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Format of Sesame Street

Sesame Street is an American children's television program that is known for its use of format and structure to convey educational concepts to its preschool audience, and to help them prepare for school. It utilizes the conventions of television such as music, humor, sustained action, and a strong visual style,[1] and combines Jim Henson's Muppets, animation, short films, humor, and cultural references. The show, which premiered in 1969, was the first to base its contents, format, and production values on laboratory and formative research. According to researchers, it was also the first to include a curriculum "detailed or stated in terms of measurable outcomes".[2]

The format of Sesame Street consisted of a combination of commercial television production elements and educational techniques. It was the first time a more realistic setting, an inner city street and neighborhood, was used for a children's program.[3] At first, each episode was structured like a magazine, but in 1998, as a result of changes in their audience and its viewing habits, the producers researched the reasons for its lower ratings, and changed the show's structure to a more narrative format. The popular, fifteen-minute long segment, "Elmo's World", hosted by the Muppet Elmo, was added in 1998 to make the show more accessible to a younger audience. The producers of Sesame Street expanded the new format to the entire show in 2002.

The format changed as the target audience did; by 2002 its main viewers were around two years old, while back in the 1960s the intended audiences were aged three through five.

Original format

The producers of Sesame Street, which premiered in 1969, used elements of commercial television such as music, humor, sustained action, and a strong visual style, in structuring the format of the show. They also used animation and live-action short films.[4] The show's staff produced segments filmed in-studio with their human and Muppet cast and they contracted out the animations and short films[note 1] to independent producers.[6][note 2] Co-creator Joan Ganz Cooney was the first to suggest that they use commercial-like 12–90-second shorts that consistently repeated several key concepts throughout an episode.[4] The studio segments were written to concentrate on the African-American child, a key component of the show's audience.[8]

With all its raucousness and slapstick humor, Sesame Street became a sweet show, and its staff maintains that there is nothing wrong in that.[9]

Sesame Street researcher Gerald S. Lesser[10]

The show's producers and writers decided to build the new show around a brownstone on an inner-city street, a choice writer Michael Davis called "unprecedented".[3] They reproduced their viewers' neighborhoods—as writer Cary O'Dell described it, "a realistic city street, complete with peeling paint, alleys, front stoops, and metal trash cans along the sidewalk".[1] Director Jon Stone was convinced that in order for inner-city children to relate to Sesame Street, the show had to be set in a familiar place.[11][note 3] Despite its urban setting, the producers depicted the world in a positive way—both realistically and as it could be.[13] They attempted to present "an idealized world of learning and play",[14] and from a child's perspective. Director Jim Martin called Sesame Street "an urban show kids could relate to" and "a reality show with a sprinkling of fantasy".[15]

When Sesame Street was developed, most researchers assumed that young children did not have long attention spans, so the new show's producers were concerned that an hour-long show would not hold their audience's attention. As a result, each episode was structured like a magazine, which made it possible for the producers to create a mixture of styles, paces, and characters. The structure allowed them to have flexibility, meaning that segments were dropped, modified, or added without affecting the rest of the show.[16] As Lesser stated, "It is unlikely that any other approach would have provided enough room to present material on the wide range of goals we had selected".[17] Producers found that if the show's segments were sufficiently varied in character, content, style, pace, and mood, children's attention was able to be sustained throughout each episode.[18] The show's magazine format accommodated both the curriculum and its demanding production schedule.[16]

"Street scenes"

At first, the show's "street scenes", which referred to the action taking place on the brownstone set, were not story-based. Instead, they consisted of individual segments connected to the curriculum and interrupted by inserts, or puppet skits, short films, and animations. By 1990, research had shown that children were able to follow a story, so the street scenes were changed to depict storylines.[19] The writers presented a story, separated by several inserts, dispersed throughout the hour-long show. Although the stories were usually about 10–12 minutes in length, it would take 45 minutes to tell them.[20][21][note 4] According to writer Tony Geiss, the addition of storylines changed the nature of the show.[19]

