' (1983) followed Big Bird, Barkley, and their new friend Xiao Foo traveling through China to find Feng Huang, the ] bird. In '']'' (1988), the titular character gets lost. '']'' (1974) features the cast of ''Sesame Street'' and '']'' taking over ]. Big Bird turned six in '']'' (1991), despite being referred to as four years old previously. '']'' (1999) was a FOX special, with ] as the princess look for her match among the kingdom. Telly fears what the ] will bring in '']'' (1993, DVD in 2004).
]

]
Various strictly musical programs have been made. ] and ] performed with the Muppets on '']'' (1974). '']'' and '']'' are two special episodes of PBS series '']'' variety show have featured ''Sesame Street'' characters. The '']'' (1988) also included many guest performances.
]

]
Holiday special '']'' (1978) won an Emmy Award, while another special that year, '']'' (1978), has mostly unfavourable reviews. Anniversary specials include '']'' (1979), '']'' (1989), '']'' (1994) and '']'' (1994), and '']'' (2004). ] is set to host a "live" retrospective on the series on ABC, but is accidentally locked in his dressing room with the tapes. Elmo attempts to salvage the show, improvised, in '']'' (1998).
]

]
In 1987 and 1992, episodes of '']'' were produced, focusing on introducing Jewish culture, customs, and language to ] children. International co-productions of ''Sesame Street'' have created many of their own specials as well.
]

]
The characters have made appearance on television series including '']'' (2001), '']'' (1972, 1975), '']'' (2005), '']'', '']'' (1970), '']'' (1992, 1995, 1997), '']'', '']'', '']'' (2006), '']'', '']'' (1981), '']'' (1998), '']'' (1991), '']'' (2004), '']'', and numerous talk shows and mornings shows, ranging from '']'' to the '']''.
]

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Characters have also appeared on specials and videos not related to the series, including '']'' (1975), '']'' (1978), '']'' (1979), '']'' (1982), '']'' (1996), and '']'' (2005).
]

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===Feature films===
]

]
]
]
Two feature films based on the series have been made.
]

]
Co-produced with ], the 1985 film '']'' revolved around a social worker forcing Big Bird into adoption. Big Bird gets homesick and tired of his adoptive parents, and heads back to New York, when he is kidnapped by evil carnival leaders (played by ] and ]); the residents of Sesame Street launch a cross-country search to find him.
]

]
In the second ''Sesame Street'' theatrical film, 1999's '']'', fourteen years after ''Follow That Bird'', ] spends time with his favorite blanket. After ] accidentally tears the blanket, when Elmo refuses to share, the blanket winds up in ], ruled by the ] (]). Elmo ventures forth, to rescue his blanket from the villainous ] (]). Soon, the rest of the ''Sesame Street'' gang follow in pursuit.
]

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According to a rumor posted on /FILM, Elmo has suggested to TVguide.com that ''Elmo's World'' might later be turned into a movie.<ref>Peter Sciretta, "", 4 July 2006.</ref>
]

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==Criticism==
]

]
Some educators criticized the show when it debuted,{{Fact|date=March 2007}} feeling that it would only worsen children's attention spans. This concern still exists today,{{Fact|date=March 2007}} although there is no conclusive proof of this being the case, even after more than 35 seasons of televised shows.
]

]
In a letter to the ''Boston Globe'', ] professor of education Frank Garfunkel commented "If what people want is for their children to memorize numbers and letters without regard to their meaning or use — without regard to the differences between children, then ''Sesame Street'' is truly responsive. To give a child 30 seconds of one thing and then to switch it and give him 30 seconds of another is to nurture irrelevance."<ref name="feinstein">{{cite news | last=Feinstein | first=Phylis | title=All About Sesame Street | date=1971 | publisher=unknown | url=http://members.tripod.com/~hooperfan/chap12.html}}</ref>
]

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In the magazine '']'', Minnie P. Berson of ] asked "Why debase the art form of teaching with phony pedagogy, vulgar sideshows, bad acting, and layers of smoke and fog to clog the eager minds of small children?"
]

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For an animation on the letter "J", the writers included "a day in jail." This drew criticism from '']'' columnist ], despite executive producer David Connell's assertion that kids are familiar with the word through shows like '']'' and '']'', and that "when you're trying to come up with a lot of words starting with J, you soon run short" of words they are already familiar with.<ref name="feinstein">{{cite news | last=Feinstein | first=Phylis | title=All About Sesame Street | date=1971 | publisher=unknown | url=http://members.tripod.com/~hooperfan/chap12.html}}</ref>
]

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The series also met with criticism in its attempts to help the underprivileged. Educator Sister Mary Mel O'Dowd worried that the show might start to replace "personalized experiences". "If Sesame Street is the only thing ghetto kids have, I don't think it's going to do much good. It never hurts a child to be able to count to 10 or recognize the 26 letters of the alphabet. But without the guidance of a teacher, he'll be like one of our preschoolers who was able to write 'CAUTION' on the blackboard after seeing it on the back of so many buses, and told me 'That says STOP.'"<ref name="feinstein">{{cite news | last=Feinstein | first=Phylis | title=All About Sesame Street | date=1971 | publisher=unknown | url=http://members.tripod.com/~hooperfan/chap12.html}}</ref>
]

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Though it is widely beloved, like a number of PBS shows (notably ]'s '']''<ref></ref>) ''Sesame Street'' has long had to contend with those who disagree with its social content. ] comments in his book ''Children and Television: Lessons from Sesame Street'' that the show faced hostility in the southern United States when it first aired because it portrayed people of various races mingling peacefully.<ref>Gerald S. Lesser, ''Children and Television: Lessons from Sesame Street'', ISBN-10 0394714482.</ref> At first the ] in Mississippi refused to air the show. However, the commission had no choice but to allow their local public television stations to air the show when commercial stations in Mississippi said they would air the program themselves.<ref name="mandel">{{cite journal | journal=The Journal of American Culture | last=Mandel | first=Jennifer| title=The Production of a Beloved Community: Sesame Street’s Answer to America’s Inequalities | date=2006 | accessdate = 2006-08-21 | publisher=Blackwell Publishing, Inc. | url=http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1542-734X.2006.00270.x}}</ref>
]

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==Rumors and urban legends==
]

]
While many rumors have been started about the series, a few have been widely promulgated and perpetuated over the years.
]

