When you're a little kids, surely you believe just about everything on Sesame Street was real, and that Sesame Street was a real place... those are a given that we were learn the truth of later in life.
I'm talking about petty details that you learned about that disappointed you a bit, ala the 123 brownstone on the sound stage actually not having a top floor like illustrated and such.
For me, that top of my list was learning that Honker and Dingers don't actually work; somehow, I had convinced myself that the puppet builders had figure out a way to actually make them work in real time - you could squeeze a Honker's nose and noise really would come out the horns on its head, or tap the head of a Dinger and it really would ding... I just assumed somehow the builders fingered out to way to accomplish those, but when I learned that it was impossible, and that the sounds were added in post-production.
I'm talking about petty details that you learned about that disappointed you a bit, ala the 123 brownstone on the sound stage actually not having a top floor like illustrated and such.
For me, that top of my list was learning that Honker and Dingers don't actually work; somehow, I had convinced myself that the puppet builders had figure out a way to actually make them work in real time - you could squeeze a Honker's nose and noise really would come out the horns on its head, or tap the head of a Dinger and it really would ding... I just assumed somehow the builders fingered out to way to accomplish those, but when I learned that it was impossible, and that the sounds were added in post-production.