I used to blame Elmo's takeover for ruining Sesame Street years ago; I've even had anti-Elmo rant threads deleted from these forums (and the mods had a good reason to do it!). Since then, I've gained a little more perspective: Elmo himself is not a bad character. Granted, I liked him a lot better when he was just one more supporting Muppet among many and didn't dominate a third of the show. Still, if 3-year-olds are watching TV differently and identify strongly with a character who thinks like them, I can't change their minds--or the minds at Sesame Workshop.
That's basically how I feel, and I have felt. I think Elmo gets the blame because he rose as the star when all this terrible stuff was happening to the show... again, I bring up the intense struggle of the 1990's, trying to find its voice. Elmo pretty much has carried the show for those kids since they got rid of the around the corner experiment. Again, the true blame lies in with the young turks in children's entertainment. SS came from an era of bland shows like Ding Dong School and Romper Room... and they were about the only things out there, now SS has to compete with Nick Jr. and Playhouse Disney... even Cartoon Network tried (And failed roundly) one of these "for the money" line ups. Where does a 40 year "dinosaur" of a show stand when it even has to compete with its own network? I keep saying, no wonder everyone says the show went downhill.
On the other hand...I miss the days when Sesame Street was truly watchable by all ages, and when it had far more time to teach more material at a leisurely pace. Children need those kinds of lessons as much as they do the 15-second jingles about nutrition, environmental problems, and playing physically. Learning that sinks in, even on TV, doesn't have to be nonstop flash-bang-boom.
Actually, SS has always been Flash-Bang-Boom... sort of like Laugh in or SNL. The "Commercials" for letters and numbers and randomly inserted skits was the Flash boom that they always had... sure, they had a lot of longer segments, but they had a lot of much, much shorter ones too. Like that Herry sleeping letter Z skit. What was that? Barely 30 seconds long?
Now, I totally agree that they're trying to shove way too much into a 50 minute TV show. Doesn't help the matter that PBS stingily asks only for 26 episodes. And of course, (something else I've been saying) conflicting reports from various educators and psychologists (some from reliable sources, some from hack pop psychologists) that say that kids need to learn 400000000 subjects in 50 minutes. What really bugs me is that they can still handle these subjects on a basis of themed episodes... one episode about environmentalism, one on health and fitness, one on reading... etc. But they have to do all of these in a real in your face way, reiterating, repeating, and all loudly. And you wind up getting quantity education through bad segments about eating all colors of the rainbow or something.
How many of us still remember those 4-minute films of real people doing ordinary things, narrated by a kid on the scene?
They still have those, and some seem to be getting longer... can't say I ever appreciated them. Some were good, but others just made me ansty until I saw a muppet or cartoon segment.
How do we get the best of both worlds, then? Keep Elmo and his flagship segment on Sesame Street--but make it shorter, about the length of "Murray Had a Little Lamb." Some of the existing EW format could be dropped without dropping educational value: the Noodles, the CGI counting spot, the infamous topic song at the end. (I'd still keep the e-mail segment as a link between Elmo and other characters, and still have real kids demonstrating "How do you do [something relevant to the topic]?"...but drop the pointless asking-a-baby moment.) With Elmo's World trimmed down but not gone, the target audience could keep their favorite character and still have time to learn other material.
Another thing I've been saying for a while. Murray is a GREAT segment, don't get me wrong. But they don't need to have the guessing game segment or theme song... that's a couple minutes right there. EW, even with the Noodles could have cuts here and there making it half its length.
While I love the idea of alternating segments, it would never work well because the episodes aren't shown in a consistent fashion anymore.
Yeah... that rerun/new episode/rerun pattern. that really kills any chance of that. Seems like they're trying to alternate some segments (E&BGA wasn't on every episode last season), and they want to go back to a less consistent (read rigid) format where the letter and number segments change times every episode... too bad PBS won't let them do more than 26 episodes a year. Or even cheat and make more "episodes" out of pre-existing episodes with different footage like they did in the old days to bulk up the season.
But hey! I've seen seasons of Arthur that are literally a week or less worth of episodes.