Author Topic: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only  (Read 11308 times)

Harold Tuttle

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Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« on: November 19, 2007, 06:14:13 AM »
By VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN
The Medium
Sweeping the Clouds Away
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/18/magazine/18wwln-medium-t.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&ref=magazine&pagewanted=all
Published: November 18, 2007
Sunny days! The earliest episodes of Sesame Street are available on digital video! Break out some Keebler products, fire up the DVD player and prepare for the exquisite pleasure-pain of top-shelf nostalgia.

Just dont bring the children. According to an earnest warning on Volumes 1 and 2, Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only: These early Sesame Street episodes are intended for grown-ups, and may not suit the needs of todays preschool child.

Say what? At a recent all-ages home screening, a hush fell over the room. What did they do to us? asked one Gen-X mother of two, finally. The show rolled, and the sweet trauma came flooding back. What they did to us was hard-core. Man, was that scene rough. The masonry on the dingy brownstone at 123 Sesame Street, where the closeted Ernie and Bert shared a dismal basement apartment, was deteriorating. Cookie Monster was on a fast track to diabetes. Oscars depression was untreated. Prozacky Elmo didnt exist.

Nothing in the childrens entertainment of today, candy-colored animation hopped up on computer tricks, can prepare young or old for this frightening glimpse of simpler times. Back then  as on the very first episode, which aired on PBS Nov. 10, 1969  a pretty, lonely girl like Sally might find herself befriended by an older male stranger who held her hand and took her home. Granted, Gordon just wanted Sally to meet his wife and have some milk and cookies, but . . . well, he could have wanted anything. As it was, he fed her milk and cookies. The milk looks dangerously whole.

Live-action cows also charge the 1969 screen  cows eating common grass, not grain improved with hormones. Cows are milked by plain old farmers, who use their unsanitary hands and fill one bucket at a time. Elsewhere, two brothers risk concussion while whaling on each other with allergenic feather pillows. Overweight layabouts, lacking touch-screen iPods and headphones, jockey for airtime with their deafening transistor radios. And one of those radios plays a late-60s news report  something about a senior American official and two billion in credit over the next five years  that conjures a bleak economic climate, with war debt and stagflation in the offing.

The old Sesame Street is not for the faint of heart, and certainly not for softies born since 1998, when the chipper Elmos World started. Anyone who considers bull markets normal, extracurricular activities sacrosanct and New York a tidy, governable place  well, the original Sesame Street might hurt your feelings.

I asked Carol-Lynn Parente, the executive producer of Sesame Street, how exactly the first episodes were unsuitable for toddlers in 2007. She told me about Alistair Cookie and the parody Monsterpiece Theater. Alistair Cookie, played by Cookie Monster, used to appear with a pipe, which he later gobbled. According to Parente, That modeled the wrong behavior  smoking, eating pipes  so we reshot those scenes without the pipe, and then we dropped the parody altogether.

Which brought Parente to a feature of Sesame Street that had not been reconstructed: the chronically mood-disordered Oscar the Grouch. On the first episode, Oscar seems irredeemably miserable  hypersensitive, sarcastic, misanthropic. (Bert, too, is described as grouchy; none of the characters, in fact, is especially sunshiney except maybe Ernie, who also seems slow.) We might not be able to create a character like Oscar now, she said.

Snuffleupagus is visible only to Big Bird; since 1985, all the characters can see him, as Big Birds old protestations that he was not hallucinating came to seem a little creepy, not to mention somewhat strained. As for Cookie Monster, he can be seen in the old-school episodes in his former inglorious incarnation: a blue, googly-eyed cookievore with a signature gobble (om nom nom nom). Originally designed by Jim Henson for use in commercials for General Foods International and Frito-Lay, Cookie Monster was never a righteous figure. His controversial conversion to a more diverse diet wouldnt come until 2005, and in the early seasons he comes across a Childs First Addict.

The biggest surprise of the early episodes is the rural  agrarian, even  sequences. Episode 1 spends a stoned time warp in the company of backlighted cows, while they mill around and chew cud. This pastoral scene rolls to an industrial voiceover explaining dairy farms, and the sleepy chords of Joe Raposos aimless masterpiece, Hey Cow, I See You Now. Chewing the grass so green/Making the milk/Waiting for milking time/Waiting for giving time/Mmmmm.

Oh, whats that? Right, the trance of early Sesame Street and its country-time sequences. In spite of the shows devotion to its target child, the 4-year-old inner-city black youngster (as The New York Times explained in 1979), the first episodes join kids cavorting in amber waves of grain  black children, mostly, who must be pressed into service as the face of Americas farms uniquely on Sesame Street.

In East Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant in 1978, 95 percent of households with kids ages 2 to 5 watched Sesame Street. The figure was even higher in Washington. Nationwide, though, the number wasnt much lower, and was largely determined by the whims of the PBS affiliates: 80 percent in houses with young children. The so-called inner city became anywhere that Sesame Street played, because the Childrens Television Workshop declared the inner city not a grim sociological reality but a full-color fantasy  an eccentric scene, framed by a box and far removed from real farmland and city streets alike.

The concept of the inner city  or slums, as The Times bluntly put it in its first review of Sesame Street  was therefore transformed into a kind of Xanadu on the show: a bright, no-clouds, clear-air place where people bopped around with monsters and didnt worry too much about money, cleanliness or projecting false cheer. The Upper West Side, hardly a burned-out ghetto, was said to be the model.

People on Sesame Street had limited possibilities and fixed identities, and (the best part) you werent expected to change much. The harshness of existence was a given, and no one was proposing that numbers and letters would lead you out of your inner city to Elysian suburbs. Instead, Sesame Street suggested that learning might merely make our days more bearable, more interesting, funnier. It encouraged us, above all, to be nice to our neighbors and to cultivate the safer pleasures that take the edge off  taking baths, eating cookies, reading. Dont tell the kids.