During Sesame Street's development in 1968, the producers followed the recommendation of child psychologists, who advised them to not allow the direct interaction of the human actors and Muppets because the experts were concerned it would confuse and mislead young children.[22] Shortly before the show's premiere, the producers created five one-hour episodes so that they could test if children found them comprehensible and appealing. They were never intended for broadcast, but were presented to preschoolers in 60 homes throughout Philadelphia in July 1969. The producers found that the results were "generally very positive".[22] However, children attended to the shows during the Muppet segments, but their interest was lost during the street scenes, which featured only humans and were considered "the glue" that "pulled the show together".[23] The appeal of the test episodes was lower than they preferred,[24] so the producers re-shot the street segments.[23] Henson and his team created Muppets that could interact with the human actors;[23] specifically, as the show's researchers put it, "two of Sesame Street's most enduring Muppets: Oscar the Grouch and Big Bird".[25] The test episodes were responsible for what writer Malcolm Gladwell called "the essence of Sesame Street—the artful blend of fluffy monsters and earnest adults".[23] CTW researcher Gerald Lesser called the producers' decision to defy the recommendations of their advisers "a turning point in the history of Sesame Street".[23]

Animation, films, and other media

Animation was another important aspect of the structure of Sesame Street. Lesser stated that one of the purposes of animation was to create incongruity, or what he called "illogical surprises".[26] The first piece of animation commissioned by the CTW for Sesame Street was "the J commercial", in 1968, which they used in a study about its effectiveness in daycare centers in New York City. The CTW found that it was an effective tool in teaching children letters and numbers and that it effectively attracted children's attention. It also provided evidence, as writer Robert W. Morrow reported, that children were able to "endure enormous amounts of repetition".[27] According to Morrow, the CTW's generalization from this study, which was later supported by outside studies, was that although repetition was an effective teaching method, repeated exposure "determined instructional effectiveness".[28] "The J commercial" was a part of CTW's promotional film about Sesame Street and was used to demonstrate its teaching style to the press.[27][note 5]

 
Jim Henson, (1989), creator of the Muppets. Henson created and produced many of the animation and short films shown on Sesame Street.

Sesame Street's animations and live-action films were usually commissioned to outside studios. For example, Misseri Studio in Florence, Italy provided animations for the show for its entire run.[29] Many animations, as well as the show's live-action films and longer segments like Elmo's World were created to accompany specific episodes, and became part of its library of shorts available for use in later episodes. Other films and animations were created as regular, recurring, and stand-alone segments.[30] Gikow reported, "Virtually all animators and filmmakers supplying the show cite the enormous freedom given by producers, calling it a liberating force that let creativity explode on screen".[31]

CTW's first producer responsible for the show's animation and live-action shorts was Lu Horne. His successor, Edith Zornow, was interested in what Gikow called "emerging talent",[32] and as a result, the show worked with, as Gikow also stated, "animators and filmmakers on the cusp of fame".[32] Animators who created pieces for Sesame Street included Bud Luckey, Jeffrey Hale, Ernie Fosselius, and others who went on to work at Pixar.[33] Jim Henson was one of the many producers who created short films for the show.[31]

As Gikow stated, "The expansion of the Sesame Street brand into films, videos, and television specials was a natural".[34] There have been two full-length films produced: Sesame Street Presents Follow That Bird (1985) and The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland (1999). In early 2019, it was announced that a third film, a musical co-starring Anne Hathaway and written and directed by Jonathan Krisel, would be produced.[35] Starting in 1978 with Christmas Eve on Sesame Street, there have been several television specials, and the Sesame Street Muppets have made several appearances on other programs throughout the years. Home videos, which emphasized specific curriculum goals, began to be produced in 1985.[34]

By 2009, Sesame Workshop started a new website containing a large library of classic and more recent free video clips, as well as a series of podcasts.[36] In 2014, PBS began to stream full-length episodes on its website, mobile app, and Roku channel.[37][38] Also in 2014, the SW began an online streaming subscription service called Sesame Go, which aired both old and new episodes of the show.[39][note 6] By 2019, Sesame Street has produced over 4,500 episodes, 35 TV specials, 200 home videos, and 180 albums.[41] Its YouTube channel had almost 5 million subscribers, and the show had 24 million followers on social media.[42][43]

