The funny thing is... they kinda did. They gave her a body suit, and it accentuated the problem. Little kids do not like cleavage. Boys think it's gross, girls just say that's what their mommy has... no one was selling sex. At worst, they should have used some CGI trickery to cover it up. Still, that's not politically correct... that's prudish. Sexual situations are not part of political correctness, to answer Snowth's question...I agree with you, Pinkflower. There's a LOT of PC nonsense that goes on in every form of media and entertainment today. I was disgusted to hear that Sesame Workshop decided against airing the footage with Elmo and Katy Perry just because a few whiny parents out there felt their kids couldn't handle it. Katy Perry wears midriff tops that show off her boobs, that's what she does aside from "singing". If someone felt it was inappropriate, maybe they shouldn't have had her on or asked her to dress more conservatively.
I don't even like the term politically correct. TRUE political correctness is not freely using racial slurs and not denying jobs for anyone based on race or religion. We NEED that political correctness. What we really have is Offendophobia, where people have to stifle everything out of fear that someone's going to write some letter. And half the time, you wind up offending someone and getting letters ANYWAY. Sesame Street used to be tough. It stood up to racists that wanted the show banned for having people who weren't white in it, they handed it to some crazy moron with a 20 word vocabulary who was objecting the Count's parody vampire status.... now they have to meekly apologize to Fox News for saying what everyone says about them.
Words well spoken.But getting back to this thread, I don't think Sesame Street has "changed for the worst", it's just a different show for a different audience in a different time and society. I think people forget that when Sesame Street started there was NOTHING like it on television and it served a particular purpose. Now, those purposes have been retooled, and the show has tons of other things to compete with.
I'll admit, I watched Sesame Street pretty much my whole life through until college until maybe Season 30 something. But I haven't watched it in the past several years, nor do I really want to. I still love the show, and it's history and what good it does for children today, but darn it still makes me laugh everytime I tune in. When it stops doing that and helping kids, THAT is when it will take a turn for the worse.
Things cannot stay the same forever, no matter how hard you try. SNL has changed style of humor with every writing staff and massive cast change. I'm glad they didn't just hire similar actors to keep giving us Coneheads sketches 30+ years later, even though I'm more of a fan of those classic years myself. But we'd also be robbed of Jon Lovitz and the late Phil Hartman.
Change isn't always good, change isn't always bad... but change is inevitable. Shows that have a consistent writing, acting, and humor style throughout haven't lasted too long. Even Seinfeld has massive changes in writing and humor, and that made the show a classic. Those early episodes aren't that funny. At least not as funny as George's angry breakdowns and Kramer's increasingly surreal actions.