Influence of Sesame Street
The children's television program Sesame Street premiered in 1969 to high ratings, positive reviews, and some controversy, which have continued during its history. Even though the show aired on only 67% of American televisions at the time of its premiere, it earned a 3.3 Nielsen rating, or 1.9 million households. By its tenth anniversary in 1979, 9 million American children under the age of six were watching Sesame Street daily. Its ratings declined in the 1990s, due to societal changes. A survey conducted in 1993 found that by the age of three, 95% of all American children had watched it. By its fortieth anniversary in 2009, it was ranked the fifteenth most popular children's show.
According to writer Michael Davis, Sesame Street is "perhaps the most vigorously researched, vetted, and fretted-over program".[1] By 2001, there were over 1,000 research studies regarding its efficacy, impact, and effect on American culture. Two landmark summative evaluations, conducted by the Educational Testing Service (ETS) in 1970 and 1971, demonstrated that Sesame Street had a significant educational impact on its viewers. Additional studies conducted throughout the show's history demonstrated that the show continued to have a positive effect on its young viewers.
Sesame Street has also been the subjects of many controversies throughout its long run on television. In May 1970, a commission in Mississippi voted to ban the show. The controversy surrounding the show stemmed from cultural and historical reasons regarding children and television's effect on them.[2] Latino and feminists groups criticized Sesame Street for its depictions of some groups, but its producers have worked to address their concerns throughout the years. By 2009, Sesame Street had received 118 Emmy Awards, more than any other television series.
Ratings
When Sesame Street premiered in 1969, it aired on only 67.6% of American televisions, but it earned a 3.3 Nielsen rating, or 1.9 million households.[3] The Children's Television Workshop (CTW), the organization that oversaw the production of Sesame Street, insisted that its seemingly low ratings were misleading. They found that although a small percentage of all viewers watched Sesame Street, approximately a quarter of all preschoolers watched it regularly. Ninety percent of households who viewed the show had children under the age of six.[4]
In the winter of 1970, partly as a response to criticism that they were not reaching their intended audience, the CTW conducted a poll of four urban neighborhoods in New York, Chicago, and Washington, D.C. The results of the poll were positive in three out of the four neighborhoods and confirmed the show's high viewership.[5] Sesame Street's high ratings increased during its second season, and Nielsen reported high audience loyalty.[6] Gerald S. Lesser, CTW's first advisory board chair, reported rumors about the show becoming a fad among college students.[7] Its ratings steadily increased for the first five seasons, and Nielsen reported that Sesame Street had the highest ratings of any PBS program.[8] In 1985, the Workshop estimated that 20% of its regular viewers consisted of adults.[9]
By the show's tenth anniversary in 1979, 9 million American children under the age of six were watching Sesame Street daily. Four out of five children had watched it over a six-week period, and 90% of children from low-income inner-city homes regularly viewed the show.[10] According to a 1993 survey conducted by the US Department of Education, out of the show's 6.6 million viewers, 2.4 million kindergartners regularly watched it. 77% of preschoolers watched it once a week, and 86% of kindergartners, first-, and second-grade students had watched it once a week before starting school. The show reached most young children in almost all demographic groups, most significantly economically disadvantaged children; 88% of children from low-income families and 90% of both African-American and Latino children watched the show before entering kindergarten. Over 80% of children from all minority language groups watched it before starting school. Children from the poorest communities were most likely to be regular viewers, as were younger children. Children whose parents did not read to them regularly were less likely to be regular viewers, and children of highly educated parents stopped viewing earlier than children from disadvantaged households.[11]
The show's ratings significantly decreased in the early 1990s, when children' viewing habits and the television marketplace had changed. In 1969, the choices in children's programming were limited, but the growth of the home-video industry during the 1980s and the boom in children's programming during the 90s on cable channels like Nickelodeon, which were directly influenced by Sesame Street, resulted in lower ratings for Sesame Street. In 2002, The New York Times reported that "learning to click the remote control has become a developmental milestone, like crawling and walking".[12] The producers responded to these societal changes by making large-scale structural changes to the show.[13]
By 2006, Sesame Street had become "the most widely viewed children's television show in the world", with 20 international independent versions and broadcasts in over 120 countries.[14] A 1996 survey found that 95% of all American preschoolers had watched the show by the time they were three years old.[15] In 2006, it was estimated that 75 million Americans had watched the series as children.[14] By the show's 40th anniversary in 2009, it was ranked the fifteenth most popular children's show on television.[16]
