H, B and O the letters of the day
— The Muppets, longtime residents of PBS, are getting a second home at HBO.
The premium cable channel and Sesame Workshop, which produces Sesame Street, on Thursday announced a five-year deal that will expand the Sesame Street footprint and its amount of programming.
The next five seasons of the respected children’s series will be available on HBO and its related platforms, including HBO GO and HBO On Demand. The deal will allow the Sesame Workshop, a nonprofit educational organization, to produce almost double the content of previous seasons, HBO and the workshop said.
It will also, for the first time, provide the new shows free to PBS and its member stations after a ninemonth window, they said.
“Our new partnership with HBO represents a true winning publicprivate partnership model,” said Jeffrey D. Dunn, Sesame Workshop’s CEO. He said it provides his organization with “critical funding” to continue producing the show and airing it on PBS, its home for 45 years.
Besides Sesame Street, the workshop will make a Muppets spinoff series and a new original educational series for children. HBO said it also has licensed more than 150 past episodes of Sesame Street.
Joan Ganz Cooney, co-founder of the series, noted there have been dramatic changes in the way children consume video, and said Sesame Workshop must “adapt to the times.”
The move by HBO reflects another reality: fledgling TV competitors such as Amazon and Netflix are making their own forays into children’s programming.
The new episodes will begin airing as early as fall 2015.