I watched the show after he was introduced too, but it was before Elmo's World, and back when Elmo was a part of a rich ensemble, instead of monopolizing everything. He could be a very endearing character back then, acting as the sort of little brother to the other characters. That is the Elmo I prefer to remember and not what he's become.
The thing is, he
can be great
if he's used in that way. I kinda wish he'd go back to being a more monstery 3 year old... that's where the third person talking comes from, in case anyone's watching. He used to speak a little more stilted, almost but not quite like Cookie Monster.
Sesame Street has never taken a break. It's always been on since 1969. However, since Elmo's rise to popularity in 1993-ish and onward, he's guaranteed to be in every single episode. If Elmo is given the chance to be more of a three-dimensional child, such as Big Bird, then the deeper, more eloquent lessons about life can be taught on Sesame. The Good Birds Club episode was a brilliant lesson in self-acceptance, pride and not giving in to bullying. Kids will benefit way more than this than 15 minutes about "hands" or "hats".
The thing that always bugged me about Old Schoolers was that they're clearly terribly scientists. They NEVER took in the variables. I have NO idea where the new block format came from... if they're trying to clone Nick Jr, they're late by well over 10 years. But Elmo's World clearly came out of the school that A) they wanted some sort of vehicle with him B) They wanted to fill the last 15 minutes of the show with filler because the audience was dropping off just then, and C) someone watched Blue's Clues and said "We need to do that."
I swear, what Barney did to kid's programming, Blue's Clues finished. Why everyone felt the need to copy that, I'll never know.
Imagine if things were different, and Elmo's world was its own little sustained show with a plot, where they did something... I mean, Abby's Flying Fairy School, Ernie and Bert's Great Adventures, and Super Grover 2.0 all
work because they follow a single storyline, and there's always conflict
while they're teaching about something. Even with Global Grover, the 2 little segments that sandwich the film have plot to them. Elmo's World is about the many different way you can point something out. No conflict, no plot, just a bunch of hit or miss segments that go on too long and become repetitive.