Format changes after the 1990s

Sesame Street's format remained intact until the 1990s. By then, its dominance was challenged by other programs such as Blue's Clues, and its ratings declined. New research, the growth of the children's home video industry, and the increase of 30-minute children's shows on cable demonstrated that the traditional magazine-format was not necessarily the most effective way to hold young viewers' attention.[44] For Sesame Street's 30th anniversary in 1999, its producers researched the reasons for the show's lower ratings. For the first time since the show debuted, the producers and a team of researchers analyzed Sesame Street's content and structure during a series of two-week-long workshops. They also studied how children's viewing habits had changed and become more sophisticated in thirty years. They found that although the show was produced for 3-to-5-year-olds, children began watching it at a younger age. As a result, the target age for Sesame Street shifted downward, from 4 years to 3 years.[45] By 2002, the main bloc of viewers was aged two.[46]

In 1998, a new 15-minute-long segment, created and developed by writers Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss,[47] that targeted the show's younger viewers and had a different format than the rest of the show,[48] began to be shown at the end of each episode. The segment, called "Elmo's World", used traditional elements (animation, Muppets, music, and live-action film), but had a more sustained narrative,[49] followed the same structure each episode, and depended heavily on repetition. Unlike the realism of the rest of the show, "Elmo's World" took place in a stylized crayon-drawn universe as conceived by its host.[50] Elmo, who represented the younger audience, was chosen as the host of the closing segment because younger toddlers identified with him[51] and because he had always tested well with them.[52][note 7]

In 2002, Sesame Street's producers went further in changing the show to reflect its younger audience and the increase in their viewers' sophistication. They expanded the "Elmo's World" concept by, as San Francisco Chronicle TV critic Tim Goodman called it, "deconstructing"[45] the show. They changed the structure of the entire show to a more narrative format, which made the show easier for young children to navigate. Arlene Sherman, a co-executive producer for 25 years, called the show's new look "startlingly different".[45]

"Elmo's World" stopped production in 2009, when the producers of Sesame Street began taking steps to increase the age of their viewers and to increase the show's ratings, and because the show's curriculum was not designed for a younger audience. They were successful; by the end of the show's 40th anniversary in 2009, 3-year-old viewers had increased by 41 percent, 4-year-olds by 4 percent, and 5-year-olds by 21 percent. In 2012, "Elmo's World" was replaced by "Elmo the Musical"; even though it was designed for older viewers, the producers hoped that younger children would still enjoy it. "Elmo's World" segments continued to appear in repeats, DVDs,[53] and on the show's website.[54] In 2017, the 47th season of Sesame Street began airing on the cable subscription service HBO, Elmo's World returned, in a newly designed segment that ran five minutes at the end of each episode. Steve Youngwood, the Sesame Workshop's CEO, called it "fresh, contemporary".[55] Also in 2017, in response to the changing viewing habits of toddlers, the show's producers decreased its length from one hour to thirty minutes, focused on fewer characters, removed the pop culture references "once included as winks for their parents", and focused "on a single backbone topic".[56]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For Sesame Street, "films" meant segments that depicted humans or real animals instead of animated characters. Morrow reported that films depicting animals were more popular than the ones with humans.[5]
  2. ^ Animations made up 37 percent of an episode, films made up 17 percent, and Muppet segments 20 percent.[7]
  3. ^ The set has changed many times during its history to better reflect the changing experiences of the show's young viewers.[12]
  4. ^ When 130 episodes were made each season, about 2,400 segments had to be produced.
  5. ^ See Morrow, pp. 89–91, for his description of "the J commercial".
  6. ^ A year later, in the wake of the SW's deal with HBO in 2015, the SW began phasing out its subscription service.[40]
  7. ^ At first, the same segment was repeated daily for a week, but this practice was dropped at the end of the first season of "Elmo's World".