Effect
According to Davis, Sesame Street is "perhaps the most vigorously researched, vetted, and fretted-over program".[1] By 2001, there were over 1,000 research studies regarding its efficacy, impact, and effect on American culture.[17] The CTW solicited the Educational Testing Service (ETS) to conduct its summative research.[18] ETS' two "landmark"[19] summative evaluations, conducted in 1970 and 1971, demonstrated that Sesame Street had a significant educational impact on its viewers.[20] These studies provided the majority of the early educational effects of Sesame Street and have been cited in other studies of the effects of television on young children.[19][note 1] Additional studies conducted throughout Sesame Street's history demonstrated that the show continued to have a positive effect on its young viewers.[note 2]
Lesser believed that Sesame Street research "may have conferred a new respectability upon the studies of the effects of visual media upon children".[21] He also believed that the show had the same effect on the prestige in the television industry of producing shows for children.[21] Historian Robert Morrow, in his book Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television, which chronicled the show's influence on children's television and on the television industry as a whole, reported that many critics of commercial television saw Sesame Street as a "straightforward illustration for reform".[22] Les Brown, a writer for Variety, saw in Sesame Street "a hope for a more substantial future" for television.[22]
The networks responded by creating more high-quality television programs, but that many saw them as "appeasement gestures".[23] In spite of the CTW's effectiveness in creating a popular show, commercial television "made only a limited effort to emulate CTW's methods", and did not use a curriculum or evaluate what children learned from them.[24] Morrow reported that by the mid-1970s, commercial television abandoned their experiments with creating better children's programming.[25] Other critics hoped that Sesame Street, with its depiction of a functioning, multicultural community, would nurture racial tolerance in its young viewers.[26]
As critic Richard Roeper has stated, perhaps one of the strongest indicators of the influence of Sesame Street have been the enduring rumors and urban legends surrounding the show and its characters, especially about Bert and Ernie.[27]
Critical reception
Sesame Street was praised from its debut in 1969. Newsday reported that several newspapers and magazines had written "glowing" reports about CTW and co-creator Joan Ganz Cooney.[3] Although the series had been on the air for less than a year, Time Magazine featured Big Bird, who had received more fan mail than any of the show's human hosts, on its cover and declared, " ...It is not only the best children's show in TV history, it is one of the best parents' shows as well".[28] The press overwhelmingly praised the new show; several popular magazines and niche magazines lauded it.[29] A 2010 survey found that most parents supported their children's viewing of Sesame Street and other PBS educational shows, and many educators used them as aides in the classroom.[30]
"Sesame Street is...with lapses, the most intelligent and important program in television. That is not anything much yet".-Renata Adler, The New Yorker, 1972[31]
David Frost declared Sesame Street "a hit everywhere it goes".[28] An executive at ABC, while recognizing that Sesame Street was not perfect, stated that the show "opened children's TV to taste and wit and substance"... and "made the climate right for improvement".[28] By the end of the show's first season, ratings were high, the song "Rubber Duckie" was on the music charts for nine weeks, and Big Bird appeared on The Flip Wilson Show. Also in 1970, Sesame Street won twenty awards, including a Peabody Award, three Emmys, an award from the Public Relations Society of America, a Clio, and the Prix Jeunesse award.[32] President Richard Nixon sent Cooney a congratulatory letter.[28] Dr. Benjamin Spock predicted that the program would result in "better trained citizens, fewer unemployables in the next generation, fewer people on welfare, and smaller jail populations".[33] By 1995, the show had won two Peabody Awards and four Parents' Choice Awards. In addition, it was the subject of retrospectives at the Smithsonian Institution and the Museum of Modern Art.[34] In 2011, puppeteer Kevin Clash was the subject of the documentary Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey. The documentary, directed by Constance Marks, received several awards, including the 2011 Black Film Critics Circle Award and the Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, where it premiered.[35] By 2009, the series had received 118 Emmy Awards, more than any other television series.[36]
Sesame Street was not without its detractors, however. In May 1970, a state commission in Mississippi voted to ban Sesame Street. A member of the commission leaked the vote to the New York Times, stating that "Mississippi was not yet ready" for the show's integrated cast.[37] Cooney called the ban "a tragedy for both the white and black children of Mississippi".[16] The Mississippi commission later reversed its decision, after the vote had made national news.