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It has widely been suggested that ] are a ] couple, as they are apparently adult human males portrayed sharing a bedroom, though with separate beds. A 1980 collection of humorous essays by ], titled ''The Real Thing'', made light of the growing rumor. "Bert and Ernie conduct themselves in the same loving, discreet way that millions of gay men, women and hand puppets do. They do their jobs well and live a splendidly settled life together in an impeccably decorated cabinet."<ref>{{cite book
]
| last = Andersen
]
| first = Kurt
]
| title = The Real Thing
| format = Paperback
| year = 1982
| month = February
| publisher = Henry Holt & Co
| location = New York, NY
| language = English
| id = ISBN 0-03-060037-5
| pages = 180
}}</ref> The rumor was promulgated repeatedly, so much so that by 1993, Sesame Workshop had a prepared statement to send out to people inquiring on the topic. In a 1994 effort to get the characters banned, Rev. Joseph Chambers stated on his radio show: "Bert and Ernie are two grown men sharing a house and a bedroom. They share clothes, eat and cook together and have blatantly effeminate characteristics. In one show Bert teaches Ernie how to sew. In another they tend plants together. If this isn't meant to represent a homosexual union, I can't imagine what it's supposed to represent."<ref>James R. Petersen, , December 1995</ref> Both Steve Whitmire as Ernie and Eric Jacobson as Bert have stated publicly that the characters are not gay.<ref>, accessed ] ].</ref> The alleged relationship has been parodied on the adult animated series '']'' and by '']''. The latter, a 2002 short film that ran at the ], was the subject of a cease and desist order from the legal department of Sesame Workshop.<ref>{{cite news | last=San Vicente | first=Romeo | title=Bert and Ernie outed from film festival | date=] ] | publisher=PlanetOut | url=http://www.planetout.com/pno/entertainment/news/splash.html?sernum=154}}</ref> The Broadway musical '']'' includes two characters similar to Bert and Ernie, named Rod and Nicky, one of which is gay.

The pair's relationship bears similarity to that of ], who were also occasionally shown sleeping together; this became such a comedy staple as to be adopted by ] in the 1970s, all of whom were similarly asexual. '']'' is another, more apposite, contemporary comparison. Some adult viewers are upset by the assertions, as in their view, Ernie and Bert act like children, teenagers at the oldest, and are no more different than brothers or cousins who share a room.

In 1990, puppeteer ]'s death spurred rumors that Ernie would be "killed off" in the show, much the way the character of Mr. Hooper was after actor ]'s passing some years earlier.<ref> Union Leader "Muppet Ernie Keeps His Life." 28 July 1991 (p. F1).</ref> Rumor said that he would be either killed by a vehicle, ], or ]. There was no legitimacy to this rumor, but because producers took their time recasting a puppeteer for Ernie, the delay allowed the claims to burgeon. A spokesperson for the series was quoted as saying "Ernie is not dying of AIDS, Ernie is not dying of leukemia. Ernie is a puppet."<ref>{{cite news | first = Jefferson | last = Graham | title = Muppet Ernie Is Doing Just Fine | url = | work = USA Today | publisher = | pages = 1 | page = D3 | date = 1992-04-30 | accessdate = | language = English }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | first = Brenda | last = Herrmann | title = Ernie Rumor Just Won't Die | work = Chicago Tribune | publisher = | pages = 1 | page = C1 | date = 1992-11-10 | accessdate = | language = English | quote = }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | first = Jon | last = Lender | title = Rest Assured, Ernie the Puppet Has Never Felt Better | work = Hartford Courant | publisher = | pages = 1 | page = B1 | date = 1992-11-23 | accessdate = | language = English | quote = }}</ref><ref>Barbara Mikkelson, , ] ].</ref>

In ], Sesame Workshop announced that a character with ] would be introduced to '']'', the ]n version of the show. Many conservatives and religious groups wrongly presumed that the American version would be getting a "gay Muppet," presumably because of the early historical connection between homosexuality and HIV in the U.S., but the character with HIV is only present on this international version of the show. The character, ], contracted HIV from a blood transfusion as an infant.

== See also ==
{{portal}}
* ]
* ]
* ] (including '']'' and '']'')
* '']''
* '']''
* '']''

'''Lists:'''
* ], ]

== Footnotes ==

<!--This article uses the Cite.php citation mechanism. If you would like more information on how to add references to this article, please see http://meta.wikimedia.org/Cite/Cite.php -->
{{reflist|2}}

== References ==

{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikinews|Sesame Street to promote healthy lifestyles}}
* David Borgenicht, ''Sesame Street Unpaved: Scripts, Stories, Secrets, and Songs'', 1998 and 2002 reprint, ISBN 1-4028-9327-2
* Caroll Spinney, J. Milligan, ''The Wisdom of Big Bird: (And the Dark Genius of Oscar the Grouch): Lessons from a Life in Feathers'', 2003, ISBN 0-375-50781-7
* Christopher Finch, ''Jim Henson: The Works - The Art, the Magic, the Imagination'', 1993, ISBN 0-679-41203-4
* Shalom M. Fisch, Rosemarie T. Truglio, ''"G" Is for Growing: 30 Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street'', 2000, ISBN 0-8058-3395-1

== External links ==

*
*
* {{imdb title|id=0063951|title=Sesame Street}}
*
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{{CurrentPBSKids_shows}}

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Latest revision as of 12:48, 11 January 2025

American children's television show

Sesame Street
Genre
Created by
Theme music composer
Opening theme"Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street?"
Ending theme
  • "Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street?" (instrumental; up until season 45)
  • "Smarter, Stronger, Kinder" (season 46 onwards)
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons54
No. of episodes4701
Production
Executive producers
  • David Connell (1969–72)
  • Jon Stone (1972–78)
  • Al Hyslop (1978–80) (credited as "producer" in season 10)
  • Dulcy Singer (1980–93)
  • Michael Loman (1993–2002)
  • Lewis Bernstein (2003–05)
  • Carol-Lynn Parente (2006–17)
  • Brown Johnson (2017–19)
  • Benjamin Lehmann (2018–present)
Production locations
Running time
  • 60 minutes (1969–2015)
  • 30 minutes (2014–present)
Production companySesame Workshop
Original release
Network
ReleaseNovember 10, 1969 (1969-11-10) –
present

Sesame Street is an American educational children's television series that combines live-action, sketch comedy, animation, and puppetry. It is produced by Sesame Workshop (known as the Children's Television Workshop until June 2000) and was created by Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett. It is known for its images communicated through the use of Jim Henson's Muppets, and includes short films, with humor and cultural references. It premiered on November 10, 1969, to positive reviews, some controversy, and high viewership. It has aired on the United States national public television provider PBS since its debut, with its first run moving to premium channel HBO on January 16, 2016, then its sister streaming service (HBO) Max in 2020.

The show's format consists of a combination of commercial television production elements and techniques which have evolved to reflect changes in American culture and audiences' viewing habits. It was the first children's TV show to use educational goals and a curriculum to shape its content, and the first show whose educational effects were formally studied. Its format and content have undergone significant changes to reflect changes to its curriculum.

Shortly after its creation, its producers developed what came to be called the CTW Model (after the production company's previous name), a system of planning, production and evaluation based on collaboration between producers, writers, educators and researchers. The show was initially funded by government and private foundations, but has become somewhat self-supporting due to revenues from licensing arrangements, international sales and other media. By 2006, independently produced versions ("co-productions") of Sesame Street were broadcast in 20 countries. In 2001, there were over 120 million viewers of various international versions of Sesame Street; and by its 40th anniversary in 2009, it was broadcast in more than 140 countries.

