The Guardian (USA)

Sesame Street theme park apologizes after Black girls shunned by costumed character

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A Sesame Street-themed amusement park has apologized and promised more training for its employees after a video showing a costumed character waving off two six-year-old Black girls during a parade went viral online.

The nine-second video, posted to Instagram on Saturday by Jodi Brown, the mother of one of the girls, showed the character Rosita high-fiving a white child and woman, then gesturing “no” and walking away from the two girls who had their arms stretched out for a hug and high-five during the parade at Sesame Place in Langhorne, outside Philadelph­ia.

“I will never step foot in Sesame Place ever again,” Brown said online.

The family’s lawyer, B’Ivory LaMarr, said the family was appalled and disturbed by the incident and “the injuries propagated to their children”.

In an initial statement, Sesame Place said the park and its employees stood for “inclusivit­y and equality in all forms”. The statement also noted that performers sometimes miss requests for hugs because the costumes they wear make it difficult to see at lower levels.

“The Rosita performer did not intentiona­lly ignore the girls and is devastated by the misunderst­anding,” the statement said.

However, many people expressed outrage online and some called for a boycott of the amusement park.

The park issued a second statement on Monday, apologizin­g again and promising that it was “taking action to do better”. Among those efforts would be inclusivit­y training for employees.

Both statements and the video triggered a stark response on social media, which LaMarr said helped shed a light on “the existence of these issues”.

“A lot of African Americans tend to become very passive because we unfortunat­ely are accustomed to dealing with this type of racism in various spaces,” he said.

Sesame Place has been the official Sesame Street theme park for more than four decades. It opened in 1980.

“You would expect a reputable organizati­on the one as well revered as Sesame Street and Sesame Place to stand on those principles and values in which they portray,” LaMarr said.

“Instead, what this family saw was a company that comes out and they’re very dismissive of the harms that were caused.”

 ?? Photograph: Jeff Chiu/AP ?? Sesame Place in Langhorne, Pennsylvan­ia. Many people expressed outrage online and some called for a boycott of the amusement park.
Photograph: Jeff Chiu/AP Sesame Place in Langhorne, Pennsylvan­ia. Many people expressed outrage online and some called for a boycott of the amusement park.

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