Throughline - Getting to Sesame Street (2022)
Episode Date: August 3, 2023American schools have always been more than where we go to learn the ABCs: They're places where socialization happens and cultural norms are developed. And arguments over what those norms are and how ...they're communicated tend to flare up during moments of cultural anxiety — like the one we're in now.When it premiered in 1969, the kids' TV show Sesame Street was part of a larger movement to reach lower-income, less privileged and more "urban" children. It was part of LBJ's Great Society agenda. And though it was funded in part by taxpayer dollars, Sesame Street is a TV show, not a classroom, and it set out to answer the question of what it means to educate kids. Today: how a television show made to represent Harlem and the Bronx reached children across a divided country, and how the conversations on the street have changed alongside usLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Find the unforgettable at AutographCollection.com. It's the late afternoon on a Monday.
I'm four years old,
sitting crisscross applesauce on the floor of my parents' apartment.
The carpet is shaggy, ugly, and brown.
I have a cherubic face and
bowl haircut, you know, like the one Jim Carrey has in the film Dumb and Dumber. In front
of me is a TV with an antenna and dial. It's the late 1980s. And on the screen is my daily
companion, Sesame Street. Today is a very special day because today is the day when my little sister Alice meets my best friend Bird.
Bird!
My family had only recently moved to the U.S. from Iran, and I was lonely.
I couldn't speak English.
I couldn't make sense of where we were or what had brought us here.
In that moment, where I needed a lifeline,
Sesame Street, with its weird cast of characters, was there.
The giant animals, monsters, Muppets,
the kind adults and children everywhere on the street.
It's a puppy!
Oh, Ernie!
You're right, Bert.
Oh, look at him.
Isn't he cute?
I learned English watching Sesame Street.
I learned how to deal with loss, anger, sadness, loneliness.
When my parents, who were dealing with their own trauma and working constantly to make rent, weren't there,
I learned from Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Susan, and Gordon.
It was a window into
a whole new world. A safe,
accepting, beautiful
American world.
Here it goes.
I wake up
in my house.
It's called
the name's Kermit. Whatever you say, Fruffy. in my house. It's called A-B-C
The name's Kermit.
Whatever you say, Fruffy.
I just opened my mouth and
That's amazing!
But I wasn't alone.
In millions of other homes, millions of other young children like me were sitting in front of their TVs watching the same show I was.
And some of those children grew up to work right here on ThruLine.
I watched Sesame Street in the early 90s when I was a kid.
From the early 1970s, so right, you know, right when Sesame Street started.
I always joke that it was created just for me because it was made about a year after I was born.
My sister and I actually weren't allowed to watch a lot of TV, but Sesame Street was one of the very few shows that we were allowed to watch.
I would watch from the couch of my family's apartment in the Bronx.
I was in Wichita, Kansas.
On the floor in our living room, way too close to the TV.
And actually my earliest memory of Sesame Street is actually my earliest memory.
I think it made me feel like I could be on the show.
Like I could be on Sesame Street.
Only child, being raised by a single dad. So I spent a lot of time in front of the show. I could be on Sesame Street. Only child, being raised by a single dad, so I
spent a lot of time in front of the TV. I think a big part of this was because there were kids
on the show who looked like me. I came to show you the moon, Maria. My favorite character was Big Bird.
Look up in the sky. My favorite, favorite character was Roosevelt Franklin.
I have a letter. It is here with me.
I'm in my 50s, and even now, I find myself walking around and randomly hearing,
Roosevelt Franklin Elementary School.
One of these things is not like the other. I saw the beautiful moon.
Just kind of felt like friends. It just felt like a place I wanted to spend time.
I learned everything on Sesame Street. Things that taught you how to, you know,
navigate the world. And I feel like in a way I'm still learning from Sesame Street.
I don't know. I think it really, really has played a major role in my worldview.
So, yeah, Sesame Street was our first taste of education.
It taught us how to read and count and be nice people in this society.
But the road to creating the show and sustaining it decade after decade has come with its own struggle.
A struggle that can tell us so much about the role of education in socializing children
and developing cultural norms and shared values.
Arguments over what those are and how they're communicated
tend to flare up during moments of cultural anxiety,
like the one we're in now.