References

  1. ^ a b O'Dell, p. 72
  2. ^ Palmer & Fisch, p. 9
  3. ^ a b Davis, p. 156
  4. ^ a b O'Dell, p. 70
  5. ^ Morrow, pp. 91, 92)
  6. ^ Morrow, p. 88
  7. ^ Morrow, pp. 89, 92, 94
  8. ^ Morrow, p. 97
  9. ^ Lesser, p. 95
  10. ^ Gikow, p. 26
  11. ^ Hellman, Peter (23 November 1987). "Street Smart: How Big Bird & Company Do It". New York. New York Media. 20 (46): 52. ISSN 0028-7369. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  12. ^ Gikow, p. 212
  13. ^ Lesser, p. 50
  14. ^ Morrow, p. 102
  15. ^ Gikow, p. 120
  16. ^ a b Morrow, p. 87
  17. ^ Lesser, p. 99
  18. ^ Lesser, p. 131
  19. ^ a b Gikow, p. 179
  20. ^ Palmer & Fisch, p. 8
  21. ^ Salamon, Julie (9 June 2002). "Children's TV Catches up with How Kids Watch". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  22. ^ a b Fisch & Bernstein, p. 39
  23. ^ a b c d e Gladwell, p. 106
  24. ^ Gladwell, p. 105
  25. ^ Fisch & Bernstein, p. 40
  26. ^ Lesser, p. 112
  27. ^ a b Morrow, p. 89
  28. ^ Morrow, p. 91
  29. ^ Gikow, p. 236
  30. ^ Gikow, p. 234
  31. ^ a b Gikow, p. 246
  32. ^ a b Gikow, p. 238
  33. ^ Gikow, pp. 240–241
  34. ^ a b Gikow, p. 276
  35. ^ Kit, Borys; Sandberg, Bryn Elise (6 February 2019). "'Sesame Street' Movie's Writer-Director Reveals Plot Details". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  36. ^ Guernsey, Lisa (22 May 2009). "How Sesame Street Changed the World". Newsweek. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  37. ^ Dockterman, Eliana (18 June 2015). "We're Getting a Half-Hour Version of Sesame Street". Time. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  38. ^ Jensen, Elizabeth (17 June 2014). "PBS Plans to Add a Shorter Version of 'Sesame Street'". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  39. ^ Luckerson, Victor (8 April 2014). "Sesame Street Is Getting Its Own Streaming Service". Time. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  40. ^ Fung, Brian (14 August 2015). "Sesame Street is killing off its subscription streaming service, Sesame Go". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  41. ^ Wallace, Debra (6 February 2019). "Big Bird Has 4,000 Feathers: 21 Fun Facts About Sesame Street That Will Blow Your Mind". Parade. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  42. ^ Guthrie, Marisa (6 February 2019). "50 Years of Sunny Days on 'Sesame Street': Behind the Scenes of TV's Most Influential Show Ever". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  43. ^ Bradley, Diana (27 July 2018). "Leaving the neighborhood: 'Sesame Street' muppets to travel across America next year". PR Week. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  44. ^ Davis, p. 338
  45. ^ a b c Goodman, Tim (4 February 2002). "Word on the 'Street': Classic Children's Show to Undergo Structural Changes This Season". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  46. ^ "Changes On Sesame Street". CBS News. Associated Press. 2002-02-01. Retrieved 2019-09-02. Now the show's primary audience is 2-year-olds,[...]
  47. ^ Clash, p. 76
  48. ^ Davis, p. 339
  49. ^ Fisch & Bernstein, p. 45
  50. ^ Clash, p. 75
  51. ^ Clash, pp. 46–47
  52. ^ Whitlock, Natalie Walker (16 October 2006). "Ultimate Guide to Elmo". HowStuffWorks. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  53. ^ Jensen, Elizabeth (13 September 2012). "Hey, Elmo, That Concept Has Legs". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  54. ^ Crimaldi, Philip (6 August 2012). "Season 43" (Press release). Sesame Workshop. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  55. ^ Steinberg, Brian (17 October 2016). "'Sesame Street' Will Revive 'Elmo's World'". Variety. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
  56. ^ Harwell, Drew (12 January 2016). "Sesame Street, newly revamped for HBO, aims for toddlers of the Internet age". Washington Post. Retrieved 15 May 2019.