Since its debut, Sesame Street has garnered praise. It was by then the 15th-highest-rated children's television show in the United States. A 1996 survey found that 95% of all American preschoolers had watched it by the time they were three. In 2018, it was estimated that 86 million Americans had watched it as children. As of 2022, it has won 222 Emmy Awards and 11 Grammy Awards, more than any other children's show. Sesame Street remains one of the longest-running shows in the world.

History

Main article: History of Sesame Street

Sesame Street was conceived in 1966 during discussions between television producer Joan Ganz Cooney and Carnegie Foundation vice president Lloyd Morrisett. Their goal was to create a children's television show that would "master the addictive qualities of television and do something good with them," such as helping young children prepare for school. After two years of research, the newly formed Children's Television Workshop (CTW) received a combined grant of US$8 million ($66 million in 2023 dollars) from the Carnegie Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the U.S. federal government to create and produce a new children's television show.

Sesame Street was officially announced at a press conference on May 6, 1969. Joan Ganz Cooney, Children's Television Workshop's executive director, said that Sesame Street would use the techniques of commercial television programs to teach young children. Live shorts and animated cartoons would teach young children the alphabet, numbers, vocabulary, shapes, and basic reasoning skills. By repeating concepts throughout an episode, young children's interest would be held while they learn the concepts. Guest cameos would help attract older children and adults. Cooney said that the name Sesame Street came from the saying "open sesame", which gives the idea of a place where exciting things occur. The show was given an initial six-month run in order to determine whether it was effective and would continue to air.

The program premiered on public television stations on November 10, 1969. It was the first preschool educational television program to base its contents and production values on laboratory and formative research. Initial responses to the show included adulatory reviews, some controversy, and high ratings.

Black and white photo of a smiling woman about fifty years of age and wearing a jacket and tied-up scarf
Co-creator Joan Ganz Cooney. Pictured 1985
Lloyd Morrisett, co-creator. Pictured 2010

I've always said of our original team that developed and produced Sesame Street: Collectively, we were a genius.

Sesame Street creator Joan Ganz Cooney

According to writer Michael Davis, by the mid-1970s the show had become "an American institution." The cast and crew expanded during this time, with emphasis on the hiring of women crew members and the addition of minorities to the cast. The show's success continued into the 1980s. In 1981, when the federal government withdrew its funding, CTW turned to and expanded other revenue sources, including its magazine division, book royalties, product licensing, and foreign broadcast income. Its curriculum has expanded to include more affective topics such as relationships, ethics and emotions. Many of its storylines have been inspired by the experiences of its writing staff, cast and crew—most notably, the 1982 death of Will Lee, who played Mr. Hooper; and the marriage of Luis and Maria in 1988.

By the end of the 1990s, the show faced societal and economic challenges, including changes in young children's viewing habits, competition from other shows, the development of cable television, and a drop in ratings. As the 21st century began, the show made major changes. Starting in 2002, its format became more narrative-focused and included ongoing storylines. After its 30th anniversary in 1999, due to the popularity of the Muppet Elmo, the show also incorporated a popular segment known as Elmo's World. In 2009, the show won the Outstanding Achievement Emmy for its 40 years on the air.

In late 2015, in response to "sweeping changes in the media business" and as part of a five-year programming and development deal, premium television service HBO began airing first-run episodes of Sesame Street. The episodes became available on PBS stations and websites nine months after they aired on HBO. The deal allowed Sesame Workshop to produce more episodes—increasing from 18 to 35 per season—and to create a spinoff series with the Sesame Street Muppets, and a new educational series.

At its 50th anniversary in 2019, Sesame Street had produced over 4,500 episodes, two feature-length movies (Follow That Bird in 1985 and The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland in 1999), 35 TV specials, 200 home videos, and 180 albums. Its YouTube channel has over 24 million subscribers. It was announced in October 2019 that first-run episodes will move to HBO Max beginning with the show's 51st season in 2020. On December 13, 2024, it was announced that Max would not be renewing their contract to make episodes of Sesame Street, meaning 2025 will be the last year for episodes made with Max. Episodes will be in the Max streaming library until 2027. A spokesperson for Sesame Workshop stated: "We will continue to invest in our best-in-class programming and look forward to announcing our new distribution plans in the coming months, ensuring that 'Sesame Street' reaches as many children as possible for generations to come."

Format

Main article: Format of Sesame Street

From its first episode, Sesame Street's format has utilized "a strong visual style, fast-moving action, humor, and music," as well as animation and live-action short films. When it premiered, most researchers believed that young children did not have long attention spans, and the show's producers were concerned that an hour-long show would not hold their attention. At first, its "street scenes"—the action recorded on its set—consisted of character-driven interactions. Rather than ongoing stories, they were written as individual, curriculum-based segments interrupted by "inserts" of puppet sketches, short films and animations. This structure allowed producers to use a mixture of styles and characters, and to vary its pace, presumably keeping it interesting to young viewers. However, by season 20, research showed that children were able to follow a story—and the street scenes, while still interspersed with other segments, became evolving storylines.

We basically deconstructed the show. It's not a magazine format anymore. It's more like the Sesame hour. Children will be able to navigate through it easier.

—Executive producer Arlene Sherman, speaking of the show's restructuring in 2002

On recommendations by child psychologists, the producers initially decided that the show's human actors and Muppets would not interact because they were concerned it would confuse young children. When CTW tested the new show, they found that children paid attention during the Muppet segments, and that their interest was lost during the "Street" segments. They requested that Henson and his team create Muppets such as Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch to interact with the human actors, and the Street segments were re-shot.

Sesame Street's format remained intact until the 2000s, when the changing audience required that producers move to a more narrative format. In 1998, the popular "Elmo's World," a 15-minute-long segment hosted by the Muppet Elmo, was created. Starting in 2014, during the show's 45th season, the producers introduced a half-hour version of the program. The new version, which originally complemented the full-hour series, was broadcast weekday afternoons and streamed on the Internet. In 2017, in response to the changing viewing habits of toddlers, the show's producers decreased the show's length from one hour to 30 minutes across all its broadcast platforms. The new version focused on fewer characters, reduced pop culture references "once included as winks for their parents", and focused "on a single backbone topic."

The format will be changed yet again in Season 56, as it was announced on October 30, 2023 by the The Hollywood Reporter that Sesame Street will be reimagined by completely dropping the half-hour magazine-style format of the long-running children's show in favor of a longer narrative-driven style and more live action Muppet puppet characters. The reimagined format will feature two 11-minute story segments, paired with a new animated series, Tales from 123.