This is a story about how a TV show
made to represent a block in Harlem, New York, has sustained its mark in educating children around the world.
And it's a story about the questions we're still asking about who the people are in our neighborhood.
In this episode of ThruLine from NPR, the story of Sesame Street.
Roosevelt Franklin Elementary School
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Part 1. A Symphony Orchestra of Rainpower.
Today, it may be easy to think of Sesame Street as a show that was created by some massive government program,
carefully concocted in some laboratory to teach kids how to read and write.
But the reality is Sesame Street began at a dinner party at the Manhattan apartment of a local TV producer
named Joan Ganz Cooney.
She and her husband hosted a, you know,
a classic 1960s dinner party.
And she prepared beef bourguignon from Julia Child's cookbook
for some of her colleagues and friends. I have never actually had beef bourguignon,
but I figured I would tell you that just as an excuse for me to say the word.
But anyway, this group of people at this party were basically just Joan
Ganz Cooney's friends and colleagues, except there was one hotshot there. Fellow named Lloyd Morissette.
Lloyd Morissette. Who worked in the philanthropic world, working on projects devoted to children.
By the way, this is Michael Davis. Author of Street Gang, The Complete History of Sesame Street.
Okay, so back at the dinner, all the guests gobbled down the beef bourguignon, and then the conversation turned to kids and education, something Joan had been thinking about in a television special she'd made. That investigated a program in Harlem where they were enriching the lives of preschool
children with educational materials and instruction and essentially giving young kids in Harlem who
were younger than school age the opportunities and influences that kids who in more privileged homes were getting,
books and records and being read to and those kinds of things.
And that program ends up becoming the model for what we now know as the National Head Start Program,
a federally funded education program designed to prepare children for kindergarten.
And there came a moment in the after dinner conversation when somebody said, you know,
I wonder if television could provide the same thing. Because by the 1960s, basically everyone
had a TV. And this electric picture box was like a direct pipeline into living rooms all across the country. Joan saw this as an opportunity. Could television teach? And Joan at that very moment
said, I don't know that it can, but I'd sure like to be the person who would try. And then, boom!
Just like that, at that moment, in her head, an idea came into clear focus that some of the things that she saw in Harlem could very well be translated to the screen.
Let's see if we could do that. Lloyd Morissette, a vice president at the Carnegie Foundation, decided to give her a grant to conduct research on whether a TV show to educate kids was even possible.
At the time, this idea was sort of novel because most children's programming on television was not educational at all.
And a home dog, howdy to you. This is the tacitive huckleberry hound
the flintstones brought to you by miles products division of miles laboratories makers of
wilma where's the alka-seltzer where it always is next to the one a day multiple vitamins What was the hole that they were trying to fill?
Well, the hole was a gaping, wide gap.
I mean, the world of children's television, circa 1968, was sort of a cavalcade of mayhem,
cartoons that really weren't all that worthy,
afternoon shows in local markets that were, you know,
just put on the air to sell products.
It was a minefield of junk.
At the time, the only show on the air for preschoolers that was quality was Captain Kangaroo.
Then one day some hunters came hunting along.
And it wasn't educational. It was a nice show for kids.
This is Joan Ganz Cooney from a television interview on a show called The Open Mind back in 2009, talking about that question from the dinner party. Could TV teach? So I did
a report saying, yes, the answer is yes. And here's how it might proceed. That report was called
The Potential Uses of Television for Preschool Education.
And she felt that, famously, that, you know, kids could sing beer commercials, beer jingles.
If television had the power to teach that to children, maybe it could teach something a little more pro-social, like, you know, some basic rudimentary concepts of learning.
It went all the way back to what she saw in Harlem, making that TV special
about the project that was part of the foundation for Head Start. Joan's fundamental idea was,
if we're going to try to see if television can teach, let's do it in a bona fide way. Let's get
educators to help us craft a curriculum for the show that can be measured.
We want to be able to prove to our funders that it worked.
Now, that was a real part of the brilliance behind Sesame Street,
to ground it in a bona fide scientific educational research.
Joan and Lloyd had been able to raise about $1 million from foundations
to support their idea of a children's TV show.
But they had to come up with a budget of $8 million to actually do it.
In today's money, that's about $62 million.
So who else was going to invest that much money
into an idea that probably offered no kind of financial return?