Works cited

  • Clash, Kevin and Gary Brozek & Louis Henry Mitchell (2006). My Life as a Furry Red Monster: What Being Elmo Has Taught Me About Life, Love and Laughing Out Loud. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-7679-2375-8
  • Davis, Michael (2008). Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 978-0-670-01996-0
  • Fisch, Shalom M. and Rosemarie T. Truglio, eds. (2001). "G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. ISBN 0-8058-3395-1
    • Palmer, Edward and Shalom M. Fisch, "The Beginnings of Sesame Street Research", pp. 3–24.
    • Fisch, Shalom M. and Lewis Bernstein, "Formative Research Revealed: Methodological and Process Issues in Formative Research", pp. 39–60.
  • Gikow, Louise A. (2009). Sesame Street: A Celebration of Forty Years of Life on the Street. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57912-638-4.
  • Gladwell, Malcolm (2000). The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference. New York: Little, Brown, and Company. ISBN 0-316-31696-2
  • Lesser, Gerald S. (1974). Children and Television: Lessons From Sesame Street. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-394-71448-2
  • Morrow, Robert W. (2006). Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-8230-3
  • O'Dell, Cary (1997). Women Pioneers in Television: Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-0167-2

format, sesame, street, sesame, street, american, children, television, program, that, known, format, structure, convey, educational, concepts, preschool, audience, help, them, prepare, school, utilizes, conventions, television, such, music, humor, sustained, . Sesame Street is an American children s television program that is known for its use of format and structure to convey educational concepts to its preschool audience and to help them prepare for school It utilizes the conventions of television such as music humor sustained action and a strong visual style 1 and combines Jim Henson s Muppets animation short films humor and cultural references The show which premiered in 1969 was the first to base its contents format and production values on laboratory and formative research According to researchers it was also the first to include a curriculum detailed or stated in terms of measurable outcomes 2 The format of Sesame Street consisted of a combination of commercial television production elements and educational techniques It was the first time a more realistic setting an inner city street and neighborhood was used for a children s program 3 At first each episode was structured like a magazine but in 1998 as a result of changes in their audience and its viewing habits the producers researched the reasons for its lower ratings and changed the show s structure to a more narrative format The popular fifteen minute long segment Elmo s World hosted by the Muppet Elmo was added in 1998 to make the show more accessible to a younger audience The producers of Sesame Street expanded the new format to the entire show in 2002 The format changed as the target audience did by 2002 its main viewers were around two years old while back in the 1960s the intended audiences were aged three through five Contents 1 Original format 1 1 Street scenes 1 2 Animation films and other media 2 Format changes after the 1990s 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Works citedOriginal format EditThe producers of Sesame Street which premiered in 1969 used elements of commercial television such as music humor sustained action and a strong visual style in structuring the format of the show They also used animation and live action short films 4 The show s staff produced segments filmed in studio with their human and Muppet cast and they contracted out the animations and short films note 1 to independent producers 6 note 2 Co creator Joan Ganz Cooney was the first to suggest that they use commercial like 12 90 second shorts that consistently repeated several key concepts throughout an episode 4 The studio segments were written to concentrate on the African American child a key component of the show s audience 8 With all its raucousness and slapstick humor Sesame Street became a sweet show and its staff maintains that there is nothing wrong in that 9 Sesame Street researcher Gerald S Lesser 10 The show s producers and writers decided to build the new show around a brownstone on an inner city street a choice writer Michael Davis called unprecedented 3 They reproduced their viewers neighborhoods as writer Cary O Dell described it a realistic city street complete with peeling paint alleys front stoops and metal trash cans along the sidewalk 1 Director Jon Stone was convinced that in order for inner city children to relate to Sesame Street the show had to be set in a familiar place 11 note 3 Despite its urban setting the producers depicted the world in a positive way both realistically and as it could be 13 They attempted to present an idealized world of learning and play 14 and from a child s perspective Director Jim Martin called Sesame Street an urban show kids could relate to and a reality show with a sprinkling of fantasy 15 When Sesame Street was developed most researchers assumed that young children did not have long attention spans so the