ISNorden
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 1,294
- Reaction score
- 53
NA NA NA NA No kidding! As often as I've complained about Elmo dominating the show, I was glad to see him act like his old watchable self in that clip. However, Mrs. Freedman completely missed the point of the song--as several comment-writers have already stated. The "lullaby" framework wasn't meant to put Elmo or the viewers to sleep; it was chosen because the English language has a lot of familiar N-words associated with sleep and bedtime. The loud/quiet contrast, besides adding some non-sequitur humor, emphasizes the N-sound and helps the real lesson sink in. (I just wish Ricky and Elmo hadn't wasted so much time talking about celebrity status; that felt more like a Word on the Street segment than a proper intro to the song.)Hello everybodeee!
I saw that clip on youtube, the actual clip I mean....not the article. I laughed so hard I nearly fell out of my chair. It was so great to see Sesame Street actually acting like....well........Sesame Street! Like when Kermit and Grover used to get into all kinds of silliness, or when Mr. Johnson ( ho ho ho.....lol Grover) would have all sorts of problems and yell. Or even the old grumpy grouchy Oscar. Besides, I loved that hard rock " NA NA NA NA NAAAAAAAA" part.
By the way, Mrs, Freedman ought to check out the huge "What sketches scared you as a kid?" thread in the Classic Sesame Street section. If she needs proof that a few frightening kidvid moments won't traumatize her son for the rest of his life, we have it!