I propose that we begin a program in education
to ensure every American child
the fullest development of his mind and skills.
This was the era of Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society.
But Washington had various pilot projects around the country that they were researching
to see if early intervention could make a difference.
And the research showed that it did make a difference.
The administration of Lyndon Johnson was laser-focused on eliminating poverty and reducing inequality.
To that end, they made education, especially for Black children, a priority.
Joan and Lloyd were completely on the same page with the administration.
The civil rights movement, it gave energy to this initiative.
And these were, you know, New Yorkers, liberals.
They were convinced that the government could and should be in the business of helping preschool children with media. After months and months of pitching, it worked.
In 1968, Sesame Street got almost $4 million from the Office of Education,
facilitated by the LBJ administration.
That made up about half the budget to kickstart the show.
The rest came from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
Carnegie, and Ford Foundations, along with other funders. half the budget to kickstart the show. The rest came from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
Carnegie, and Ford Foundations, along with other funders.
I think they had a holy crap moment.
It's like, okay, you know, we, Joan spent a year, you know,
doing research and talking to people,
educators and psychologists and doctors, pediatricians, you know, and then,
you know, all of a sudden it became very real. And they realized that we've got to put a show on the air. And within a year, you're talking about something that had never been done before.
They summoned the brightest people they could find from disparate worlds, the world of education, psychology, psychiatry, medicine, artists, musicians.
And they had a series of seminars and they brainstormed together.
No one had ever created this symphony orchestra of brainpower.
I think it's fair to say that by the time our program goes on the air,
it will be the most thoroughly researched show in the history of the medium.
The show was developed under a nonprofit called the Children's Television Workshop.
All they needed was an audience, and Joan had to sell it.
The short, simple, 60-second form used by TV advertisers in commercials to sell products is used here to teach numbers and letters.
This is from a promo that was filmed before Sesame Street's debut.
You know what this is, Kermit?
A really bad triangle?
Oh, come on, Kermit, it's a circle.
Okay, so it's a circle.
So?
Well, you know that, but a lot of little kids don't.
It's hard to overstate how revolutionary this was.
It was a show whose goal was to reach Black audiences
at a time when Black families were struggling for equality in education.
It was a show inspired by Harlem,
which many people thought wouldn't resonate with
the national audience. No one knew if anyone would watch. So the creators were literally
hitting the streets to spread the word. A woman named Evelyn Davis, African-American woman
who was a community activist in New York City,
very, very well connected, knew everybody.
It was her job to raise awareness that this show was coming,
and she was able to convince Con Edison,
you know, the big utility in New York City,
to donate a bus. And on that bus, they had an early VCR, a tape machine, and a monitor.
And they invited people onto the bus to have a look at, you know, basically a reel
of what Sesame Street was going to look like.
She went from church to church, preschool to preschool,
community house to community house, just selling this idea
and doing her best to get excitement generated about its promise. That work was so important because
she had credibility in the Black community, high credibility.
It was 1969, three years after the dinner party at Joan's apartment,
and Sesame Street's first episode would air on November 10th.
Millions of dollars had been invested, yet no one knew for sure if the show would work.
Nothing like it had ever existed before.
When we come back, Sesame Street launches, and legends are born. Hi, this is Regina from Washington, D.C.,
and you are listening to the best sound design podcast there is,
not to mention the best NPR podcast, Throughline.
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Part 2. How the People Spoke
I was a senior in high school when Sesame debuted.
And I already was determined to watch it.
That first episode opens with weird animated creatures.
One looks kind of like a cross between a unicorn and an alligator.
The other, an armless, grinning blue guy wearing a bowler hat.
It has a very 60s vibe.
Number one, I had seen a special on NBC that aired a couple of days before that hailed the show.
But number two, I love the Muppets.
I call my bathtub
Rosie. Here I was, you know, like 17, watching a show meant for kids age four. Why do you call
your bathtub Rosie? Because every time I take a bath, I leave a ring around Rosie. And I thought,
man, this is really great.
Sally, you've never seen a street like Sesame Street.
Everything happens here. You're going to love it.
In the first scene of the very first episode, you meet the store clerk, Mr. Hooper, Bob, the music teacher,
and in the background, two kids, black and white, play with a ball. And then Gordon, the guy who owns the Sesame Street Brownstone,
calls into the window of his house.