new show s producers were concerned that an hour long show would not hold their audience s attention As a result each episode was structured like a magazine which made it possible for the producers to create a mixture of styles paces and characters The structure allowed them to have flexibility meaning that segments were dropped modified or added without affecting the rest of the show 16 As Lesser stated It is unlikely that any other approach would have provided enough room to present material on the wide range of goals we had selected 17 Producers found that if the show s segments were sufficiently varied in character content style pace and mood children s attention was able to be sustained throughout each episode 18 The show s magazine format accommodated both the curriculum and its demanding production schedule 16 Street scenes Edit At first the show s street scenes which referred to the action taking place on the brownstone set were not story based Instead they consisted of individual segments connected to the curriculum and interrupted by inserts or puppet skits short films and animations By 1990 research had shown that children were able to follow a story so the street scenes were changed to depict storylines 19 The writers presented a story separated by several inserts dispersed throughout the hour long show Although the stories were usually about 10 12 minutes in length it would take 45 minutes to tell them 20 21 note 4 According to writer Tony Geiss the addition of storylines changed the nature of the show 19 During Sesame Street s development in 1968 the producers followed the recommendation of child psychologists who advised them to not allow the direct interaction of the human actors and Muppets because the experts were concerned it would confuse and mislead young children 22 Shortly before the show s premiere the producers created five one hour episodes so that they could test if children found them comprehensible and appealing They were never intended for broadcast but were presented to preschoolers in 60 homes throughout Philadelphia in July 1969 The producers found that the results were generally very positive 22 However children attended to the shows during the Muppet segments but their interest was lost during the street scenes which featured only humans and were considered the glue that pulled the show together 23 The appeal of the test episodes was lower than they preferred 24 so the producers re shot the street segments 23 Henson and his team created Muppets that could interact with the human actors 23 specifically as the show s researchers put it two of Sesame Street s most enduring Muppets Oscar the Grouch and Big Bird 25 The test episodes were responsible for what writer Malcolm Gladwell called the essence of Sesame Street the artful blend of fluffy monsters and earnest adults 23 CTW researcher Gerald Lesser called the producers decision to defy the recommendations of their advisers a turning point in the history of Sesame Street 23 Animation films and other media Edit Animation was another important aspect of the structure of Sesame Street Lesser stated that one of the purposes of animation was to create incongruity or what he called illogical surprises 26 The first piece of animation commissioned by the CTW for Sesame Street was the J commercial in 1968 which they used in a study about its effectiveness in daycare centers in New York City The CTW found that it was an effective tool in teaching children letters and numbers and that it effectively attracted children s attention It also provided evidence as writer Robert W Morrow reported that children were able to endure enormous amounts of repetition 27 According to Morrow the CTW s generalization from this study which was later supported by outside studies was that although repetition was an effective teaching method repeated exposure determined instructional effectiveness 28 The J commercial was a part of CTW s promotional film about Sesame Street and was used to demonstrate its teaching style to the press 27 note 5 Jim Henson 1989 creator of the Muppets Henson created and produced many of the animation and short films shown on Sesame Street Sesame Street s animations and live action films were usually commissioned to outside studios For example Misseri Studio in Florence Italy provided animations for the show for its entire run 29 Many animations as well as the show s live action films and longer segments like Elmo s World were created to accompany specific episodes and became part of its library of shorts available for use in later episodes Other films and animations were created as regular recurring and stand alone segments 30 Gikow reported Virtually all animators and filmmakers supplying the show cite the enormous freedom given by producers calling it a liberating force that let creativity explode on screen 31 CTW s first producer responsible for the show s animation and live action shorts was Lu Horne His successor Edith Zornow was interested in what Gikow called emerging talent 32 and as a result the show worked with as Gikow also stated animators and filmmakers on the cusp of fame 32 Animators who created pieces for Sesame Street included Bud Luckey Jeffrey Hale Ernie Fosselius and others who