The Mercury News

Ji-Young debuting on ‘Sesame Street’

- 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,” Ji-Young 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 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 anti-Asian hate incidents.

For Kim, it was crucial that Ji-Young not be “genericall­y pan-Asian.”

“Because that’s something that all Asian Americans have experience­d. They kind of want to lump us into this monolithic ‘Asian,’” Kim said. “So it was very important that she was specifical­ly Korean American, not just like, genericall­y Korean, but she was born here.”

 ?? NOREEN NASIR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ernie, from “Sesame Street,” introduces Ji-Young, the show’s first Asian American muppet.
NOREEN NASIR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ernie, from “Sesame Street,” introduces Ji-Young, the show’s first Asian American muppet.

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