Educational goals

Main article: Educational goals of Sesame Street
The Sesame Street signpost

Author Malcolm Gladwell said that "Sesame Street was built around a single, breakthrough insight: that if you can hold the attention of children, you can educate them." Gerald S. Lesser, the CTW's first advisory board chair, went even further, saying that the effective use of television as an educational tool needed to capture, focus, and sustain children's attention. Sesame Street was the first children's show to structure each episode, and the segments within them, to capture children's attention, and to make, as Gladwell put it, "small but critical adjustments" to keep it. According to CTW researchers Rosemarie Truglio and Shalom Fisch, it was one of the few children's shows to utilize a detailed and comprehensive educational curriculum, garnered from formative and summative research.

Sesame Street's creators and researchers formulated both cognitive and affective goals for the show. They initially focused on cognitive goals, while addressing affective goals indirectly, believing it would increase children's self-esteem and feelings of competency. One of their primary goals was preparing young children for school, especially children from low-income families, using modeling, repetition, and humor. They adjusted its content to increase viewers' attention and the show's appeal, and encouraged older children and parents to "co-view" it by including more sophisticated humor, cultural references, and celebrity guests; by 2019, 80% of parents watched Sesame Street with their children, and 650 celebrities had appeared on the show.

First Lady Barbara Bush participates with Big Bird in an educational taping of Sesame Street at United Studios, 1989
First Lady Michelle Obama participates in a Let's Move! and Sesame Street public service announcement taping with Big Bird in the White House Kitchen, 2013
Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets Grover to discuss refugees at the United Nations in New York City, 2016

During Sesame Street's first season, some critics felt that it should address more overtly such affective goals as social competence, tolerance of diversity, and nonaggressive ways of resolving conflict. The show's creators and producers responded by featuring these themes in interpersonal disputes between its Street characters. During the 1980s, the show incorporated real-life experiences of its cast and crew, including the death of Will Lee (Mr. Hooper) and the pregnancy of Sonia Manzano (Maria). In later seasons, it addressed real-life disasters such as the September 11 terrorist attacks and Hurricane Katrina.

In its first season, the show addressed its outreach goals by focusing on the promotion of educational materials used in preschool settings; and in subsequent seasons, by focusing on their development. Innovative programs were developed because their target audience, children and their families in low-income, inner-city homes, did not traditionally watch educational programs on television and because traditional methods of promotion and advertising were not effective with these groups.

Starting in 2006, the Workshop expanded its outreach by creating a series of PBS specials and DVDs focusing on how military deployment affects the families of servicepeople. Its outreach efforts also focused on families of prisoners, health and wellness, and safety. In 2013, SW started Sesame Street in Communities, to help families dealing with difficult issues.

Funding

As a result of Cooney's initial proposal in 1968, the Carnegie Institute awarded her a $1 million grant to create a new children's television program and establish the CTW, renamed in June 2000 to Sesame Workshop (SW). Cooney and Morrisett procured additional multimillion-dollar grants from the U.S. federal government, The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, CPB, and the Ford Foundation. Davis reported that Cooney and Morrisett decided that if they did not procure full funding from the beginning, they would drop the idea of producing the show. As Lesser reported, funds gained from a combination of government agencies and private foundations protected them from the economic pressures experienced by commercial broadcast television networks, but created challenges in procuring future funding.

After Sesame Street's initial success, its producers began to think about its survival beyond its development and first season and decided to explore other funding sources. From the first season, they understood that the source of their funding, which they considered "seed" money, would need to be replaced. The 1970s were marked by conflicts between the CTW and the federal government; in 1978, the U.S. Department of Education refused to deliver a $2 million check (equivalent to $9.34 million in 2023) until the last day of CTW's fiscal year. As a result, the CTW decided to depend upon licensing arrangements with toy companies and other manufacturers, publishing, and international sales for their funding.

In 1998, the CTW accepted corporate sponsorship to raise funds for Sesame Street and other projects. For the first time, they allowed short advertisements by indoor playground manufacturer Discovery Zone, their first corporate sponsor, to air before and after each episode. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who had previously appeared on Sesame Street, called for a boycott of the show, saying that the CTW was "exploiting impressionable children." In 2015, in response to funding challenges, it was announced that premium television service HBO would air first-run episodes of Sesame Street. Steve Youngwood, SW's Chief Operating Officer, called the move "one of the toughest decisions we ever made." According to The New York Times, the move "drew an immediate backlash." Critics claimed that it favored privileged children over less-advantaged children and their families, the original focus of the show. They also criticized choosing to air first-run episodes on HBO, a network with adult dramas and comedies.

Production

Research

Main article: Sesame Street research

Producer Joan Ganz Cooney has stated, "Without research, there would be no Sesame Street." In 1967, when she and her team began planning the show's development, combining research with television production was, as she put it, "positively heretical." Its producers soon began developing what came to be called the CTW Model, a system of planning, production and evaluation that did not fully emerge until the end of the show's first season. According to Morrow, the Model consisted of four parts: "the interaction of receptive television producers and child science experts, the creation of a specific and age-appropriate curriculum, research to shape the program directly, and independent measurement of viewers' learning."

Cooney credited the show's high standard in research procedures to Harvard professors Gerald S. Lesser, whom CTW hired to design its educational objectives; and Edward L. Palmer, who conducted the show's formative research and bridged the gap between producers and researchers. CTW conducted research in two ways: in-house formative research that informed and improved production; and independent summative evaluations, conducted by the Educational Testing Service (ETS) during the first two seasons, which measured its educational effectiveness. Cooney said, "From the beginning, we—the planners of the project—designed the show as an experimental research project with educational advisers, researchers, and television producers collaborating as equal partners." She characterized the collaboration as an "arranged marriage."

Writing

Sesame Street has used many writers in its long history. As Peter Hellman wrote in his 1987 article in New York Magazine, "The show, of course, depends upon its writers, and it isn't easy to find adults who could identify the interest level of a pre-schooler." Fifteen writers a year worked on the show's scripts, but very few lasted longer than one season. Norman Stiles, head writer in 1987, reported that most writers would "burn out" after writing about a dozen scripts. According to Gikow, Sesame Street went against the convention of hiring teachers to write for the show, as most educational television programs did at the time. Instead, Cooney and the producers felt that it would be easier to teach writers how to interpret curriculum than to teach educators how to write comedy. As Stone stated, "Writing for children is not so easy." Long-time writer Tony Geiss agreed, stating in 2009, "It's not an easy show to write. You have to know the characters and the format and how to teach and be funny at the same time, which is a big, ambidextrous stunt."

Facade of a large white building, the left having large pillars beneath a strip with dozens of windows and the right three stories of large windows.
The Kaufman Astoria Studios, where Sesame Street is taped

The show's research team developed an annotated document, or "Writer's Notebook," which served as a bridge between the show's curriculum goals and script development. The notebook was a compilation of programming ideas designed to teach specific curriculum points, provided extended definitions of curriculum goals, and assisted the writers and producers in translating the goals into televised material. Suggestions in the notebook were free of references to specific characters and contexts on the show so that they could be implemented as openly and flexibly as possible.

