Sunday, December 2, 2007

can you tell me how to get...


this got me cracking early in the morning! surely the world has other things to worry about other than Cookie Monster's dietary habits or Bert & Ernie's living/sleeping arrangements? :P

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The New Paper

Monday Dec 3 2007

'Sesame Street: Old School' released with warning

(Dec 1) HOW to get to Sesame Street? Don't tell the children.

Recently, the earliest episodes, covering the decade from 1969 to 1979, were re-released on DVD. But apparently, the series that so shaped the young minds of millions worldwide - many Singaporeans among them - has been deemed suitable only for adults.

A warning by the creators on volumes one and two of Sesame Street: Old School said: 'These early Sesame Street episodes are intended for grown-ups, and may not suit the needs of today's preschool child.'

The New Paper could not find a copy despite calling several DVD retailers here. But each volume is also available online at store.sesame- workshop.org for US$39.95 ($58).

Sesame Street executive producer Carol-Lynn Parente told the New York Times that Alistair Cookie (Cookie Monster's alter-ego) used to appear with a pipe and eat it on Monsterpiece theatre and 'that modelled the wrong behaviour'. So the scenes were reshot, this time pipe-free, and then the parody was dropped.

Oscar The Grouch was another problem. The filthy, trash can-dwelling muppet was, well, too grouchy. 'We might not be able to create a character like Oscar now,' Ms Parente said.

Also, back then, Cookie Monster didn't care about fruits or vegetables, like he does now. Snuffleupagus was only a figment of Big Bird's imagination (he became real in 1985). And the unfathomably cheerful Elmo didn't exist.

It is understood that Sesame Street: Old School will be released unrated in Singapore. This means it is suitable for all ages. Singapore is typically seen to be more conservative than the US. A case in point: The temporary banning and M18 rating for the Xbox 360 game Mass Effect because of a lesbian scene between a woman and an alien.

But if even we found it okay, why did Sesame Street feel the need to add a warning? Perhaps it's because of the lawsuit-happy culture in the US.

Assistant Professor Bradley Freeman from Nanyang Technological University's (NTU) Wee Kim Wee School of Communication And Information, wondered if the label sounded like a legal disclaimer. 'So they don't end up sued by parents whose children end up getting fat after watching Cookie Monster,' he said.

Mr Caleb Liu, 26, a former foreign service officer, quipped: 'Far from being labelled 'adult programming' that is 'unsuitable for children', the DVDs should be labelled 'children's programming' that is 'unsuitable for adults without a sense of imagination'.'

Some parents also feel that it's a case of being over-protective towards youngsters. Mr Noel Tan, 37, a father of three, said it's ludicrous to say those episodes of Sesame Street are not suitable for preschoolers, when there are far worse programmes on TV.

Mr Tan, a programme manager and co-founder of Sanctuary House, a volunteer charity organisation which dedicates itself to saving abandoned babies, said: 'It is political correctness gone overboard.'

Educational psychologist Amanda Kok, from Dynamics OTC Therapy Centre For Kids, said it is difficult to gauge what is over-protection. It is up to the parent, she said.

EXPOSURE IS GOOD

Psychologist Daniel Koh of Insights-Tse said: 'Children who are exposed to both good and bad (situations) are much more equipped to deal with anything that happens in life, making them both socially and emotionally resistant.'

However, NTU's Assistant Professor Freeman, who has researched children's TV policy and programming, said: 'As a parent, it doesn't hurt to have a warning.' The father of a 1 1/2-year-old daughter also suggested that the target market may not be children but nostalgic adults.

Sesame Street is one of the most researched children's shows ever, he noted. He said researchers had found that Sesame Street wasn't really teaching children to love learning, but just how TV teaches learning. And that while children who watch Sesame Street have a better vocabulary, the advantage fades by age 6.

No one needs to be worried.

He doubts that old-school Sesame Street would be attractive to today's children, who are reared on fast-paced programming. 'They'll be bored,' he said.

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REASONS:

OSCAR THE GROUCH

Too negative

COOKIE MONSTER

Binges on too many cookies

BERT

Has too-close relationship with male roommate Ernie?

 

12 comments:

  1. oits.. sms aku ler.. no ko pong dah hilang...
    and aku still suka cookie monster. if only they have donut monster..

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  2. *lol*.......read d same article.....all i can say is "wht d h***!!!"..........it's all about being 'politically correct' these days that they forgot about blank pages of little kid's minds.......i must have been corrupted when i watched all those sesame street shows back in 1974!!! DUH!!!
    btw.....my fave character was cookie monster n d grouch........they always makes me smile....:)

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  3. aku dah sms dah abt an hour ago (11am tadi)...tak dapat ke?

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  4. tu lah...if we go by this, we must be grouchy, demented, garbage-eating adults by now..hahaha! c'mon..gotta give some credits to kids right?

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  5. Yes, Cake. I was rolling my eyes when I read it too.

    Kesian Bert & Ernie. Good thing 'rubber duckie' was just a toy..

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  6. hahahha!! aku takde pun terfikir sejauh tu cik nora oi!

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  7. maybe the next one will be Electric Company wif the same warning labels.. "on the next episode spidey says *some funny noises*" hahahahahaha

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  8. dulu dulu kita tengok Sesame Street with Alistair cookie eating too much cookie and his pipe in mosterpiece theatre, takda pun apa2 yang buruk terjadi kat kita. I loved the song "C is for Cookie, and Cookie is for me" heh heh. I always thought Bert and Ernie were siblings.

    Oh I remember Electric Company, it has a segment with Spiderman yang tak berbual kan?

    There is a segment yang they sing numbers 1 to 12 which follows a ball in a machine that hits all the numbers...that one is in Sesame Street ke Electric company.

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  9. i thought bert and ernie were cousins?

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  10. alaaah kalau garbage in, garbage out ...u need a really filthy mind to think thaaat far!

    I've only had one favorite. Oscar. Typical Mexcan name, always miserable (errr he lives in a garbage can?) and the only one that made sense to me.
    Wonder what psyc101 says about the child I was once...mmm

    & eh check this video clip.
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=AezWjFQ2hfc

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  11. How lame! Blame the world for your follies! Gosh, what will they come up with next? Winnie The Pooh's got problem with obesity and he's a baaaad boy who doesn't wear his undies? Cheh!

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  12. This is utter rubbishlah. We all grew up watching Sesame Street and I think we turned out allrite. Whatever will be next? *scratches head*

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