I found out that they have deemed the first 10 seasons of Sesame Street unsuitable for today's children.
In this thread, let's try to list all the things the PC crowd would shake their heads at.
- The fact that Cookie Monster is addicted to cookies.
- That fact that Oscar permanently lives in a trash can, and is never affable.
- The fact that Ernie is seen in the bathtub (from the waist up!) (*gasp* Implied puppet nudity! Not to mention that when Bert is in the same scene, it might send the message to the children that it's ok to walk in on someone when they're naked! Highly doubt that.)
PC Moms: Good. They've successfully incorporated people of different races and disabilities and have them live together in harmony and cooperation. But we've got to do something about that Cookie Monster!
How about these "bad examples":
- The fact that a rock band calls a random stranger from a pay phone to sing about telephones. (Sure, they get arrested in the end, but...)
- The fact that a "mad painter" vandalizes people's property with numbers and never suffers any real punishment.
- The fact that a certain blue monster acts
very unprofessional towards his customers, no matter which job he takes.
- The fact that no teacher ever appears in Roosevelt Franklin's classroom, and that most pupils there speak rudely or sarcastically.
- As for Ernie's rude and selfish behavior towards his "old buddy Bert"...the examples could take days to list. It's a miracle that Bert still considers Ernie a friend!
I'm sure that most reasonable parents wouldn't want their children copying those aspects of Sesame Street either. Poor social skills can harm someone as badly as a poor diet, yet no one's seen Bert sing to Ernie about minding his manners...or Charlie sing to Grover about treating customers respectfully.
Don't get me wrong; I'm not saying that every character on the show should be a role model of some kind. Sesame Street would have become terribly boring if everyone went through the same kind of misguided reform that happened to Cookie Monster. Still, it bothers me that parents notice one problem and blame Sesame Street for it--yet ignore other problems that could have triggered the same response.