Sesame Workshop (SW), originally known as the Children's Television Workshop (CTW), is an American
nonprofit organization
A nonprofit organization (NPO) or non-profit organisation, also known as a non-business entity, not-for-profit organization, or nonprofit institution, is a legal entity organized and operated for a collective, public or social benefit, in co ...
that has been responsible for the production of several educational children's programs—including its first and best-known, ''
Sesame Street''—that have been televised internationally. Television producer
Joan Ganz Cooney and foundation executive
Lloyd Morrisett developed the idea to form an organization to produce ''Sesame Street'', a television series which would help children, especially those from low-income families, prepare for school. They spent two years, from 1966 to 1968, researching, developing, and raising money for the new series. Cooney was named as the Workshop's first executive director, which was termed "one of the most important television developments of the decade."
''Sesame Street'' premiered on
National Educational Television (NET) as a series run in the United States on November 10, 1969, and moved to NET's successor, the Public Broadcasting Service (
PBS), in late 1970. The Workshop was formally incorporated in 1970.
Gerald S. Lesser
Gerald Samuel Lesser (August 22, 1926 – September 23, 2010) was an American psychologist who served on the faculty of Harvard University from 1963 until his retirement in 1998. Lesser was one of the chief advisers to the Children's Television ...
and
Edward L. Palmer were hired to perform research for the series; they were responsible for developing a system of planning, production, and evaluation, and the interaction between television producers and educators, later termed the "CTW model". They also hired a staff of producers and writers. After the initial success of ''Sesame Street'', they began to plan for its continued survival, which included procuring additional sources of funding and creating other television series. The early 1980s were a challenging period for the Workshop; difficulty finding audiences for their other productions and a series of bad investments harmed the organization until licensing agreements stabilized its revenues by 1985.
After ''Sesame Street''s initial success, the CTW began to think about its survival beyond the development and first season of the show, since their funding sources were composed of organizations and institutions that tended to start projects, not sustain them. Government funding ended by 1981, so the CTW developed other activities, including unsuccessful ventures into adult programs, the publications of books and music, international co-productions, interactive media and new technologies, licensing arrangements, and programs for preschools. By 2005, income from the organization's international co-productions of the series was $96 million. By 2008, the ''Sesame Street''
Muppets accounted for $15–17 million per year in licensing and merchandising fees. Cooney resigned as CEO in 1990; David Britt was named as her replacement.
On June 5, 2000, the CTW changed its name to Sesame Workshop to better represent its activities beyond television, and
Gary Knell became CEO.
H. Melvin Ming
H. Melvin "Mel" Ming (born as Hilton Austin Melvin Ming) is a Bermudian-American broadcast executive who was the president and CEO of Sesame Workshop from 2011 until his retirement in 2014. He was previously chief operating officer of Sesame W ...
replaced Knell in 2011. In 2014, Ming was succeeded by
Jeffrey D. Dunn
Jeffrey D. Dunn is an American broadcast executive who was the president and CEO of Sesame Workshop until 2021, the non-profit organization best known for making Sesame Street. He previously served as the President and CEO of the HiT Entertainmen ...
, and Dunn was succeeded by
Sherrie Westin
Sherrie Rollins Westin is an American businesswoman. She is the President of Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit educational organization that produces the television series ''Sesame Street''.
Early life and education
She was born Sherrie Lynn Sandy ...
in 2021.
History
Background
During the late 1960s, 97% of all American households owned a television set, and preschool children watched an average of 27 hours of television per week. Early childhood educational research at the time had shown that when children were prepared to succeed in school, they earned better grades and learned more effectively. Children from low-income families, however, had fewer resources than children from higher-income families to prepare them for school. Research had shown that children from low-income, minority backgrounds tested "substantially lower" than middle-class children in school-related skills, and that they continued to have educational deficits throughout school. The topic of developmental psychology had grown during this period, and scientists were beginning to understand that changes of early childhood education could increase children's cognitive growth.