went on to work at Pixar 33 Jim Henson was one of the many producers who created short films for the show 31 As Gikow stated The expansion of the Sesame Street brand into films videos and television specials was a natural 34 There have been two full length films produced Sesame Street Presents Follow That Bird 1985 and The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland 1999 In early 2019 it was announced that a third film a musical co starring Anne Hathaway and written and directed by Jonathan Krisel would be produced 35 Starting in 1978 with Christmas Eve on Sesame Street there have been several television specials and the Sesame Street Muppets have made several appearances on other programs throughout the years Home videos which emphasized specific curriculum goals began to be produced in 1985 34 By 2009 Sesame Workshop started a new website containing a large library of classic and more recent free video clips as well as a series of podcasts 36 In 2014 PBS began to stream full length episodes on its website mobile app and Roku channel 37 38 Also in 2014 the SW began an online streaming subscription service called Sesame Go which aired both old and new episodes of the show 39 note 6 By 2019 Sesame Street has produced over 4 500 episodes 35 TV specials 200 home videos and 180 albums 41 Its YouTube channel had almost 5 million subscribers and the show had 24 million followers on social media 42 43 Format changes after the 1990s EditSesame Street s format remained intact until the 1990s By then its dominance was challenged by other programs such as Blue s Clues and its ratings declined New research the growth of the children s home video industry and the increase of 30 minute children s shows on cable demonstrated that the traditional magazine format was not necessarily the most effective way to hold young viewers attention 44 For Sesame Street s 30th anniversary in 1999 its producers researched the reasons for the show s lower ratings For the first time since the show debuted the producers and a team of researchers analyzed Sesame Street s content and structure during a series of two week long workshops They also studied how children s viewing habits had changed and become more sophisticated in thirty years They found that although the show was produced for 3 to 5 year olds children began watching it at a younger age As a result the target age for Sesame Street shifted downward from 4 years to 3 years 45 By 2002 the main bloc of viewers was aged two 46 In 1998 a new 15 minute long segment created and developed by writers Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss 47 that targeted the show s younger viewers and had a different format than the rest of the show 48 began to be shown at the end of each episode The segment called Elmo s World used traditional elements animation Muppets music and live action film but had a more sustained narrative 49 followed the same structure each episode and depended heavily on repetition Unlike the realism of the rest of the show Elmo s World took place in a stylized crayon drawn universe as conceived by its host 50 Elmo who represented the younger audience was chosen as the host of the closing segment because younger toddlers identified with him 51 and because he had always tested well with them 52 note 7 In 2002 Sesame Street s producers went further in changing the show to reflect its younger audience and the increase in their viewers sophistication They expanded the Elmo s World concept by as San Francisco Chronicle TV critic Tim Goodman called it deconstructing 45 the show They changed the structure of the entire show to a more narrative format which made the show easier for young children to navigate Arlene Sherman a co executive producer for 25 years called the show s new look startlingly different 45 Elmo s World stopped production in 2009 when the producers of Sesame Street began taking steps to increase the age of their viewers and to increase the show s ratings and because the show s curriculum was not designed for a younger audience They were successful by the end of the show s 40th anniversary in 2009 3 year old viewers had increased by 41 percent 4 year olds by 4 percent and 5 year olds by 21 percent In 2012 Elmo s World was replaced by Elmo the Musical even though it was designed for older viewers the producers hoped that younger children would still enjoy it Elmo s World segments continued to appear in repeats DVDs 53 and on the show s website 54 In 2017 the 47th season of Sesame Street began airing on the cable subscription service HBO Elmo s World returned in a newly designed segment that ran five minutes at the end of each episode Steve Youngwood the Sesame Workshop s CEO called it fresh contemporary 55 Also in 2017 in response to the changing viewing habits of toddlers the show s producers decreased its length from one hour to thirty minutes focused on fewer characters removed the pop culture references once included as winks for their parents and focused on a single backbone topic 56 See also EditEducational goals of Sesame Street History of Sesame Street Sesame Street researchNotes Edit For Sesame Street films meant segments that depicted humans or real animals instead of animated characters Morrow reported