Susan's my wife. We love her.
Susan, come here. I want you to say hello to Sally.
Hi, Sally.
Susan is not a name that you name black children, okay?
I inherited Susan.
However, Susan was from the Midwest.
She grew up on a farm.
She had a father and a mother
and a brother. I use my own story. Susan is you. Yeah, yeah. It's me.
This is Dr. Loretta Long, who played Susan starting from that very first episode in 1969. I was born in Kansas, but I was raised in rural Michigan,
20 miles from Kalamazoo, zoo, zoo, zoo.
Dr. Long has been an entertainer since she was a kid.
She used to sing show tunes while helping her family sell produce at the roadside stand.
When I graduated from Western Michigan University
in Kalamazoo, I immediately moved to Detroit.
My dream was really to work for Motown.
I wanted to be part of the Motown sound,
but all the slots were taken.
The Supremes didn't need nobody.
Martha had all the Vandellas. So I had to branch out.
Dr. Long went to New York City in 1960. She wanted to make it big, be a star. But she needed
a day job that would give her
the flexibility to go on auditions. And so, with a degree in education, she landed substitute
teaching gigs in Harlem and the Bronx. I knew if I got the right phone call, I was history.
When she finally got that call, it was 1969, and she'd been co-hosting a show on New York
public television that was all about Black music, Black culture, and Black identity.
It was a show called Soul.
It's Soul, and this is your announcer, Jerry B.
No train. We didn't have the money for a train. Just Soul.
The young man who was a set director, director every time the camera went off you heard
he was building the the mock-up for Sesame Street
he said oh I'm doing this for this uh children's show and um you're a teacher? Why don't you? And I'm so, I'm an actor who happens to be teaching.
I am not a teacher.
He said, right now, you're a teacher who can sing, okay?
So he sent me to the audition.
It was just a regular room with a bunch of judgmental people
sitting at a long table with their arms folded
looking at you. But I was used to that. I mean, I had auditioned for Broadway.
They were looking for an acoustic folk guitarist, Joan Baez looking, and I look like,
I look like Angela Davis. I had a big fro, short skirts, and show tunes.
They looked me up and down and said, where's your guitar?
I said, excuse me?
My what?
They said, so, very New York.
So sing already.
One, two, you know what to do.
Hey, I'm a little teapot, short and stout. Here is my handle.
And I said, hold it, hold it. See, I knew we were singing to children. And I looked right in the
camera and I said, now you all know this song. Now I'm going to start it again and you stand up
and sing it with me. Okay. One, two, you know what to do.
Hey!
Ed Palmer, who was head of research,
said the kids all stood up and sang.
And I have a career because of some kids in Harlem
that stood up and sang with me.
Anybody see any more rectangles right around in this neighborhood?
Yeah.
The pictures.
Oh, the pictures. Those are good rectangles.
Look at this.
The thing about Dr. Loretta Long is that she really did embody what Sesame Street has been doing since the very beginning,
mixing education and entertainment.
One of these things is not like the others.
One of these things doesn't belong. In fact, during the first few years the show ran,
Dr. Long was earning her Ph.D. in urban education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
I have a riddle for you.
What's closer to you than the air?
And what stretches like a rubber band
and comes in a lot of pretty colors like white, all shades of brown?
The fact that we could put entertainment and
educational concepts together and make it more palatable for children, it fit me like a glove.
Well, did you guess? It was skin. I was hired for one week. We shot a pilot from a Monday through Friday
to show how we would teach
and utilize every day to reinforce the lesson we were teaching.
I was only hired for a week, so that wasn't any big celebration.
And that brings us back to that first episode in November 1969.
E-E-C-Me.
Milk.
Did you ever wonder where it came from?
That first episode is trippy.
Hello, Big Bird.
Big Bird is this big, dopey, disheveled-looking creature
with sort of creepy eyes, a rough sketch of what we see today.
You're letting all the fresh air and sunlight in.
Boy, I hate that.
Oscar the Grouch is orange.
Oh, go away.
Close my can, my dear.
And Sesame Street was born at a time when the government was taking a bigger role in people's lives.
Medicaid and Medicare had been created. the Civil Rights Act was passed,
and the government was getting involved with what was on TV.