In the winter of 1966,
Joan Ganz Cooney hosted what she called "a little dinner party"
at her apartment near
Gramercy Park
Gramercy ParkSometimes misspelled as Grammercy () is the name of both a small, fenced-in private park and the surrounding neighborhood that is referred to also as Gramercy, in the New York City borough of Manhattan in New York, United States.
...
. Attending were her husband Tim Cooney, her boss Lewis Freedman, and Lloyd and Mary Morrisett, whom the Cooneys knew socially. Cooney was a producer of documentary films at New York public television station WNDT (now
WNET
WNET (channel 13), branded on-air as "Thirteen" (stylized as "THIRTEEN"), is a primary PBS member television station licensed to Newark, New Jersey, United States, serving the New York City area. Owned by The WNET Group (formerly known as the ...
), and won an
Emmy for a documentary about poverty in America.
Lloyd Morrisett was a vice-president at
Carnegie Corporation, and was responsible for funding educational research, but had been frustrated in his efforts because they were unable to reach the large numbers of children in need of early education and intervention. Cooney was committed to using television to change society, and Morrisett was interested in using television to "reach greater numbers of needy kids". The conversation during the party, which according to writer Michael Davis was the start of a five-decade long professional relationship between Cooney and Morrisett, turned to the possibilities of using television to educate young children. A week later, Cooney and Freedman met with Morrisett at the office of Carnegie Corporation to discuss doing a feasibility study for creating an educational television program for preschoolers. Cooney was chosen to perform the study.
In the summer of 1967, Cooney took a leave of absence from WNDT, and funded by Carnegie Corporation, traveled the U.S. and Canada interviewing experts in child development, education, and television. She reported her findings in a fifty-five-page document entitled "The Potential Uses of Television in Preschool Education". The report described what the new series, which became ''
Sesame Street'', would be like and proposed the creation of a company that managed its production, which eventually became known as the Children's Television Workshop (CTW).
Founding
For the next two years, Cooney and Morrisett researched and developed the new show, acquiring $8 million funding for ''Sesame Street'', and establishing the CTW. Due to her professional experience, Cooney always assumed the show's natural network would be PBS. Morrisett was amenable to broadcast it by commercial stations, but all three major networks rejected the idea. Davis, considering ''Sesame Street''s licensing income years later, termed their decision "a billion-dollar blunder". Morrisett was responsible for fund acquisition, and was so successful at it that writer Lee D. Mitgang later said that it "defied conventional media wisdom". Cooney was responsible for the show's creative development, and for hiring the production and research staff for the CTW. The Carnegie Corporation provided their initial $1 million grant, and Morrisett, using his contacts, procured additional multimillion-dollar grants from the U.S. federal government, the
Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and the
Ford Foundation. Morrisett's friend Harold Howe, who was the
commissioner for the
U.S. Department of Education, promised $4 million, half of the new organization's budget. The Carnegie Corporation donated an additional $1 million. Mitgang stated, "Had Morrisett been any less effective in lining up financial support, Cooney's report likely would have become just another long-forgotten foundation idea". Funds gained from a combination of government agencies and private foundations protected them from the economic problems experienced by commercial networks, but caused difficulty for procuring future funding.
Cooney's proposal included using in-house formative research that would inform and improve production, and independent summative evaluations to test the show's effect on its young viewers' learning. In 1967, Morrisett recruited
Harvard University
Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of high ...
professor
Gerald S. Lesser
Gerald Samuel Lesser (August 22, 1926 – September 23, 2010) was an American psychologist who served on the faculty of Harvard University from 1963 until his retirement in 1998. Lesser was one of the chief advisers to the Children's Television ...
, whom he had met while they were both psychology students at
Yale
Yale University is a private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1701 as the Collegiate School, it is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and among the most prestigious in the wo ...
