Pilot thoughts
I watched the pilot more than a week ago, so I guess I've just been lazy posting my thoughts about it (was my whining about the unskippable ads really more important?). The pilot had lots of problems; I'm really glad they did a test to find out what didn't work so that the real shows came out well.
Everybody seemed pretty lost about transitioning from one segment to another--over and over a person would just be standing staring at the camera with this heavy pause, like he or she was waiting for a director to say, "Right, the animated clip's over, you're on!" Embarrassing! (But maybe they would've edited that stuff out anyway for a real broadcast.)
The interactions with the kids were poor. In the first bit (with the cement writing), Gordon does practically all the talking. The two boys give one-word answers and show no initiative whatsoever. (Whether that's because of bad directing, bad writing, or picking camera-shy kids, I couldn't say, but somebody messed up.) In the first segment with Susan and the kids ("If You're Happy and You Know It") some of those kids seem pretty bored and distracted. The friend I watched this with wondered how many takes they had done to make the kids tired of it.
Watching one segment ("Story About the Letter D") three times in a row is just painful.
The biggest deal of all: nowhere in the whole episode do Muppets and humans interact. Bert and Ernie exist in some separate, alternate world apart from Gordon, Susan, and Bob. (It's true Bert and Ernie are shown in the middle of the dance segment, but they're still on their own set, not on the street with the humans.) Praise and thanks to whoever insisted that Muppets and humans be brought together--especially human CHILDREN. What would Sesame Street be if they'd kept Muppets and humans separate? Well, it probably wouldn't still be around, for one thing.