Sesame Street first aired on the National Educational Television Network,
which would become the public broadcasting system, PBS, the next year.
Which is why even today, Sesame Street can feel so synonymous with PBS.
I was there, man, in 1969.
Nobody knew what the hell PBS was, believe me.
In a lot of markets, you couldn't even find it.
It was on a UHF station, and you were lucky if you could get rid of the fuzz and get a decent picture.
But the picture was pretty clear. In its second week, Sesame Street was reaching almost
two million homes and the reviewers loved the show.
I think the majority of people hailed it and loved it. And, you know, it was an immediate success. It was a blockbuster success. It was
everywhere. But there were opponents from the very start. Notably, Mississippi Public Television
refused to air the show. Why? Because black and white children were portrayed
as being friends on the show and, you know,
did things together and it was as normal as normal could be.
That was not going to fly in Mississippi
until, aha, the parents said,
wait a minute, we want this show.
We think our children should be able to see this show.
And they resolved that conflict in the best of all ways.
The people spoke.
The ban lasted less than a month.
But the Mississippi government wasn't the show's only critic.
Some educators themselves were questioning whether a TV show could really do a good job teaching kids.
They thought that the pace was too frenetic.
They thought it was going to create a generation of kids with attention deficit disorder.
And there were people who were really angry with it, suspicious of it, didn't like it one little bit. I had a guy say, well, am I supposed to be entertaining my kids in the class?
And I said, why not?
But Sesame Street was changing the game.
Kindergarten teachers had to rip up their curriculum.
They had to start over because no longer were kids showing up not understanding the basics. They showed up
ready to learn and to learn more. A 2015 study showed that a whole generation of kids in the
70s were coming to school more prepared. By 1979, around 9 million kids under the age of 6
were watching Sesame Street every day. And it wasn't just
reaching, quote-unquote, disadvantaged children. Within weeks of its premiere,
it was clear that all boats were going to rise as a result of this show. A lot of people question the idea of the government getting involved in television
and the whole idea of a public television network seemed to them to be like just more liberal brainwashing. But, but, but, but, but, but, moms, grandmoms, dads, older siblings, I mean,
once they started watching this show, when it debuted in November of 69, immediately defended
it, immediately took to it, immediately saw that it was like nothing else on television.
And, you know, within a year, Big Bird was on the cover of Time magazine.
The tone of Sesame Street and the tempo of it was extraordinary too.
It was very fast-paced.
There were quick cuts.
Roy, you're really weird.
There was animation.
There were songs.
Two whipped cream pies on the wall. There were parodies. And now, time for TV's favorite game show,
Beat the Time. And here's TV's favorite moderator, Guy Smiley.
And the show wasn't just about numbers and letters.
The diversity was the soft skill that laid right in there with the ABCs and the 1-2-3s and Kermit singing It's Not That Easy Being Green.
It's not that easy being green.
Having to spend each day the color of the leaves And all the while, educators and researchers, directors and writers work together,
trying to figure out how to do all this right.
Hi, Mr. Hooper, what you doing?
Hooper, Hooper.
Hooper.
Life presented Children's Television Workshop with a real dilemma when Willie, the actor who portrayed Mr. Hooper, died.
And fairly suddenly.
I'll sweep for you.
And that way you can sit down and study
because that's what you should be doing.
I see.
He rode in the Thanksgiving Day parade, went in the hospital.
And less than two weeks later,
Will Lee and with him, Mr. Hooper, died.
They had to decide
what would become of that character.
Since the show spent so much time
researching each episode,
the episode where they addressed
the death of Mr. Hooper
wouldn't air for almost a year after his death.
I just drew pictures of all of my grown-up friends
on Sesame Street, and I'm going to give them to you.
They said, we have to say the words, Mr. Hooper died.
And it has to be put in Big Bird's mouth,
because he's the child.
Big Bird was a stand-in for like a six-year-old child.
He's the child's representative on the street.
And if he had a question, we figured that the children were questioning that as well.
So we were all in the alcove and sitting around,
and he had drawn caricatures of each of us,
and he brought them to give them to us.
Hey, it's time for your presents.
Presents?
And then he went to give Mr. Hooper's his.
And last but not least, ta-da!
And that's when we said, well, Big Bird, you know, you remember Mr. Hooper died.