, to help develop and lead the Workshop's research department. In 1972, the Markle Foundation donated $72,000 to Harvard to form the Center for Research in Children's Television, which served as a research agency for the CTW. Harvard produced about 20 major research studies about ''Sesame Street'' and its effect on young children. Lesser also served as the first chairman of the Workshop's advisory board, a position he held until his retirement in 1997. According to Lesser, the CTW's advisory board was unusual because instead of rubber-stamping the Workshop's decisions like most boards for other children's television shows, it contributed significantly to the series' design and implementation. Lesser reported in ''
Children and Television: Lessons from Sesame Street'', his 1974 book about the beginnings of ''Sesame Street'' and the Children's Television Workshop, that about 8–10% of the Workshop's initial budget was spent on research.
CTW's summative research was done by the Workshop's first research director,
Edward L. Palmer, whom they met at the curriculum seminars Lesser conducted in Boston in the summer of 1967. In the summer of 1968, Palmer began to create educational goals, define the Workshop's research activities, and hire his research team.
[Lesser, p. 39] Lesser and Palmer were the only scientists in the U.S. studying the interaction of children and television at the time. They were responsible for developing a system of planning, production, and evaluation, and the interaction between television producers and educators, later called the "CTW model". Cooney observed of the CTW model: "From the beginning, we—the planners of the project—designed the show as an experimental research project with educational advisers, researchers, and television producers collaborating as equal partners". She described the collaboration as an "arranged marriage".
The CTW devoted 8% of its initial budget to outreach and publicity. In what television historian Robert W. Morrow called "an extensive campaign" that Lesser stated "would demand at least as much ingenuity as production and research",
the Workshop promoted the show with educators, the broadcast industry, and the show's target audience, which consisted of inner-city children and their families. They hired
Evelyn Payne Davis
Evelyn Payne Davis (born Evelyn Aramburo; December 27, 1921 – January 10, 1997) was an American community organizer, nonprofit executive and founder of the New York chapter of the National Coalition of 100 Black Women volunteer organization. She ...
from the
Urban League, whom Michael Davis called "remarkable, unsinkable, and indispensable", as the Workshop's first Vice President of Community Relations and manager of the Workshop's Community Educational Services (CES) division.
Bob Hatch was hired to publicize their new series, both before its premiere and to take advantage of the media attention concerning ''Sesame Street'' during its first year of production.
According to Davis, despite her involvement with the project's initial research and development, Cooney's installment as CTW's executive director was questionable due to her lack of executive experience, untested financial management skills, and lack of experience with children's television and education. Davis also speculated that sexism was involved, stating, "Doubters also questioned whether a woman could gain the full confidence of a quorum of men from the federal government and two elite philanthropies, institutions whose wealth exceeded the gross national product of entire countries". At first, Cooney did not fight for the position. However she had the help of her husband and Morrisett, and the project's investors soon realized they could not begin without her. She was eventually named to the post in February 1968. As one of the first female executives in American television, her appointment was termed "one of the most important television developments of the decade".
[Davis, pp. 125–126] The formation of the Children Television Workshop was announced at a press conference at the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City on 20 May 1968.
After her appointment, Cooney hired Bob Davidson as her assistant; he was responsible for making agreements with approximately 180 public television stations to broadcast the new series. She assembled a team of producers:
Jon Stone was responsible for writing, casting, and format;
David Connell assumed control of animation and volume production; and Samuel Gibbon served as the show's chief liaison between the production staff and the research team. Stone, Connell, and Gibbon had worked on another children's show, ''
Captain Kangaroo'', together. Cooney later said about ''Sesame Street''s original team of producers, "collectively, we were a genius". CTW's first children's show, ''Sesame Street'', premiered on 10 November 1969. The CTW was not incorporated until 1970 because its creators wanted to see if the series was a success before they hired lawyers and accountants.
Morrisett served as the first chairperson of CTW's board of trustees, a job he had for 28 years.