Points of Entry

Caveat teletor: Volumes 1 and 2 of Sesame Street: Old School are available on DVD, which you can sample and buy on Sesameworkshop.org. With a few episodes, extras and celebrity appearances by the likes of Richard Pryor and Lou Rawls, Old School sounds harmless enough. But are you ready to mainline this much 70s nostalgia?
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Nitrogen

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #1 on: November 19, 2007, 06:37:02 AM »
Wow.  I never knew just how bad it had gotten.

Last I had heard, Cookie Monster stopped eating cookies; because they were a "sometimes food".
That was enough for me.

Then again, I'm sure kids these days wouldn't even GET the alastair cookie joke. 
Back when I was that age, Masterpiece Theater wasn't something I'd watch, but I remember the intro.  Much like Wall Street Week; I never watched it, but I knew what it was.

The funny thing is, being a Liberal (shh don't tell anyone) I know that many libs find this crap just as distasteful as many others do.

Like most Liberals tend to do, though, they don't do anything about it, which is a shame into itself.
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HankB

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #2 on: November 19, 2007, 07:02:37 AM »
I remember back when "Sesame Street" first came on the air, the teacher's union in New York told parents that they should NOT allow their children to watch . . .

Why? Why should children be stopped from watching a TV show that was moderately educational for tykes?

Children who first entered school after watching Sesame Street knew their alphabet, knew how to count . . . in short, they knew too much which gave them an "unfair advantage" over their non-Sesame Street watching peers.

So parents were urged to retard their children.

That's when I first became aware of the evils of teacher's unions.

Trump won in 2016. Democrats haven't been so offended since Republicans came along and freed their slaves.
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Manedwolf

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #3 on: November 19, 2007, 08:17:37 AM »
What's scary to me is that the lady who plays Maria was just on an interview for something.

SHE DOESN'T AGE!!!  shocked

She still looks and sounds exactly like she did when I was little!

Brad Johnson

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #4 on: November 19, 2007, 08:58:09 AM »
Yep, between the dual evils of Sesame Street and (orginal unedited) Looney Tunes, it's amazing that any of us made it out of our formative years mentalled unscathed...

Brad
It's all about the pancakes, people.
"And he thought cops wouldn't chase... a STOLEN DONUT TRUCK???? That would be like Willie Nelson ignoring a pickup full of weed."
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HankB

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #5 on: November 19, 2007, 10:37:53 AM »
Yep, between the dual evils of Sesame Street and (orginal unedited) Looney Tunes, . . .
You mean cartoons like "Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips?"
Trump won in 2016. Democrats haven't been so offended since Republicans came along and freed their slaves.
Sometimes I wonder if the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on, or by imbeciles who really mean it. - Mark Twain
Government is a broker in pillage, and every election is a sort of advance auction in stolen goods. - H.L. Mencken
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it. - Mark Twain

Manedwolf

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #6 on: November 19, 2007, 10:43:31 AM »
Yep, between the dual evils of Sesame Street and (orginal unedited) Looney Tunes, . . .
You mean cartoons like "Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips?"

Even the standard ones, with Elmer being extremely irresponsible with that double-barrel and Yosemite Sam having no regard for backstop when shooting up a place upon entering.  grin

Ned Hamford

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #7 on: November 19, 2007, 11:52:01 AM »
Yep, between the dual evils of Sesame Street and (orginal unedited) Looney Tunes, it's amazing that any of us made it out of our formative years mentalled unscathed...
Brad

Who says you folks didn't?
How else could we account for this wild notions you seem to express about being 'fine'.
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Brad Johnson

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #8 on: November 19, 2007, 12:02:22 PM »
How else could we account for this wild notions you seem to express about being 'fine'.

Delusions of grandeur.

Brad
It's all about the pancakes, people.
"And he thought cops wouldn't chase... a STOLEN DONUT TRUCK???? That would be like Willie Nelson ignoring a pickup full of weed."
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jeepmor

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #9 on: November 20, 2007, 05:30:34 AM »
All that lead paint took the edge off.
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wooderson

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #10 on: November 20, 2007, 10:16:24 AM »
Quote
The earliest episodes of Sesame Street are available on digital video!
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Manedwolf

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #11 on: November 20, 2007, 10:20:32 AM »
I take it everyone's heard this...Sesame Street Stoned.

http://www.248am.com/audio/stoned.mp3

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geronimotwo

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #12 on: November 23, 2007, 11:44:30 AM »
it is unfortunate how we are representing the candy coated politicaly correct world as reality. our future generations will will have no idea what the term "personal responsibility" is.
make the world idiot proof.....and you will have a world full of idiots. -g2

hexidismal

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #13 on: November 24, 2007, 12:37:08 AM »
Yeah .. I didn't really have much to add.. but I couldn't resist a post since my avatar is so appropriate here.   grin

Larger:
I'm hexidismal on THR, TFL, APS, and many other forums.

geronimotwo

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Re: Sesame Street: Old School is adults-only
« Reply #14 on: November 25, 2007, 03:36:37 AM »
Quote
where the closeted Ernie and Bert shared a dismal basement apartment

i'm told, there was a family of three watching the news one one night where. the newscaster was going on about these two puppets, and their alternate lifestyle. when it switched to commercial, the parents could see their 6 year old was kind of troubled, so they asked if he understood what was being talked about. with tears in his eyes the little boy stammered, "you mean...burt and ernie.....are....puppets! grin
make the world idiot proof.....and you will have a world full of idiots. -g2