Oh, yeah, I remember.
Well, I'll give it to him when he comes back.
Big Bird, Mr. Hooper's not coming back.
Why not? Big Bird, when people die, they don't come back.
Ever?
No, never.
Why not? We did it one time.
The assistant director came out, Lisa, crying.
Oh, there were a few things wrong.
Anybody want to do it again?
And everybody said no.
And we ran for our dressing rooms.
You know, that was it, man.
Coming up, how Sesame Street takes on empathy, diversity,
and some of the country's most divisive issues. use. Hi, my name is Stephen Barrera, and I'm a graduate student at Indiana University here
in Bloomington, Indiana, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR. Part 3
Don't Dish Big Bud
Now where is that Roosevelt Franklin? Part 3. Don't Dish Big Bird.
Now where is that Roosevelt Franklin?
Somebody call me by my first and last name.
Yes, I called you and it's about time you got here too. What's really interesting to me is the character Roosevelt Franklin.
Here I am, here I am, and there you are.
And that's just what we're going to get into today.
Who was an identifiably black character.
Here and there.
And funny and fresh, and the bits were always set in a schoolhouse, in a classroom, where he clearly spoke in a black vernacular.
Rhyme time, rhyme time, everybody ready for rhyme time.
While some in the black community were delighted to see it and thought it was something that Sesame Street absolutely needed to do,
if your target audience is Black,
other members of the Black community said,
oh, no, no, no, no, no.
It was over here.
Now it's over there.
Uh-huh.
Right.
Well, that's the difference between here and there.
The pressure amounted,
and they did drop the character.
Here's the thing, though.
The guy who created that character was Matt Robinson,
the same guy who played Gordon, Susan's husband.
And he was proud of Roosevelt Franklin.
Which brings us to a question that Sesame Street has been forced to deal with throughout its entire existence.
Who should be included in
the neighborhood? While there were conservative voices saying that the show was trying to sell
something that they didn't necessarily want their children to buy, voices on the left were saying,
you folks aren't going far enough.
In the early 1970s, you started to see pushback on representation on Sesame Street.
There were feminists who were angry that the Susan character was too subservient to her husband.
Two new human characters, Luis and Maria, joined the show after activists asked for more Latino representation in the neighborhood.
There were individuals throughout the history of Sesame Street saying,
you know, why aren't you showing a gay or lesbian family on the show?
It's the rare television show that can claim getting criticism from both flanks.
We are looking at the public spat between Texas Senator Ted Cruz and Big Bird.
Big Bird put out a tweet after getting the COVID vaccine.
He called Big Bird's tweet government propaganda for your five-year-old. Over the years, Sesame Street has become known for taking on more and more of these culturally sensitive topics,
trying to help families navigate how to talk about them.
It's right there along with the ABCs.
Do you tell everybody that it is okay to hug someone who is HIV positive like me?
My dad's in jail.
In jail?
Why?
I don't like to talk about it.
Most people don't understand.
What does divorce mean?
Well, divorce means that Abby's mommy and daddy aren't married anymore.
We see ebbs and flows.
This is Dr. Kira Hunting,
associate professor at the University of Kentucky,
who specialized in children's media.
We see these moments where Sesame Street introduces something new,
and sometimes you get pushed back from the larger culture relationship there,
or more frequently politicians' relationship to that. And then we move on, and maybe perhaps we don't have something new for
a little while, and then we have something new again. Children don't need this kind of access
at such an early age. They're simply not ready for it. They're not prepared for it.
And really, we're taking away our children's innocence. We're taking away...
In a country that's so politically divided,
what does a show like Sesame Street represent in terms of either exacerbating that divide or bridging it?
Well, I don't think it exacerbates it.
I think it can be used by people who want to further the divide, right? I think
we've certainly seen politicians take moments from Sesame Street and tweet about them and be like,
oh my God, Big Bird got a vaccine. Well, Big Bird also got a vaccine in the 70s. He was fine.
I want to get a measles shot. I don't want to get the measles.
So I don't think that Sesame Street can really fulfill its goals and its purposes without engaging in some representations and some content that is going to be perceived as political in a negative way by at least some commentators and some politicians. There was, in the early days, some critique of the government's place
in funding Sesame Street.