According to Children and Television, Lesser's account of the development and early years of Sesame Street, there was little criticism of the show in the months following its premiere, but it increased at the end of its first season and beginning of the second season. Lesser put the early criticism into four categories: educational goals, how the goals were chosen and obtained, the show's possible unintended effects, and its portrayal of minorities and women.[38][note 3] Historian Robert W. Morrow suggested that much of the early criticism, which he called "surprisingly intense",[2] stemmed from cultural and historical reasons in regards to, as he put it, "the place of children in American society and the controversies about television's effects on them".[2]
The "most important" studies that found negative effects of Sesame Street were conducted by educator Herbert A. Sprigle and psychologist Thomas D. Cook during its first two seasons. Both studies found that the show increased the educational gap between poor and middle-class children. Morrow reported that these studies had little impact on the public discussion about Sesame Street.[39] Social scientist and Head Start founder Urie Bronfenbrenner criticized the show for being too wholesome, stating, "The old, the ugly or the unwanted is simply made to disappear through a manhole".[28] He also criticized the show for presenting bland and unrealistic characters, and for failing to teach children about social relationships and how to become a part of the society around them.[40] Psychologist Leon Eisenberg saw Sesame Street's urban setting as "superficial" and having little to do with the problems confronted by the inner-city child.[41]
Head Start director Edward Zigler was probably Sesame Street's most vocal critic in the show's early years. He withdrew Head Start's funding of the show, becoming the first of CTW's original investors to do so. Morrow stated that the basis of Zigler's criticism was concern that the federal government would transfer their funding of Head Start to CTW.[42] Also according to Morrow, these studies were utilized by critics in Sesame Street's later years, especially by child development psychologists Jerome and Dorothy G. Singer, who insisted the television shortened children's attention spans, and by author Neil Postman in his book Amusing Ourselves to Death, who believed that television could not teach children.[43] Postman claimed that Sesame Street also introduced children to a shallow pop culture, undermined American education, and relieved parents of their responsibility of teaching their children how to read.[44]
Since federal funds had been used to produce the show, more segments of the population insisted upon being represented on Sesame Street. Morrow credited CTW's commitment to multiculturalism as one source for their conflicts with the leadership of minority groups, especially Latino groups and feminists. These conflicts were resolved when the CTW added or substituted offending segments and characters. By 1977, the cast consisted of two African American women, one of whom was single, two African American men, a Chicano man, two white men, an American Indian woman, a Puerto Rican woman, and a Deaf white woman.[45]
Latino groups criticized the show for the lack of Hispanic characters during its early years.[16] A committee of Hispanic activists, commissioned by the CTW in 1970, called Sesame Street "racist" and said that the show's bilingual aspects were of "poor quality and patronizing".[2] According to Morrow, Cooney admitted that the show's bilingual elements were "not well thought out".[46] By 1971, the CTW hired Hispanic actors, production staff, and researchers, and by the mid-70s, Morrow reported that "the show included Chicano and Puerto Rican cast members, films about Mexican holidays and foods, and cartoons that taught Spanish words".[47] In 1989, Sesame Street created a four-year "race relations curriculum"[48] that focused on introducing its viewers to various cultural backgrounds.
