
Sunny days! The earliest episodes of âSesame Streetâ are available on digital video! Break out some Keebler products, fire up the DVD player and prepare for the exquisite pleasure-pain of top-shelf nostalgia.
Just donât bring the children. According to an earnest warning on Volumes 1 and 2, âSesame Street: Old Schoolâ is adults-only: âThese early âSesame Streetâ episodes are intended for grown-ups, and may not suit the needs of todayâs preschool child.â
Say what? At a recent all-ages home screening, a hush fell over the room. âWhat did they do to us?â asked one Gen-X mother of two, finally. The show rolled, and the sweet trauma came flooding back. What they did to us was hard-core. Man, was that scene rough. The masonry on the dingy brownstone at 123 Sesame Street, where the closeted Ernie and Bert shared a dismal basement apartment, was deteriorating. Cookie Monster was on a fast track to diabetes. Oscarâs depression was untreated. Prozacky Elmo didnât exist.
Nothing in the childrenâs entertainment of today, candy-colored animation hopped up on computer tricks, can prepare young or old for this frightening glimpse of simpler times. Back then â as on the very first episode, which aired on PBS Nov. 10, 1969 â a pretty, lonely girl like Sally might find herself befriended by an older male stranger who held her hand and took her home. Granted, Gordon just wanted Sally to meet his wife and have some milk and cookies, but . . . well, he could have wanted anything. As it was, he fed her milk and cookies. The milk looks dangerously whole.
Live-action cows also charge the 1969 screen â cows eating common grass, not grain improved with hormones. Cows are milked by plain old farmers, who use their unsanitary hands and fill one bucket at a time. Elsewhere, two brothers risk concussion while whaling on each other with allergenic feather pillows. Overweight layabouts, lacking touch-screen iPods and headphones, jockey for airtime with their deafening transistor radios. And one of those radios plays a late-â60s news report â something about a âsenior American officialâ and âtwo billion in credit over the next five yearsâ â that conjures a bleak economic climate, with war debt and stagflation in the offing.
The old âSesame Streetâ is not for the faint of heart, and certainly not for softies born since 1998, when the chipper âElmoâs Worldâ started. Anyone who considers bull markets normal, extracurricular activities sacrosanct and New York a tidy, governable place â well, the original âSesame Streetâ might hurt your feelings.
I asked Carol-Lynn Parente, the executive producer of âSesame Street,â how exactly the first episodes were unsuitable for toddlers in 2007. She told me about Alistair Cookie and the parody âMonsterpiece Theater.â Alistair Cookie, played by Cookie Monster, used to appear with a pipe, which he later gobbled. According to Parente, âThat modeled the wrong behaviorâ â smoking, eating pipes â âso we reshot those scenes without the pipe, and then we dropped the parody altogether.â
Which brought Parente to a feature of âSesame Streetâ that had not been reconstructed: the chronically mood-disordered Oscar the Grouch. On the first episode, Oscar seems irredeemably miserable â hypersensitive, sarcastic, misanthropic. (Bert, too, is described as grouchy; none of the characters, in fact, is especially sunshiney except maybe Ernie, who also seems slow.) âWe might not be able to create a character like Oscar now,â she said.
Snuffleupagus is visible only to Big Bird; since 1985, all the characters can see him, as Big Birdâs old protestations that he was not hallucinating came to seem a little creepy, not to mention somewhat strained. As for Cookie Monster, he can be seen in the old-school episodes in his former inglorious incarnation: a blue, googly-eyed cookievore with a signature gobble (âom nom nom nomâ). Originally designed by Jim Henson for use in commercials for General Foods International and Frito-Lay, Cookie Monster was never a righteous figure. His controversial conversion to a more diverse diet wouldnât come until 2005, and in the early seasons he comes across a Childâs First Addict.
Oh, whatâs that? Right, the trance of early âSesame Streetâ and its country-time sequences. In spite of the showâs devotion to its âtarget child,â the â4-year-old inner-city black youngsterâ (as The New York Times explained in 1979), the first episodes join kids cavorting in amber waves of grain â black children, mostly, who must be pressed into service as the face of Americaâs farms uniquely on âSesame Street.â
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