that films depicting animals were more popular than the ones with humans 5 Animations made up 37 percent of an episode films made up 17 percent and Muppet segments 20 percent 7 The set has changed many times during its history to better reflect the changing experiences of the show s young viewers 12 When 130 episodes were made each season about 2 400 segments had to be produced See Morrow pp 89 91 for his description of the J commercial A year later in the wake of the SW s deal with HBO in 2015 the SW began phasing out its subscription service 40 At first the same segment was repeated daily for a week but this practice was dropped at the end of the first season of Elmo s World References Edit a b O Dell p 72 Palmer amp Fisch p 9 a b Davis p 156 a b O Dell p 70 Morrow pp 91 92 Morrow p 88 Morrow pp 89 92 94 Morrow p 97 Lesser p 95 Gikow p 26 Hellman Peter 23 November 1987 Street Smart How Big Bird amp Company Do It New York New York Media 20 46 52 ISSN 0028 7369 Retrieved 5 May 2019 Gikow p 212 Lesser p 50 Morrow p 102 Gikow p 120 a b Morrow p 87 Lesser p 99 Lesser p 131 a b Gikow p 179 Palmer amp Fisch p 8 Salamon Julie 9 June 2002 Children s TV Catches up with How Kids Watch The New York Times Retrieved 5 May 2019 a b Fisch amp Bernstein p 39 a b c d e Gladwell p 106 Gladwell p 105 Fisch amp Bernstein p 40 Lesser p 112 a b Morrow p 89 Morrow p 91 Gikow p 236 Gikow p 234 a b Gikow p 246 a b Gikow p 238 Gikow pp 240 241 a b Gikow p 276 Kit Borys Sandberg Bryn Elise 6 February 2019 Sesame Street Movie s Writer Director Reveals Plot Details The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 6 May 2019 Guernsey Lisa 22 May 2009 How Sesame Street Changed the World Newsweek Retrieved 6 April 2019 Dockterman Eliana 18 June 2015 We re Getting a Half Hour Version of Sesame Street Time Retrieved 7 May 2019 Jensen Elizabeth 17 June 2014 PBS Plans to Add a Shorter Version of Sesame Street The New York Times Retrieved 7 May 2019 Luckerson Victor 8 April 2014 Sesame Street Is Getting Its Own Streaming Service Time Retrieved 7 May 2019 Fung Brian 14 August 2015 Sesame Street is killing off its subscription streaming service Sesame Go The Washington Post Retrieved 7 May 2019 Wallace Debra 6 February 2019 Big Bird Has 4 000 Feathers 21 Fun Facts About Sesame Street That Will Blow Your Mind Parade Retrieved 7 May 2019 Guthrie Marisa 6 February 2019 50 Years of Sunny Days on Sesame Street Behind the Scenes of TV s Most Influential Show Ever The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 7 May 2019 Bradley Diana 27 July 2018 Leaving the neighborhood Sesame Street muppets to travel across America next year PR Week Retrieved 7 May 2019 Davis p 338 a b c Goodman Tim 4 February 2002 Word on the Street Classic Children s Show to Undergo Structural Changes This Season San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 14 May 2019 Changes On Sesame Street CBS News Associated Press 2002 02 01 Retrieved 2019 09 02 Now the show s primary audience is 2 year olds Clash p 76 Davis p 339 Fisch amp Bernstein p 45 Clash p 75 Clash pp 46 47 Whitlock Natalie Walker 16 October 2006 Ultimate Guide to Elmo HowStuffWorks Retrieved 14 May 2019 Jensen Elizabeth 13 September 2012 Hey Elmo That Concept Has Legs The New York Times Retrieved 14 May 2019 Crimaldi Philip 6 August 2012 Season 43 Press release Sesame Workshop Retrieved 14 May 2019 Steinberg Brian 17 October 2016 Sesame Street Will Revive Elmo s World Variety Retrieved 14 May 2019 Harwell Drew 12 January 2016 Sesame Street newly revamped for HBO aims for toddlers of the Internet age Washington Post Retrieved 15 May 2019 Works cited EditClash Kevin and Gary Brozek amp Louis Henry Mitchell 2006 My Life as a Furry Red Monster What Being Elmo Has Taught Me About Life Love and Laughing Out Loud New York Random House ISBN 0 7679 2375 8 Davis Michael 2008 Street Gang The Complete History of Sesame Street New York Viking Press ISBN 978 0 670 01996 0 Fisch Shalom M and Rosemarie T Truglio eds 2001 G Is for Growing Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street Mahweh New Jersey Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers ISBN 0 8058 3395 1 Palmer Edward and Shalom M Fisch The Beginnings of Sesame Street Research pp 3 24 Fisch Shalom M and Lewis Bernstein Formative Research Revealed Methodological and Process Issues in Formative Research pp 39 60 Gikow Louise A 2009 Sesame Street A Celebration of Forty Years of Life on the Street New York Black Dog amp Leventhal Publishers ISBN 978 1 57912 638 4 Gladwell Malcolm 2000 The Tipping Point How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference New York Little Brown and Company ISBN 0 316 31696 2 Lesser Gerald S 1974 Children and Television Lessons From Sesame Street New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 394 71448 2 Morrow Robert W 2006 Sesame Street and the Reform of Children s Television Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 8230 3 O Dell Cary 1997 Women Pioneers in Television Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 7864 0167 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Format of Sesame Street amp oldid 1122116994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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