Early years
During the second season of ''Sesame Street'', to capitalize on the momentum the Workshop was enjoying and the attention it received from the press, the Workshop created its second series, ''
The Electric Company'', in 1971. Morrisett used the same fund-acquisition techniques as he had used for ''Sesame Street''. ''The Electric Company'' stopped production in 1977, but continued in reruns until 1985; it eventually became one of the most widely used TV shows in American classrooms
[O'Dell, p. 75] and was
revived in 2009. Starting in the early 1970s, the Workshop ventured into adult programming, but found that it was difficult to make their programs accessible to all socio-economic groups.
In 1971, it produced a medical program for adults termed ''Feelin' Good'', hosted by
Dick Cavett, which was broadcast until 1974. According to writer Cary O'Dell, the show "lacked a clear direction and never found a large audience". In 1977, the Workshop broadcast an adult drama called ''Best of Families'', which was set in New York City around the turn of the 20th century. However, it lasted for only six or seven episodes and helped the Workshop decide to emphasize children's programs only.
Throughout the 1970s, the CTW's main non-television efforts changed from promotion to the development of educational materials for preschool settings. Early efforts included mobile viewing units that broadcast the show in the inner cities, in
Appalachia
Appalachia () is a cultural region in the Eastern United States that stretches from the Southern Tier of New York State to northern Alabama and Georgia. While the Appalachian Mountains stretch from Belle Isle in Newfoundland and Labrador, ...
, in
Native American communities, and in
migrant worker camps. In the early 1980s, the CTW created the Preschool Education Program (PEP), whose goal was to assist preschools, by combining television viewing, books, hands-on activities, and other media, in using the series as an educational resource. The Workshop also provided materials to non-English speaking children and adults. Starting in 2006, the Workshop expanded its programs by creating a series of PBS specials and DVDs largely concerning how military deployment affects the families of soldiers. Other efforts by the Workshop concerned families of prisoners, health and wellness, and safety.
According to Cooney and O'Dell, the 1980s were a problematic period for the Workshop.
A series of poor investments in video games, motion picture production, theme parks, and other business ventures hurt the organization financially.
Cooney brought in Bill Whaley during the late 1970s to work on their licensing agreements, but he was unable to compensate for the CTW's losses until 1986, when licensing revenues stabilized and its portfolio investments increased.
Despite financial troubles, the Workshop continued to produce new shows throughout the decade. ''
3-2-1 Contact'' premiered in 1980 and ran for seven seasons. The CTW found that finding funding for this series and other science-oriented series like ''
Square One Television'', which was broadcast from 1987 to 1992, was easy because the
National Science Foundation
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent agency of the United States government that supports fundamental research and education in all the non-medical fields of science and engineering. Its medical counterpart is the National ...
and other foundations were interested in funding science education.
Later years
Cooney stepped down as chairman and chief executive officer of the CTW in 1990, when she was replaced by David Britt, who was her "chief lieutenant in the executive ranks through the mid-1990s" and whom Cooney termed her "right-hand for many years".
Britt had worked for her at the CTW since 1975 and had served as its president and chief operating officer since 1988. At that time, Cooney became chairman of the Workshop's executive board, which managed its businesses and licensing, and became more involved with the organization's creative efforts. The Workshop had a reorganization in 1995, and dismissed about 12 percent of its staff. In 1998, for the first time in the series' history, they accepted funds from corporations for ''Sesame Street'' and its other programs, a policy criticized by consumer advocate
Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader (; born February 27, 1934) is an American political activist, author, lecturer, and attorney noted for his involvement in consumer protection, environmentalism, and government reform causes.
The son of Lebanese immigrants to the U ...
. The Workshop defended the acceptance of corporate sponsorship, stating that it compensated for a decrease of government subsidies. Also in 1998, the Workshop invested $25 million in the cable channel
Noggin, initiated in 1999 by the Workshop and
Nickelodeon
Nickelodeon (often shortened to Nick) is an American pay television television channel, channel which launched on April 1, 1979, as the first cable channel for children. It is run by Paramount Global through its List of assets owned by Param ...
