Does anyone else watch anything besides SS besides me? It wasn't just SS. Every bloody show and commerical had to shoehorn something in about obesity to try to combat the fact that there are fat people. The kids' shows at least had some taste to it. Special K is still selling its wretched cereal by scaring women into thinking that if they actually eat a waffle at a restaurant every so often, they'll become 900-pound shut-ins the next day. But that's enough of that. People should already know how to be healthy. It's all about choice. A lot of things were abandoned for that. SS already did a good job with healthy foods, and they could have had a softer focus on the subject. But you know what they say--several pounds of fevered prevention is worth an ounce of cure.
Goodness knows I am sick and tired of seeing ads for exercise programs, diet pills, and mega-healthy low-everything food whenever I watch network TV...not to mention the public service announcements during kidvid time, which demonize ANY food with sugar, fat, or meat in it. Obesity may be a common health problem in the US, but it's high time the media stopped treating obesity like the
only health problem (especially when kids are involved).
To bring this back on topic...Sesame Street didn't
need to emphasize "Healthy Habits for Life" over two whole seasons. They could have done without most of the new health/nutrition material, and simply redone older sketches on those topics. (Heck, even a remake of "Captain Vegetable" would've taught more than that awful "Fruit/Veggie Dance" did. And why couldn't someone have filmed new live-action clips of playing/dancing children, instead of coming up with "It's Time to Play" in Season 37?)
But I think that everytime they put a disabled character in now, they have to pretty much bus one in. Linda was natural. We need someone natural, and not a character that's just about "a person in a wheelchair can be normal" and then pretty much do nothing but talk about how they're in a wheelchair.
They did a real good job with Traction Jackson. Half the time, I can't even tell he's in a wheelchair. He's that natural. We need a human character like that on SS.
As a real-life disabled fan of Sesame Street--all I can say is "Hear, hear!" One of the things I liked about Linda (during her run on the show) was that she
had a disability but didn't let it
define her. Not every sketch with Linda in it taught about hearing problems or sign language...just as not every sketch with Maria and Luis in it taught about Spanish words or Latino culture. Sometimes those traits came up in the script, sometimes not...the same way it happens in real life. Traction Jackson is a decent attempt to show disabled kids in that light, but I worry that he might become a parody of what he's meant to teach.