But I think the volume on that
was increased later, in the 80s.
And, you know, during the Newt Gingrich era
of the Republican Revolution,
I mean, it was later when that drumbeat
of criticism of the show really grew louder.
By the mid-1980s, Sesame Street had been relying
less and less on government funding
and more and more on merchandising Sesame Street products
like stuffed animals, T-shirts, and books.
But because of its reach, and because it symbolized a public, more liberal media,
it was an easy target.
When Newt Gingrich, the leader of the Republican Revolution,
was asked what in the federal budget would first feel his axe,
he answered, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
All this criticism hasn't stopped Sesame Street,
Children's Television Workshop,
and now Sesame Workshop
from trying to represent what they feel
is right for the moment.
In 2020, after the murder of George Floyd,
Sesame Street partnered with CNN
to host a town hall on racism
called Coming Together.
Racism? What's that?
Oh, racism is when people treat other people unfairly
because of the way they look or the color of their skin.
If you look at some of the specials or the episodes
that are being critiqued by some conservative groups and other commentators,
you can really see that they're mostly just about children and Muppets in the community
dealing with difficult experiences.
Well, my friend Big Bird, he was bullied by some other birds because of his yellow feathers. So Sesame Street having these direct depictions
is very consistent with what's always done
in just a slightly more explicit way
that is consistent with this historical moment.
They won't stop with their push for woke politics.
It's the innocence of kids that's being attacked earlier
and earlier. And I think what really I want to ask is why that's controversial. Why talking about
self-esteem and inclusion and being a good friend and dealing with people who have excluded you or been mean to you or treated you
badly for part of who you are is okay in some instances, but in other instances is being treated
as inappropriate or as, quote, too political. I will tell you this. It's always a mistake to diss Big Bird.
Bad idea.
Why can't you diss Big Bird?
Over time, what's happened is that we really deeply understand these characters.
We know who they are. And to suggest that Big Bird was doing something stupid or not good for kids just rings false with the viewer.
Like the time presidential candidate Mitt Romney said he'd cancel subsidies to PBS and use Big Bird as a stand-in.
There were all these memes and media coverage about it,
and it was used against him in the election in 2012.
Thank goodness somebody is finally getting tough on Big Bird.
We didn't know that Big Bird was driving the federal deficit.
It's impossible to say how much of the rhetoric for or against Sesame Street helps anyone's cause. But there is something deeply ingrained in many of us about Sesame Street,
something that's decades in the making that makes some adults feel like kids,
that makes dissing Big Bird off-limits for many people, including me.
Big Bird, I said, was the prototype of the child.
You were messing with their childhood.
Sesame Street started as a way to reach underprivileged kids. It was going above the noise and really above the politics that can slow down and sometimes obstruct real change in schools and governments. And because it was started by white liberals from New York City and kick-started with government funding and aired on public television and meant for Black children, the question still remains.
Who gets to control the neighborhood?
The messages.
The music they choose.
The Muppets who have continued to teach us, generation after generation.
One, two, you know what to do.
Hey, I'm a little teapot, short and stout.
I am a little teapot, short and stout. Here is my handle. Here is my spout. I am a little teapot, short and stout.
Here is my handle.
Here is my spout. When I get all steamed up, give me a shout.
Tip me over and pour me out. That's it for this week's show.
I'm Randa Adelfatah.
I'm Ramteen Arablui.
This episode was produced by me.
And me and...
Lawrence Wu.
Julie Kane.
Anya Steinberg.
Yolanda Sanguin.
Casey Miner.
Christina Kim.
Devin Katayama.
Amiri Tala.
Jennifer Etienne.
And a big, huge special thanks to the ThruLine kids you heard at the end,
Reed, Rumi, Soleil, and Finley.
Fact-checking for this episode was done by the one and only Kevin Vocal.
Thanks also to Kimberly Sullivan, Micah Ratner, Taylor Ashe,
Samantha Belgard, Tamar Charney, and Anya Grunman.
This episode was mixed by Josh Newell.
Music for this episode was composed by Ramtin and his band, Drop Electric,
which includes Anya Mizani, Naveed Marvi, Sho Fujiwara.
And as always, if you have an idea or like something you heard on the show,
please write us at throughlineatnpr.org.
Thanks for listening.