The New York Times reported that creating strong female characters "that make kids laugh, but not...as female stereotypes"[49] has been a challenge for the producers of Sesame Street. Davis reported that the National Organization for Women (NOW) expressed concerns that the show needed to be "less male-oriented".[28] Members of NOW were "rankled by the portrayal of Susan, whom they saw as a subservient, powerless dispenser of milk and cookies".[50] In the spring of 1970, Boston Globe columnist Ellen Goodman objected to what she considered Sesame Street's portrayal of women and girls as passive. In late 1970, the NOW threatened to boycott the show.[51] The show's producers satisfied these critics by making Susan a nurse and by hiring a female writer.[28]
According to Morrow, change regarding how women and girls were depicted on Sesame Street occurred slowly. CTW's research staff, which were mostly made up of women, worked with the mostly male production staff to raise their consciousnesses about how women and girls were portrayed in their scripts.[51] Another source of friction between the CTW and feminists were the lack of female Muppets, for which they held Jim Henson responsible, as well as his organization of all-male puppeteers, who tended to create male characters. The demanding production schedule tended to attract only men, and Henson expressed his opinion that women were incapable of withstanding it. Gikow believed that the difficulty creating breakout Muppet characters was due to children's viewing styles: girls have tended to become attached to male characters they like, but boys did not tend to form the same attachments to female characters.[52] The show's inventory of material, some of which many feminists found sexist and which were shown over and over, were slowly replaced by new, less sexist segments.[53] As more female Muppets performers like Fran Brill,[note 4] Stephanie D'Abruzzo, and Leslie Carrara-Rudolph were hired and trained, stronger female characters like Abby Cadabby were created.[52] As an interesting contrast, Sesame Street was also chastised by a Louisiana critic for the presence of strong single women on the show.[54]
In 1995, journalist Kay Hymowitz called Sesame Street "a triumph of appearance over substance" and credited its success not with quality, but with "a combination of savvy timing, sophisticated image making, and vigorous promotion".[34] She held the show partly responsible for the declining verbal abilities of American students, and accused the show of affirming negative stereotypes about women. According to Hymowitz, the show's creators discouraged children's natural curiosity about the world. She criticized the show for, instead of transforming television, being "devoured"[34] by it. She took issue with its use of cultural references, stating that the show taught young children to embrace the negative values of commercialism, celebrity, and anti-intellectualism. She insisted that by using television's production values, the producers of Sesame Street emphasized their "jazzy medium"[34] more than the educational content they were supposed to convey. Hymowitz took issue with the show's educational claims, stating that Sesame Street diminished young children's readiness for reading by limiting their abilities to engage in analytical and creative thinking. She reported that most of the positive research conducted on the show has been done by the CTW, and then sent to a sympathetic press. She charged that the studies conducted by the CTW "hint at advocacy masquerading as social science".[34]
In 2003, one of Sesame Street's international co-productions, Takalani Sesame, caused some controversy in the US when the first HIV-positive Muppet, Kami, was created in response to South Africa's AIDS epidemic. It marked the first time AIDS and the goal of confronting the disease's stigma was included in a preschool curriculum. According to the documentary, The World According to Sesame Street, the reaction of many in the US surprised Sesame Workshop. Some members of Congress attacked Sesame Street, Sesame Workshop, and PBS. According to co-producer Naila Farouky, "The reaction we got in the US blew me away. I didn't expect people to be so horrible... and hateful and mean".[55] The controversy in the US was short-lived, and died down when the public discovered the facts about the South African co-production, and when United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and prominent minister and conservative political commentator Jerry Falwell praised the Workshop's efforts. Kami went on to be named UNICEF's Champion for Children in November 2003.[56]
Footnotes
- ↑ According to Palmer and his colleague Shalom M. Fisch, these studies were responsible for securing funding for the show over the next several years (Palmer & Fisch, p. 20).
- ↑ For a discussion of these studies, see Gikow, pp. 284-285; "G" is For Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street, pp. 147-230
- ↑ See Lesser, pp. 175-201 for his response to the early critics of Sesame Street.
- ↑ Brill developed a solution to the height difference between the taller male puppeteers and her: wearing boots with 4–5 inches of platform glued to their soles. (See Gikow, p. 56)
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Davis, p. 357
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Morrow, p. 3
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Seligsohn, Leo (1970-02-09). "Sesame Street". Newsday.
- ↑ Morrow, p. 117
- ↑ Morrow, pp. 142—144
- ↑ Lesser, p. 205
- ↑ Lesser, p. 170
- ↑ Morrow, p. 118
- ↑ Rothenberg, Fred (1985-12-23). "New 'Sesame Street' Star Adds Adoption Topic to Show". The Free Lance-Star. Retrieved 2010-12-09.
- ↑ Davis, p. 277
- ↑ Zill, Nicholas (2001). "Does Sesame Street Enhance School Readiness?: Evidence from a National Survey of Children". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. pp. 117–120. ISBN 978-0-8058-3395-9.
