Otago Daily Times

‘Sesame Street’ still aimed at providing muchneeded education

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NEW YORK: Almost 50 years ago, entertaine­r Carol Burnett appeared on the first broadcast of a quirky television programme that featured a bunch of furry puppets.

That show was Sesame Street and Burnett, like a lot of kids, was instantly hooked.

She would return to the show multiple times, including visits to demonstrat­e to preschool viewers where her nose was and to smooch a rubber duckie.

‘‘I was a big fan. I would have done anything they wanted me to do,’’ she said.

‘‘I loved being exposed to all that goodness and humour.’’

This first episode of Sesame Street — sponsored by the letters W, S and E and the numbers 2 and 3 — aired in the autumn of 1969.

It was a turbulent time in the US, rocked by the Vietnam War and raw from the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King the year before. The media, like today, was going through disruption.

Newt Minow, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission chairman at the time, famously said TV was becoming ‘‘a vast wasteland’’. Like today, there was lots of content, but it was not necessaril­y quality.

Enter Sesame Street creators Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett, who worked with Harvard University developmen­tal psychologi­st Gerald Lesser to build the show’s unique approach to teaching that now reaches 120 million children. Legendary puppeteer Jim Henson supplied the critters.

‘‘It wasn’t about if kids were learning from TV, it was about what they were learning from TV,’’ said Steve Youngwood, the chief operating officer of Sesame Workshop.

‘‘If they could harness that power to teach them the alphabet and their numbers as opposed to the words to beer commercial­s, you may be able to make a really big difference.’’

The show was designed by education profession­als and child psychologi­sts with one goal: to help lowincome and minority pupils aged 25 overcome some of the deficienci­es they had when entering school. Social scientists had long noted white and higher income children were often better prepared.

So, it was not an accident that the show was set on an urban street with a multicultu­ral cast. Diversity and inclusion were baked into the show. Monsters, humans and animals all lived together peacefully.

It became the first children’s programme to feature someone with Down syndrome. It has had puppets with HIV and in foster care, invited children in wheelchair­s, dealt with topics like jailed parents, homelessne­ss, women’s rights, military families and even girls singing about loving their hair.

It introduced the bilingual Rosita — the first Latina Muppet

— in 1991. Julia, a 4yearold Muppet with autism came in 2017 and this year has offered help for kids whose parents are dealing with addiction and recovery. So important is the show animal rights group Peta asked for the creation of a vegan Muppet.

‘‘We are a mirror to society here even though we’re dealing with birds and chickens and monsters,’’ said Matt Vogel, the puppeteer who portrays Big Bird and the Count and who grew up watching Sesame Street.

Music has always been a big part of the show and its song

Rubber Duckie peaked at No 16 on the Billboard charts in 1970.

Sing, which premiered on the show, went even higher, hitting No 3 on Billboard in 1973 when the Carpenters recorded it.

There have been a few bumps in the road, like Roosevelt Franklin, an early puppet whose stereotypi­cal African American dialect offended many.

Katy Perry showed a little too much Katy Perry for some parents in 2010 and Cookie Monster, in the face of an obesity epidemic, had to moderate his adoration of cookies to ‘‘a sometimes food’’.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Making a difference . . . The Sesame Street cast of season 49.
PHOTO: REUTERS Making a difference . . . The Sesame Street cast of season 49.

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