Originally posted by scarecroe
I'm out of the loop on that. When did the government stop funding?
Funding for the arts is down in general. But the funding PBS gets (from the NEA and members and private donations) does not pay to produce SST. Sesame Workshop pays for the show via their endowment and (mostly) revenue from merchandise.
As I understand it, PBS dictates the number of episodes each season. PBS also decides when to begin airing the new season. I understand not putting them up during sweeps, when all the other shows bring out their top stuff, but April 7th seems a little ridiculous for the 2002-2003 season. Seems like at least one episode ought to have aired during 2002.
There are a lot of reasons for the decrease in episodes. Fewer parents are home with their kids, so that means fewer tv sets watching (30 kids can watch one tv at a daycare center). More competition from cable networks (Disney Channel, Noggin, Cartoon Network...). There are simply fewer kids watching Sesame Street. And while viewership is decreasing, costs keep increasing.
Everyone wants more Unpaved episodes on Noggin but the bottom line is the ratings weren't there. All the research indicates kids today won't watch the old episodes. I know that's hard to believe, I know we all have examples of kids who love the old episodes (my daughter certainly does) but that's just not what Noggin and Sesame Workshop have found and they need more viewers than the kids related to a small group of Muppet fans. It's simply not cost effective to air Unpaved-- which is why it ended up in odd time slots in the first place, because it was adult Muppet fans watching, not kids. In television, as in most businesses, profit is the bottom line.