- ↑ Salamon, Julie (2002-06-09). "Children's TV Catches up with How Kids Watch". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
- ↑ Weiss, Joanna (2005-10-19). "New Character Joins PBS". The Boston Globe.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Friedman, Michael Jay (2006-04-08). "Sesame Street Educates and Entertains Internationally". America.gov (U.S. Department of State Bureau of International Information Programs). Retrieved 2010-12-10.
- ↑ Truglio, Rosemarie T; Shalom M. Fisch (2001). "Introduction". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. xvi. ISBN 978-0-8058-3395-9.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Guernsey, Lisa (2009-05-23). "'Sesame Street': The Show That Counts". Newsweek. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
- ↑ Cooney, p. xii
- ↑ Miekle, p. 85
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 Mielke, p. 88
- ↑ Palmer, Edward L; Shalom M. Fisch (2001). "The Beginnings of Sesame Street Research". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-8058-3395-9.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Lesser, p. 235
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 Morrow, p. 122
- ↑ Morrow, p. 127
- ↑ Morrow, p. 130
- ↑ Morrow, p. 132
- ↑ Morrow, p. 124
- ↑ Roeper, Richard (2001). Hollywood Urban Legends: The Truth Behind All Those Delightfully Persistent Myths of Film, Television and Music. Franklin Lakes, New Jersey: Career Press. pp. 48–53. ISBN 978-1-56414-554-3.
- ↑ 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 28.5 28.6 Kanfer, Stefan (1970-11-23). "Who's Afraid of Big, Bad TV?". Time. Retrieved 2010-12-11.
- ↑ Morrow, pp. 119—120
- ↑ Linebarger, Deborah L (November 2011). "Teaching with television: New evidence supports an old medium". The Phi Delta Kappan (Phi Delta Kappa International) 93 (3): 63.
- ↑ Lesser, p. 165
- ↑ Morrow, p. 119
- ↑ Davis, p. 198
- ↑ 34.0 34.1 34.2 34.3 34.4 Hymowitz, Kay S. (Autumn 1995). "On Sesame Street, It's All Show". City Journal. Retrieved 2010-12-11.
- ↑ "Being Elmo". Docurama Films. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
- ↑ "36th Daytime Emmy Awards". 2009-08-30. The CW. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ↑ "Mississippi Agency Votes for a TV Ban on 'Sesame Street'". New York Times. 1970-05-03.
- ↑ Lesser, pp. 174—175
- ↑ Morrow, pp. 146—147
- ↑ Morrow, p. 145
- ↑ Morrow, p. 98
- ↑ Morrow, p. 147
- ↑ Morrow, p. 149
- ↑ Davis, p. 200
- ↑ Morrow, pp. 157—158
- ↑ Morrow, p. 154
- ↑ Morrow, p. 155
- ↑ Truglio, Rosemary T; Valeria O. Lovelace; Ivelesse Segui; Susan Scheiner (2001). "The Varied Role of Formative Research: Case Studies from 30 Years". In Shalom M. Fisch & Rosemarie T. Truglio. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-8058-3395-9.
- ↑ Gikow, p. 142
- ↑ Davis, p. 213
- ↑ 51.0 51.1 Morrow, p. 156
- ↑ 52.0 52.1 Gikow, p. 143
- ↑ Morrow, pp. 156—157
- ↑ Hellman, Peter (1987-11-23). "Street Smart: How Big Bird & Co. Do It". New York Magazine 20 (46): 52. Retrieved 2010-12-11.
- ↑ Knowlton, Linda Goldstein and Linda Hawkins Costigan (producers) (2006). The World According to Sesame Street (documentary). Participant Productions.
- ↑ "HIV-positive Muppet Appointed as "Champion for Children"". UNICEF. 2003-11-24. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
References
- Davis, Michael (2008). Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street. New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 978-0-670-01996-0.
- Gikow, Louise A. (2009). Sesame Street: A Celebration—Forty Years of Life on the Street. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. ISBN 978-1-57912-638-4.
- Lesser, Gerald S. (1974). Children and Television: Lessons From Sesame Street. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-394-71448-6.
- Mielke, Keith W. (2001). "A Review of Research on the Educational and Social Impact of Sesame Street". In Fisch, Shalom M. & Truglio, Rosemarie T. "G" is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8058-3394-2.
- Morrow, Robert W. (2006). Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8230-2.