I always wondered... were Ernie and Bert ever really on the street when Jim and Frank were performing them? I mean, especially during the run of the Muppet show, most of the puppeteers were off in England filming. Maybe during breaks? I dunno, I wasn't alive then, but I don't recall too many Ernie and Bert episodes. Just the taped inserts.
Personally, I always felt the animosity towards Elmo was directed at the fact that Elmo represents the "New era" of Sesame Street, since he seemed to usher it in. I am not a fan of Elmo's world as a segment of the show, and as I've said many a time, it should be a sepperate show (I mean, there are sepperate videos). You know, for the youngest of Young viewers? I like the character of Elmo, and find it fascinating such a tall dude who has to be at least 30+ who plays such diverse characters can perform a totally believable child.
I feel that the new characters popularity and roles in the show evolved from the fact that in 1993 (the rebirth) we had previously lost Jim Henson, Richard Hunt, Joe Raposso, and Frank Oz was less and less involved with Puppetry and more involved in film (since the late 80's, I think. Jim's death galvinized his insecurities). Durning this time we had new performers and new characters surfaced. Some stuck, some didn't. Even Dave Golez stuck around for a while (I don't know how long, but it was very brief).
SO, Elmo, Rosita, Baby Bear, and Zoe stuck, out of countless one shots that never made it (even now, thy don't have any perminant new new characters). Zoe was introduced to have a strong female monster in the series, Rosita as well, plus she taught Spanish and tolerance for minorities, and Baby Bear... well... I guess he evolved from David Rudman wanting to play a character.
Personally, I have a love hate thing about Baby Bear. He does give Telly someone to talk to, and when he was with Goldilocks, he was very funny... but I HATE the Hero Guy segments.
Personally, I always felt the animosity towards Elmo was directed at the fact that Elmo represents the "New era" of Sesame Street, since he seemed to usher it in. I am not a fan of Elmo's world as a segment of the show, and as I've said many a time, it should be a sepperate show (I mean, there are sepperate videos). You know, for the youngest of Young viewers? I like the character of Elmo, and find it fascinating such a tall dude who has to be at least 30+ who plays such diverse characters can perform a totally believable child.
I feel that the new characters popularity and roles in the show evolved from the fact that in 1993 (the rebirth) we had previously lost Jim Henson, Richard Hunt, Joe Raposso, and Frank Oz was less and less involved with Puppetry and more involved in film (since the late 80's, I think. Jim's death galvinized his insecurities). Durning this time we had new performers and new characters surfaced. Some stuck, some didn't. Even Dave Golez stuck around for a while (I don't know how long, but it was very brief).
SO, Elmo, Rosita, Baby Bear, and Zoe stuck, out of countless one shots that never made it (even now, thy don't have any perminant new new characters). Zoe was introduced to have a strong female monster in the series, Rosita as well, plus she taught Spanish and tolerance for minorities, and Baby Bear... well... I guess he evolved from David Rudman wanting to play a character.
Personally, I have a love hate thing about Baby Bear. He does give Telly someone to talk to, and when he was with Goldilocks, he was very funny... but I HATE the Hero Guy segments.