The research team, in a series of meetings with the writers, also developed "a curriculum sheet" that described the show's goals and priorities for each season. After receiving the curriculum focus and goals for the season, the writers met to discuss ideas and story arcs for the characters, and an "assignment sheet" was created that suggested how much time was allotted for each goal and topic. When a script was completed, the show's research team analyzed it to ensure that the goals were met. Then each production department met to determine what each episode needed in terms of costumes, lights, and sets. The writers were present during the show's taping, which for the first twenty-four years of the show took place in Manhattan, and after 1992, at the Kaufman Astoria Studios in Queens to make last-minute revisions when necessary.

Media

Main articles: Sesame Workshop § Funding sources, Music of Sesame Street, and Sesame Street international co-productions

Early in their history Sesame Street and the CTW began to look for alternative funding sources and turned to creating products and writing licensing agreements. They became, as Cooney put it, "a multiple-media institution." In 1970, the CTW created a "non-broadcast" division responsible for creating and publishing books and Sesame Street Magazine. By 2019, the Sesame Workshop had published over 6,500 book titles. The Workshop decided from the start that all materials their licensing program created would "underscore and amplify" the show's curriculum. In 2004, over 68% of Sesame Street's revenue came from licenses and products such as toys and clothing. By 2008, the Sesame Street Muppets accounted for between $15 million and $17 million per year in licensing and merchandising fees, split between the Sesame Workshop and The Jim Henson Company. By 2019, the Sesame Workshop had over 500 licensing agreements and had produced over 200 hours of home video. There have been two theatrically released Sesame Street movies, Follow That Bird, released in 1985, and Elmo in Grouchland, released in 1999. In early 2019, it was announced that a third film, a musical co-starring Anne Hathaway and written and directed by Jonathan Krisel, would be produced. In November 2019, Sesame Street announced a family friendly augmented reality application produced by Weyo in partnership with Sesame Workshop in honor of the show's 50th anniversary.

Jim Henson, the creator of the Muppets, owned the trademarks to those characters, and was reluctant to market them at first. He agreed when the CTW promised that the profits from toys, books, computer games, and other products were to be used exclusively to fund the CTW and its outreach efforts. Even though Cooney and the CTW had very little experience with marketing, they demanded complete control over all products and product decisions. Any product line associated with the show had to be educational and inexpensive, and could not be advertised during the show's airings. As Davis reported, "Cooney stressed restraint, prudence, and caution" in their marketing and licensing efforts.

Director Jon Stone, talking about the music of Sesame Street, said: "There was no other sound like it on television." For the first time in children's television, the show's songs fulfilled a specific purpose and supported its curriculum. In order to attract the best composers and lyricists, the CTW allowed songwriters like Joe Raposo, Sesame Street's first musical director, to retain the rights to the songs they wrote, which earned them lucrative profits and helped the show sustain public interest. By 2019, there were 180 albums of Sesame Street music produced, and its songwriters had received 11 Grammys. In late 2018, the SW announced a multi-year agreement with Warner Music Group to re-launch Sesame Street Records in the U.S. and Canada. For the first time in 20 years, "an extensive catalog of Sesame Street recordings" was made available to the public in a variety of formats, including CD and vinyl compilations, digital streaming, and downloads.

Sesame Street used animations and short films commissioned from outside studios, interspersed throughout each episode, to help teach their viewers basic concepts like numbers and letters. Jim Henson was one of the many producers to create short films for the show. Shortly after Sesame Street debuted in the United States, the CTW was approached independently by producers from several countries to produce versions of the show at home. These versions came to be called "co-productions." By 2001 there were over 120 million viewers of all international versions of Sesame Street, and in 2006, there were twenty co-productions around the world. By its 50th anniversary in 2019, 190 million children viewed over 160 versions of Sesame Street in 70 languages. In 2005, Doreen Carvajal of The New York Times reported that income from the co-productions and international licensing accounted for $96 million. Sesame Street the Musical opened at Theatre Row off Broadway on September 8, 2022.

In 2015, HBO acquired the production rights to the show, which included an agreement of exclusive rights for nine months at which point the episodes were to be given away free of charge to other networks (e.g. PBS). In December 2024, HBO announced it would part ways with Sesame Street.

Cast, crew and characters

Main articles: List of Sesame Street Muppets and List of human Sesame Street characters
Jim Henson in 1989.
Jim Henson, creator of the Muppets, in 1989
Caroll Spinney with Oscar the Grouch

Shortly after the CTW was created in 1968, Joan Ganz Cooney was named its first executive director. She was one of the first female executives in American television. Her appointment was called "one of the most important television developments of the decade." She assembled a team of producers, all of whom had previously worked on Captain Kangaroo. Jon Stone was responsible for writing, casting, and format; Dave Connell took over animation; and Sam Gibbon served as the show's chief liaison between the production staff and the research team. Cameraman Frankie Biondo has worked on Sesame Street from its first episode in 1969.

Jim Henson and the Muppets' involvement in Sesame Street began when he and Cooney met at one of the curriculum planning seminars in Boston. Author Christopher Finch reported that Stone, who had worked with Henson previously, felt that if they could not bring him on board, they should "make do without puppets." Henson was initially reluctant, but he agreed to join Sesame Street to meet his own social goals. He also agreed to waive his performance fee for full ownership of the Sesame Street Muppets and to split any revenue they generated with the CTW. As Morrow stated, Henson's puppets were a crucial part of the show's popularity and it brought Henson national attention. Davis reported that Henson was able to take "arcane academic goals" and translate them to "effective and pleasurable viewing." In early research, the Muppet segments of the show scored high, and more Muppets were added during the first few seasons. Morrow reported that the Muppets were effective teaching tools because children easily recognized them, they were stereotypical and predictable, and they appealed to adults and older siblings.

Sesame Street is best known for the creative geniuses it attracted, people like Jim Henson and Joe Raposo and Frank Oz, who intuitively grasped what it takes to get through to children. They were television's answer to Beatrix Potter or L. Frank Baum or Dr. Seuss.

—Author Malcolm Gladwell, The Tipping Point

Although the producers decided against depending upon a single host for Sesame Street, instead casting a group of ethnically diverse actors, they realized that a children's television program needed to have, as Lesser put it, "a variety of distinctive and reliable personalities," both human and Muppet. Jon Stone, whose goal was to cast white actors in the minority, was responsible for hiring the show's first cast. He did not audition actors until Spring 1969, a few weeks before the five test shows were due to be filmed. Stone videotaped the auditions, and Ed Palmer took them out into the field to test children's reactions. The actors who received the "most enthusiastic thumbs up" were cast. For example, Loretta Long was chosen to play Susan when the children who saw her audition stood up and sang along with her rendition of "I'm a Little Teapot." Stone stated that casting was the only aspect of the show that was "just completely haphazard." Most of the cast and crew found jobs on Sesame Street through personal relationships with Stone and the other producers. According to puppeteer Marty Robinson in 2019, longevity was common among the show's cast and crew.

