Okay, so maybe 90s episodes are considered classic now, but I can’t think of episodes from the 2000s as “classic.” Or any era with Elmo’s World for that matter. And it’s like as for more current episodes, why did they choose to only go as far back as season 41? I think they could have just as well included season 40, since the format is basically identical.
But if they only have a limited amount of classic episodes, do you think it could just simply be because Sesame Workshop doesn’t WANT us to see the classic episodes?
I'd assume:
they went with Seasons 41-45 because five seasons feels like more sense than six.
- the original deal was "X number of episodes on the streaming service," so after the several made up from the five seasons, there was only so many other episodes they could include.
-My theory behind their choice of "classics" is that they made this deal with Sesame to attract new subscribers. New subscribers would likely be new (or new-ish) parents wanting to share the show with their kids, and they most likely grew up watching the show in the 90s. I also suspect current events had a role in it (why else would they chose an episode with Hillary Clinton and another spoofing Trump).
-Also, all these episodes probably had to be re-negotiated with the various rights and such; the ones already on DVD/digital download were probably easier. They also probably had to be careful about which ones they picked because of the Joe Raposo stuff being cut; if an episode has a lot of his material, it might wind up being like 40 minutes instead of an hour.