That article really pointed out what I feared to be the case. While old school fans were always whine...errr...concerned about the show being dumbed down, it seems like there's an air of that happening on purpose here, and all because of the former Nick and HIT guy. The fact someone involved with lesser and more patronizing kid's programming being a consultant doesn't sit right with me. Not at all. The thing that really sours me on the fact they're talking directly to the youngest of the audience again is they
finally turned that corner that Elmo's World dug them into with the batch of engineering and science episodes that brought the older (5 year olds, relatively older) audiences back. Now they're going back into the 2-3 range again, it sounds like.
Considering the reasons why, I'm mixed. There's
no doubt that Sesame Street relying that much on parody and celebrity the past decade or so seems a little bit...well... desperate to stand out in the over-saturated market of preschool shows. Those were no doubt for older fans and parents watching, not to mention the press to keep Sesame a household name in the massive ocean of little kiddy entertainment. And the scary thing is, it's
good now. Nick still holds onto the "sitting around answering their own questions" model, but Disney has some actual
great programming that never feels patronizing. The Lion Guard is pretty good, and TLK fans might just get some enjoyment out of it. Back to the subject, the show's biggest concern was budget, and I've been saying the Word of the Day celebrity bits must've cost them an arm and a leg for both celeb costs and flying puppeteers out to California to perform with them. If there's one segment I felt
needed to go, it was that one.
The parodies, however.... no let's be honest. They were NEVER for the kids. And we've had them since the 70's when they
also weren't meant for the kids. They were for both the writers and performers to have some fun, and for the parents who were strongly encouraged to watch with their kids. I for one didn't get the Rebel L bit until I was older, mainly because my parents didn't listen to that kind of current music from the 80's. To be fair, there was stuff I
did get because my parents listened to or watched some of it, but that's a long tangent. And the parodies were either shallow puns based on the titles or actually researched bits and always have been. The problem I do have with the parodies, however, was how important they were getting. The fact they basically had to advertise the
heck out of them felt, like I said earlier, a bit desperate to stay relevant. They were listing "Girl Scouts" and the game of "Simon Says" as parodies when... well... that's ridiculous. To say the least, you can't really parody girl scouts, really (at least the way they did it). They said an episode was a parody of something when it wasn't as well. I liked it better when we didn't
know when these jokes were coming up instead of impatiently waiting for them.
Oh... and by the way, I just found this on YT. The first clip we're seeing of the HBO run. Enjoy.