According to the CTW's research, children preferred watching and listening to other children more than to puppets and adults, so they included children in many scenes. Dave Connell insisted that no child actors be used, so these children were non-professionals, unscripted, and spontaneous. Many of their reactions were unpredictable and difficult to control, but the adult cast learned to handle the children's spontaneity flexibly, even when it resulted in departures from the planned script or lesson. CTW research also revealed that the children's hesitations and on-air mistakes served as models for viewers. According to Morrow, this resulted in the show having a "fresh quality," especially in its early years.

Reception

Main article: Influence of Sesame Street

Ratings

When Sesame Street premiered on November 10, 1969, it aired on only 67.6% of American televisions, but it earned a 3.3 Nielsen rating, which totaled 1.9 million households. By the show's tenth anniversary in 1979, nine million American children under the age of 6 were watching Sesame Street daily. According to a 1993 survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Education, out of the show's 6.6 million viewers, 2.4 million kindergartners regularly watched it. 77% of preschoolers watched it once a week, and 86% of kindergartners and first- and second-grade students had watched it once a week before starting school. The show reached most young children in almost all demographic groups.

The show's ratings significantly decreased in the early 1990s, due to changes in children's viewing habits and in the television marketplace. The producers responded by making large-scale structural changes to the show. By 2006, Sesame Street had become "the most widely viewed children's television show in the world," with 20 international independent versions and broadcasts in over 120 countries. A 1996 survey found that 95% of all American preschoolers had watched the show by the time they were three years old. In 2008, it was estimated that 77 million Americans had watched the series as children. By the show's 40th anniversary in 2009, it was ranked the fifteenth-most-popular children's show on television, and by its 50th anniversary in 2019, the show had 100% brand awareness globally. In 2018, the show was the second-highest-rated program on PBS Kids. In 2021, however, the Sesame Street documentary "50 Years of Sunny Days," which was broadcast nationally on ABC, did not fare well in the ratings, scoring only approximately 2.3 million viewers.

Influence

Main article: Sesame Street research#Summative research

As of 2001, there were over 1,000 research studies regarding Sesame Street's efficacy, impact, and effect on American culture. The CTW solicited the Educational Testing Service (ETS) to conduct summative research on the show. ETS's two "landmark" summative evaluations, conducted in 1970 and 1971, demonstrated that the show had a significant educational impact on its viewers. These studies have been cited in other studies of the effects of television on young children. Additional studies conducted throughout Sesame Street's history demonstrated that the show continued to have a positive effect on its young viewers.

Sesame Street perhaps the most vigorously researched, vetted, and fretted-over program on the planet. It would take a fork-lift to now to haul away the load of scholarly paper devoted to the series...

—Author Michael Davis

Lesser believed that Sesame Street research "may have conferred a new respectability upon the studies of the effects of visual media upon children." He also believed that the show had the same effect on the prestige of producing shows for children in the television industry. Historian Robert Morrow, in his book Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television, which chronicled the show's influence on children's television and on the television industry as a whole, reported that many critics of commercial television saw Sesame Street as a "straightforward illustration for reform." Les Brown, a writer for Variety, saw in Sesame Street "a hope for a more substantial future" for television.

Morrow reported that the networks responded by creating more high-quality television programs, but that many critics saw them as "appeasement gestures." According to Morrow, despite the CTW Model's effectiveness in creating a popular show, commercial television "made only a limited effort to emulate CTW's methods," and did not use a curriculum or evaluate what children learned from them. By the mid-1970s commercial television had abandoned their experiments with creating better children's programming. Other critics hoped that Sesame Street, with its depiction of a functioning, multicultural community, would nurture racial tolerance in its young viewers. It was not until the mid-1990s that another children's television educational program, Blue's Clues, used the CTW's methods to create and modify their content. The creators of Blue's Clues were influenced by Sesame Street, but wanted to use research conducted in the 30 years since its debut. Angela Santomero, one of its producers, said, "We wanted to learn from Sesame Street and take it one step further."

Critic Richard Roeper said that perhaps one of the strongest indicators of the influence of Sesame Street has been the enduring rumors and urban legends surrounding the show and its characters, especially speculation concerning the sexuality of Bert and Ernie.

Critical reception

Sesame Street was praised from its debut in 1969. Newsday reported that several newspapers and magazines had written "glowing" reports about the CTW and Cooney. The press overwhelmingly praised the new show; several popular magazines and niche magazines lauded it. In 1970, Sesame Street won twenty awards, including a Peabody Award, three Emmys, an award from the Public Relations Society of America, a Clio, and a Prix Jeunesse. By 1995, the show had won two Peabody Awards and four Parents' Choice Awards. It was the subject of a traveling exhibition by the Smithsonian Institution, and a film exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.

Sesame Street is ... with lapses, the most intelligent and important program in television. That is not anything much yet.

Renata Adler, The New Yorker, 1972
Sesame Workshop CEO Gary Knell, Executive Vice-president Terry Fitzpatrick, and puppeteer Kevin Clash (with Elmo) at the 69th Annual Peabody Awards in 2010

Sesame Street was not without its detractors, however. The state commission in Mississippi, where Henson was from, operated the state's PBS member station; in May 1970 it voted to not air Sesame Street because of its "highly integrated cast of children" which "the commission members felt ... Mississippi was not yet ready for." According to Children and Television, Lesser's account of the development and early years of Sesame Street, there was little criticism of the show in the months following its premiere, but it increased at the end of its first season and beginning of the second season. Historian Robert W. Morrow speculated that much of the early criticism, which he called "surprisingly intense," stemmed from cultural and historical reasons in regards to, as he put it, "the place of children in American society and the controversies about television's effects on them."

According to Morrow, the "most important" studies finding negative effects of Sesame Street were conducted by educator Herbert A. Sprigle and psychologist Thomas D. Cook during its first two seasons. Social scientist and Head Start founder Urie Bronfenbrenner criticized the show for being too wholesome. Psychologist Leon Eisenberg saw Sesame Street's urban setting as "superficial" and having little to do with the problems confronted by the inner-city child. Head Start director Edward Zigler was probably Sesame Street's most vocal critic in the show's early years.

In spite of their commitment to multiculturalism, the CTW experienced conflicts with the leadership of minority groups, especially Latino groups and feminists, who objected to Sesame Street's depiction of Latinos and women. The CTW took steps to address their objections. By 1971, the CTW hired Hispanic actors, production staff, and researchers, and by the mid-1970s, Morrow reported that "the show included Chicano and Puerto Rican cast members, films about Mexican holidays and foods, and cartoons that taught Spanish words." As The New York Times has stated, creating strong female characters "that make kids laugh, but not...as female stereotypes" has been a challenge for the producers of Sesame Street. According to Morrow, change regarding how women and girls were depicted on Sesame Street occurred slowly. As more female Muppet performers like Camille Bonora, Fran Brill, Pam Arciero, Carmen Osbahr, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Jennifer Barnhart, and Leslie Carrara-Rudolph were hired and trained, stronger female characters like Rosita (1991) and Abby Cadabby (2006) were created.

