Dr Tooth, I'm a little confused...you said parent groups have knee jerk reactions to Sesame Street, but that you find Rosevelt Franklin and Guy Smiley inappropriate due to their behavior?
I'm not saying they should have or that I agree with the character oustings, I'm just saying, I can see why a preschool show would want to avoid something that sends a bad example. It's like why they stopped having Bert call Ernie a Meatball and stuff. And frankly, the character is
much funnier without it. The way he gets so over exasperated and faints? That's why we love Bert.
And yeah it was a gross over simplification. However I will say I have great hope for the next generation, even if they are even further removed from a more organic, analog world. I fear one day everything will be one giant Matrix-esque cloud computing wetwire network, with no connection to the old ways of enjoying life. But then I also see how high schoolers now in America are in a very post racial, post homophobic mindset. Extremely open minded, shedding a lot of their parents and societies old prejudices. A lot of inner city schools are starting to turn around as well. I do have hope. And some of my complains may just be my Statler and Waldorf side.
I hate the fact that everything's on iPads, and everything's all app based, though. I worry more for the future of television, movies, and physical reading material, as there's just so much going on that's negatively affecting them all. The less people buying DVD's means the less risk films take. And I'd hate to not be able to collect comic books. Even the toy market is hurting because of apps. No wonder the prices are insane.
But on the other hand, cartoons more or less have been getting better. Even toy based cartoons have names attached. How much more organic is that? I
love 1980's cartoons for the most part, but I bought the Warner Bros 1980's collection, mainly because it was at Five Below, and for the Ed Grimley cartoon. While some of the other cartoons on that disk were so insanely stupid that they were entertaining, I make special mention of The Bisketts. That has to be one of the
worst things I've ever seen. Aside from the obvious "we have to make Smurf knockoffs" bit, the show has the most egregious example of "The Complainer is Always Wrong" I've ever seen. Again, I love 1980's cartoons, but that is the
worst message cartoons ever made. I don't care how stupid something gets past the 80's, I'm absolutely glad cartoons aren't forcing Tall Poppy Syndrome on children anymore. Or in that case Tall Puppy Syndrome.
While everyone laughed about the Romney Big Bird thing, Sesame Workshop I realize is facing their two biggest crisis in decades: the loss of Kevin Clash and the fallout of whatever it is he may have done and the impact on their flagship brand and the recent firing of 10% of its work force. While Im glad EMTV sold the rights back to JHC and thus made Sesame its own separate thing completely...sometimes I *do* worry about the future of Sesame Street.
Sesame Street will do fine because it's too much of an institution for anyone to want to get rid of. I wouldn't doubt that the mass firings are because little kids aren't buying enough talking Elmos and PBS is only using that money it gets to outbid BBC America on
terrible British Crime Shows (Sherlock is not one of them. Sherlock is freaking amazing and I'm glad I don't have to get a cable channel that barely runs British programing anymore just to watch it). PBS no longer does kid's pledge month, and it's hurting those programs.