The Denver Post

“Sesame Street” debuts Ji-young, first Asian American muppet

- By Terry Tang

What’s in a name? Well, for Ji-young, the newest muppet resident of “Sesame Street,” her name is a sign she was meant to live there.

“So, in Korean traditiona­lly the two syllables they each mean something different and Ji means, like, smart or wise. And Young means, like, brave or courageous and strong,” Jiyoung explained during a recent interview. “But we were looking it up and guess what? Ji also means sesame.”

At only 7 years old, Jiyoung is making history as the first Asian American muppet in the “Sesame Street” canon. She is Korean American and has two passions: rocking out on her electric guitar and skateboard­ing. The children’s TV program, which first aired 52 years ago this month, gave The Associated Press a first look at its adorable new occupant.

Ji-young will formally be introduced in “See Us Coming Together: A Sesame Street Special.” Simu Liu, Padma Lakshmi and Naomi Osaka are among the celebritie­s appearing in the special, which will drop Thanksgivi­ng Day on HBO Max, “Sesame Street” social media platforms and on local PBS stations.

Some of Ji-young’s personalit­y comes from her puppeteer. Kathleen Kim, 41 and Korean American, got into puppetry in her 30s. In 2014, she was accepted into a “Sesame

Street” workshop. That evolved into a mentorship and becoming part of the team the following year. Being a puppeteer on a show Kim watched growing up was a dream come true. But helping shape an original muppet is a whole other feat.

“I feel like I have a lot of weight that maybe I’m putting on myself to teach these lessons and to be this representa­tive that I did not have as a kid,” Kim said. But fellow puppeteer Leslie Carrara-rudolph — who performs Abby Cadabby — reminded her, “It’s

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2021 not about us ... It’s about this message.”

Ji-young’s existence is the culminatio­n of a lot of discussion­s after the events of 2020 — George Floyd’s death and antiasian hate incidents. Like a lot of companies, “Sesame Street” reflected on how it could “meet the moment,” said Kay Wilson Stallings, executive vicepresid­ent of Creative and Production for Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit organizati­on behind “Sesame Street.”

Sesame Workshop establishe­d two task forces — one to look at its content and another to look at its own diversity. What developed was Coming Together, a multi-year initiative addressing how to talk to children about race, ethnicity and culture.

One result was 8-year-old Tamir. While not the show’s first Black muppet, he was one of the first used to talk about subjects like racism.

“When we knew we were going to be doing this work that was going to focus on the Asian and Pacific Islanders experience, we of course knew we needed to create an Asian muppet as well,” Stallings said.

These newer muppets — their personalit­ies and their looks — were remarkably constructe­d in a matter of a months. The process normally takes at least a couple of years. There are outside experts and a cross-section of employees known as the “culture trust” who weigh in on every aspect of a new muppet, Stallings said.

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 ?? Noreen Nasir, The Associated Press ??
Noreen Nasir, The Associated Press

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