In 2002, Sesame Street was ranked number 27 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time. Sesame Workshop won a Peabody Award in 2009 for its website, sesamestreet.org, and the show was given Peabody's Institutional Award in 2019 for 50 years of educating and entertaining children globally. In 2013, TV Guide ranked the show number 30 on its list of the 60 best TV series. As of 2021, Sesame Street has received 205 Emmy Awards, more than any other television series. In 2023, Variety ranked Sesame Street #12 on its list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time.

See also

References

Informational notes

  1. Season 44 (2013–2014) was the first time episodes were numbered in a seasonal order rather than the numerical and chronological fashion used since the show premiered. For example, episode 4401 means "the first episode of the 44th season", not "the 4401st episode" (it is in fact the 4328th episode).
  2. Known as Children's Television Workshop until 2000.
  3. See Gikow, p. 155, for a visual representation of the CTW model.
  4. Most of the first season was filmed at a studio near Broadway, but a strike forced their move to Teletape Studios. In the early days, the set was simple, consisting of four structures. In 1982, Sesame Street began filming at Unitel Studios on 57th Street, but relocated to Kaufman Astoria Studios in 1993, when the producers decided they needed more space.
  5. See Gikow, pp. 280–285 for a list of many of the show's products.
  6. According to Parade Magazine in 2019, 1 million children played with Sesame Street toys daily.
  7. According to Edward Palmer and his colleague Shalom M. Fisch, these studies were responsible for securing funding for the show over the next several years.
  8. See Gikow, pp. 284–285; "G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street, pp. 147–230.
  9. See Lesser, pp. 175–201 for his response to the early critics of Sesame Street.

Citations

  1. "Sesame Street season 1 End Credits (1969-70)". YouTube. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  2. "Sesame Street season 3 End Credits (1971-72)". YouTube. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  3. "Sesame Street season 4 End Credits (1972-73)". YouTube. October 7, 2014. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  4. "Sesame Street season 9 end credits (1977-78)". YouTube. Archived from the original on January 22, 2020. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  5. "Sesame Street season 10 end credits (1978-79)". YouTube. Archived from the original on October 8, 2012. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  6. "Sesame Street season 12 end credits (1980-81)". YouTube. August 24, 2015. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  7. "Sesame Street season 24 (#3010) closing & funding credits (1992) ["Dancing City" debut]". YouTube. April 3, 2019. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  8. "Sesame Street - Season 25 End Credits (1993-1994)". YouTube. May 24, 2014. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  9. "Elmo Writes a Story - Sesame Street Full Episode (credits start at 55:37)". YouTube. Sesame Street. May 3, 2019. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  10. "Sesame Street Season 34 credits & fundings (version #1)". YouTube. February 4, 2017. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  11. "Elmo and Zoe Play the Healthy Food Game - Sesame Street Full Episodes (credits start at 52:50)". YouTube. Sesame Street. July 13, 2018. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  12. "PBS Kids Program Break (2006 WFWA-TV)". YouTube. January 6, 2017. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  13. ^ Morrow, p. 3
  14. "Sesame Street Co-Founder Lloyd Morrisett Dies Aged 93". No. Virgin Radio UK. January 25, 2023. Retrieved April 13, 2023.
  15. ^ Wallace, Debra (February 6, 2019). "Big Bird Has 4,000 Feathers: 21 Fun Facts About Sesame Street That Will Blow Your Mind". Parade. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  16. ^ Davis, p. 8
  17. 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
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  19. Subber, Barbara (May 7, 1969). "New ETV Show for Preschooler To Use 'Commercial' Techniques". The Morning Call (Allentown, Pennsylvania). p. 51.
  20. ^ Brooke, Jill (November 13, 1998). "'Sesame Street' Takes a Bow to 30 Animated Years". The New York Times. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
  21. ^ Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 9
  22. Gikow, p. 26
  23. Davis, p. 220
  24. ^ O'Dell, pp. 73–74
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  26. Borgenicht, p. 80
  27. Davis, p. 320
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  29. Eng, Joyce (August 28, 2009). "Guiding Light, Sesame Street to Be Honored at Daytime Emmys". TV Guide. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  30. ^ Pallotta, Frank; Stelter, Brian (August 13, 2015). "'Sesame Street' is heading to HBO". CNN.com. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  31. ^ Steel, Emily (August 13, 2015). "'Sesame Street' to Air First on HBO for Next 5 Seasons". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
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  33. Alexander, Julia (October 3, 2019). "HBO Max locks down exclusive access to new Sesame Street episodes". The Verge. Retrieved October 3, 2019.
  34. Shanfeld, Ethan (December 13, 2024). "'Sesame Street' for Sale: Max Not Renewing Deal for New Episodes". Variety. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
  35. O'Dell, p. 70
  36. Morrow, p. 87
  37. Gikow, p. 179
  38. Fisch & Bernstein, p. 39
  39. Gladwell, p. 105
  40. Gladwell, p. 106
  41. Fisch & Bernstein, pp. 39–40
  42. Clash, p. 75
  43. ^ Dockterman, Eliana (June 18, 2014). "We're Getting a Half-Hour Version of Sesame Street". Time. Archived from the original on January 13, 2022. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
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  45. Jensen, Elizabeth (June 17, 2014). "PBS Plans to Add a Shorter Version of 'Sesame Street'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on June 20, 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
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  48. Gladwell, p. 100
  49. ^ Lesser, p. 116
  50. Gladwell, p. 91
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  52. Morrow, pp. 76, 106
  53. Lesser, p. 46
  54. Lesser, pp. 86–87
  55. Lesser, p. 107
  56. Lesser, p. 87
  57. "'Sesame Street' Draws in Adults with Pop Culture Parodies". yahoo.com. October 30, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
  58. Truglio, Rosemarie T.; Kotler, Jennifer A. (2013). "Language, Literacy, and Media: What's the Word on Sesame Street?". In Gershoff, E. T.; Mistry, R. S.; Crosby, D. A. (eds.). Societal Contexts of Child Development: Pathways of Influence and Implications for Practice and Policy. pp. 188–202. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199943913.003.0012.
  59. Huston, Aletha C; Daniel R. Anderson; John C. Wright; Deborah Linebarger; Kelly L. Schmidt (2001). ""Sesame Street Viewers as Adolescents: The Recontact Study". In Shalom M. Fisch; Rosemarie T. Truglio (eds.). "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 133. ISBN 0-8058-3395-1.
  60. Gikow, p. 165
  61. Gikow, p. 181
  62. Gikow, pp. 280–281
  63. Gikow, pp. 286–293
  64. Chandler, Michael Alison (October 6, 2017). "Sesame Street launches tools to help children who experience trauma, from hurricanes to violence at home". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 27, 2019.
  65. Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 3
  66. Davis, p. 105
  67. Lesser, p. 17
  68. ^ Davis, p. 203
  69. Guthrie, Marisa (February 6, 2019). "Where 'Sesame Street' Gets Its Funding — and How It Nearly Went Broke". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 28, 2019.
  70. Luckerson, Victor (August 13, 2019). "This Is Why HBO Really Wants Sesame Street". Time. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
  71. ^ Cooney in Fisch & Truglio, p. xi
  72. ^ Morrow, p. 68
  73. ^ Cooney in Fisch & Truglio, p. xii
  74. Mielke in Fisch & Truglio, pp. 84–85
  75. Borgenicht, p. 9
  76. ^ Gikow, p. 178
  77. Gikow, p. 174
  78. ^ Lesser, p. 101
  79. Morrow, p. 82
  80. Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 10
  81. Palmer & Fisch in Fisch & Truglio, p. 11
  82. Lesser, Gerald S.; Joel Schneider (2001). "Creation and Evolution of the Sesame Street Curriculum". In Shalom M. Fisch; Rosemarie T. Truglio (eds.). "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 28. ISBN 0-8058-3395-1.
  83. Murphy, Tim (November 1, 2009). "How We Got to 'Sesame Street'". New York Magazine. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  84. "How to Get to 'Sesame Street' at the Apollo Theater". New York City Mayor's Office. November 19, 2008. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
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  86. Gikow, pp. 66–67
  87. Gikow, pp. 206–207
  88. Cherow-O'Leary in Fisch & Truglio, p. 197
  89. Cherow-O'Leary in Fisch & Truglio, pp. 197–198
  90. ^ Davis, p. 205
  91. ^ Davis, p. 195
  92. Carvajal, Doreen (December 12, 2005). "Sesame Street Goes Global: Let's All Count the Revenue". The New York Times. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
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  94. Kit, Borys; Sandberg, Bryn Elise (February 6, 2019). "'Sesame Street' Movie's Writer-Director Reveals Plot Details". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 18, 2019.
  95. Damiani, Jesse. "Sesame Street Launches 50th Anniversary AR App". Forbes. Retrieved November 18, 2019.
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  98. Gikow, p. 220
  99. Gikow, p. 227
  100. Davis, p. 256
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  104. Cole et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 148
  105. Cole et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 147
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  110. CNBC Market Hall segment, archived athttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJGPLD-xcfI
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General and cited references

