You know what the problem is? They're purposely making the street stories shorter so they can put something in between them and the WOTD. I don't like it either. If we keep complaining about it, maybe they'll fix it, like when we complained about Muppets not being in the WOTD and MHALL being too long.Enjoyed the rest of the story, but it felt kind of short/rushed. A lot of the stories this season have seemed that way.
I don't have an issue with more inserts; I prefer that actually.You know what the problem is? They're purposely making the street stories shorter so they can put something in between them and the WOTD. I don't like it either. If we keep complaining about it, maybe they'll fix it, like when we complained about Muppets not being in the WOTD and MHALL being too long.
But having a short street story doesn't make up for it.I don't have an issue with more inserts; I prefer that actually.
The second half of that sentence kinda doesn't make sense to me; I know there are a lot of older Sesame fans, and Sesame Workshop seems to realize this and respect it, and post older things on YouTube for this reason (or maybe just because), but isn't Sesame Street directed towards a younger audience? That doesn't mean older fans can't watch it, but I would kinda expect it to be written towards younger viewers. I mean, you could say Sesame Street is one of those rare shows for young kids that appeals to a large age group (which I do see; Blue's Clues appealed to a large age group as well), but it really isn't directed towards old school fans (from what I can see). There are a lot of things that only older fans will get, but if it was made for a higher age group, it might not be on PBS.I've felt the street stories this season were subpar, and some seem written to speak to the younger audiences rather than the older ones which they just got back.
By which, I mean of the target demographic. It's no secret that ever since Elmo's World, the audience skewed towards the younger 2-3 year olds rather than the up to 5 year olds that were watching prior. Things like Elmo the Musical, Cookie's Crumby Pictures, and especially their science based curriculum got 4 and 5 year olds back watching the show. The show was leaning towards the older ages in the main demographic. It's a shame that some of the street stories talked down this season. Especially that one about Cookie wanting Abby's wand which as too safe.The second half of that sentence kinda doesn't make sense to me; I know there are a lot of older Sesame fans, and Sesame Workshop seems to realize this and respect it, and post older things on YouTube for this reason (or maybe just because), but isn't Sesame Street directed towards a younger audience?
I thought you were talking about old school fans, like people who watched the show as kids years ago. What you were saying now makes sense; the show has lowered their demographic, that's totally noticeable. I haven't seen much recently, and I even notice it. I saw a lot of episodes from the first 2 years Elmo's World aired as a kid (they were recorded on tape for my sister I think), and at the time, it didn't really change the demographic (from what I remember). But I guess something happened after the second year of Elmo's World, or during the second year.By which, I mean of the target demographic. It's no secret that ever since Elmo's World, the audience skewed towards the younger 2-3 year olds rather than the up to 5 year olds that were watching prior. Things like Elmo the Musical, Cookie's Crumby Pictures, and especially their science based curriculum got 4 and 5 year olds back watching the show. The show was leaning towards the older ages in the main demographic. It's a shame that some of the street stories talked down this season. Especially that one about Cookie wanting Abby's wand which as too safe.
I say who cares how relevent this particular parody is. It's still a good song,now them showing something as out dated as Preshool Musical or Desperate Houseplants is definetly a problemYeah. The D- Dance. I can't believe they actually showed the D-Dance. Sure, it fits with the concept of the episode and the letter D tie in... but that was made 5 years ago. Even then, it was near the end of the iPod commercial's relevance. Do they even make those anymore? They only advertise the iPads and iPhones. That's the problem with SS's parody segments. They take over a year to make the show, and by then a good chunk of the references are dated. But what's worse is when they use something that's been long expired. Like last year's appearance of Preschool Musical. At least with Joe Hundred Guy they knew enough to use it once and discard it from the show before the reference fell out of relevance.
SS really needs to know when a pop culture reference has expired. Lest we wind up seeing Desperate Houseplants again.