  • Borgenicht, David (1998). Sesame Street Unpaved. New York: Hyperion Publishing. ISBN 0-7868-6460-5
  • Clash, Kevin, Gary Brozek, and Louis Henry Mitchell (2006). My Life as a Furry Red Monster: What Being Elmo has Taught Me About Life, Love and Laughing Out Loud. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-7679-2375-8
  • Davis, Michael (2008). Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street. New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 978-0-670-01996-0.
  • Finch, Christopher (1993). Jim Henson: The Works, the Art, the Magic, the Imagination. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780679412038
  • Fisch, Shalom M. and Rosemarie T. Truglio, Eds. (2001). "G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. ISBN 0-8058-3395-1
    • Cooney, Joan Ganz, "Foreword", pp. xi–xiv.
    • Palmer, Edward and Shalom M. Fisch, "The Beginnings of Sesame Street Research", pp. 3–24.
    • Fisch, Shalom M. and Lewis Bernstein, "Formative Research Revealed: Methodological and Process Issues in Formative Research", pp. 39–60.
    • Mielke, Keith W., "A Review of Research on the Educational and Social Impact of Sesame Street", pp. 83–97.
    • Cole, Charlotte F., Beth A. Richman, and Susan A. McCann Brown, "The World of Sesame Street Research", pp. 147–180.
    • Cherow-O'Leary, Renee, "Carrying Sesame Street into Print: Sesame Street Magazine, Sesame Street Parents, and Sesame Street Books", pp. 197–214.
  • Gikow, Louise A. (2009). Sesame Street: A Celebration— Forty Years of Life on the Street. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57912-638-4.
  • Gladwell, Malcolm (2000). The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. New York: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 0-316-31696-2
  • Lesser, Gerald S. (1974). Children and Television: Lessons From Sesame Street. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-394-71448-2
  • Morrow, Robert W. (2006). Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-8230-3
  • O'Dell, Cary (1997). Women Pioneers in Television: Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-0167-2.

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Segments
Specials
Films
Theatrical
Television
Direct-to-
video
Music
Albums
Songs
Web series
Video games
Other media
Related
The Jim Henson Company
Henson family
Major works
Theatrical
films
TV series
TV specials
Other
projects
Henson
Alternative
Divisions
Related
Sold to The Walt Disney Company in 2004, Muppet characters only; sold to Sesame Workshop in 2000
Daytime Emmy Lifetime Achievement Award
No lifetime achievement award was presented in 2020 and 2021.
Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Series
Entertainment Children's Series
(1974–1984)
Children's Instructional Programming
(1976–1979)
Informational Children's Series
(1976–1979)
Children's Informational/Instructional Series
(1980–1984)
Children's Series
(1985–2016)
Pre-School Children's Series
(1995–2021)
Children's or Family Viewing Series
(2017–2020)
Preschool, Children's or Family Viewing Program
(2021)
Education or Informational Series
(2018–2021)
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Program
1950–1980
1981–2005
2006–2020
Grammy Award for Best Children's Music Album
1958−1974
1975−1992
2011−present
From 1993–2010, the category was split into Best Musical Album for Children and Best Spoken Word Album for Children.
Kennedy Center Honorees (2010s)
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
Producers Guild of America Award for Outstanding Children's Program
TCA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Youth Programming
Youth Programming
1985–2022
Family Programming
2023–present
Children's Programming
2023–present
Max original programming
Current
Original
Continuations
Upcoming
Ended
Original
Continuations
Films
Released
Upcoming
Unreleased
See also
Cartoonito original programming
Current
Cartoon Network
Max
Upcoming
Cartoon Network
  • Dylan's Playtime Adventures (TBA)
  • Adventure Time: Heyo BMO (TBA)
  • Foster's Funtime for Imaginary Friends (TBA)
Former
Cartoon Network
Max
European co-productions
  • LazyTown (seasons 3-4, 2013-2014)
  • Mush-Mush & the Mushables (since 2021, used to be an American original until 2022)
  • Interstellar Ella (since 2022)
  • Toad & Friends (since 2023)
  • Lu & the Bally Bunch (since 2023)
UK originals
  • Cartoonito Karaoke (2007-2008)
  • Go and Get a Grown-Up! (2007-2008)
  • Go and Be a Grown-Up! (2008)
  • Cartoonito Karaoke in Paris (2008)
  • Make, Shake & Jake (2008)
  • Go And... (2009)
  • Button Box Tales/Cartoonito Tales/Boomerang Tales (2011-2012)
  • Ballooniverse/Ballooniville (2011-2012)
  • Ha Ha Hairies (2012)
See also
PBS Kids original programming
Current
See also
TV series produced by Children's Television Workshop/Sesame Workshop
Post-1970s debuts
1980s debuts
1990s debuts
2000s debuts
2010s debuts
2020s debuts
See also
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