. In 2000, the profit the CTW earned from the deal, along with its 1998 revenue caused partly by the "Tickle Me Elmo" craze, enabled the CTW to purchase
The Jim Henson Company's rights to the ''Sesame Street'' Muppets from the German media company
EM.TV, which had acquired Henson earlier that year. The transaction, valued at $180 million, also included a small interest Henson had in the Noggin cable channel. Gary Knell stated, "Everyone, most especially the puppeteers, were thrilled that we were able to bring them home. It protected ''Sesame Street'' and allowed our international expansion to continue. Owning these characters has allowed us to maximize their potential. We are now in control of our own destiny".
The CTW changed its name to Sesame Workshop in June 2000, to better represent its non-television activities and interactive media. Also in 2000,
Gary Knell succeeded Britt as president and CEO of the Workshop; according to Davis, he "presided over an especially fertile period in the nonprofit's history".
[Davis, p. 345] Knell was instrumental in the creation of the cable channel
Universal Kids (formerly Sprout TV network) in 2005.
Sprout (launched as PBS Kids Sprout) was founded as a partnership between the Workshop,
Comcast
Comcast Corporation (formerly known as American Cable Systems and Comcast Holdings),Before the AT&T merger in 2001, the parent company was Comcast Holdings Corporation. Comcast Holdings Corporation now refers to a subsidiary of Comcast Corpora ...
,
PBS, and
HIT Entertainment, all of whom contributed programming to the new network. After seven years as a partner, the Workshop divested its stake in Sprout to
NBCUniversal
NBCUniversal Media, LLC is an American multinational mass media and entertainment conglomerate corporation owned by Comcast and headquartered at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, United States.
NBCUniversal is primaril ...
in December 2012.
In 2007, the Sesame Workshop founded
The Joan Ganz Cooney Center, an independent, non-profit organization that studies how to improve children's literacy by using and developing digital technologies "grounded in detailed educational curriculum", just as was done during the development of ''Sesame Street''.
The 2008–2009 recession, which resulted in budget reductions for many nonprofit arts organizations, severely affected the organization; in 2009, it had to dismiss 20% of its staff. Despite earning about $100 million from licensing revenue, royalties, and foundation and government funding in 2012, the Workshop's total revenue was down 15% and its operating loss doubled to $24.3 million. In 2013, it responded by dismissing 10% of its staff, saying that it was necessary to "strategically focus" their resources because of "today's rapidly changing digital environment". In 2011, Knell left Sesame Workshop to become the chief executive of
National Public Radio
National Public Radio (NPR, stylized in all lowercase) is an American privately and state funded nonprofit media organization headquartered in Washington, D.C., with its NPR West headquarters in Culver City, California. It differs from othe ...
(NPR).
H. Melvin Ming
H. Melvin "Mel" Ming (born as Hilton Austin Melvin Ming) is a Bermudian-American broadcast executive who was the president and CEO of Sesame Workshop from 2011 until his retirement in 2014. He was previously chief operating officer of Sesame W ...
, who had been the organization's chief financial officer since 1999 and chief operating officer since 2002, was named as his replacement. In 2014, H. Melvin Ming retired and was succeeded by former HIT Entertainment and Nickelodeon executive Jeffery D. Dunn. Dunn's appointment was the first time someone not affiliated with CTW or Sesame Workshop became its manager, although he had associations with the organization previously. In 2021, Dunn retired and was replaced by
Sherrie Rollins Westin, who had served as president of SW's Social Impact and Philanthropy Division for six years.
In 2019, ''
The Hollywood Reporter
''The Hollywood Reporter'' (''THR'') is an American digital and print magazine which focuses on the Hollywood film, television, and entertainment industries. It was founded in 1930 as a daily trade paper, and in 2010 switched to a weekly large ...
'' reported that Sesame Workshop's operating income was approximately $1.6 million, after the majority of its funds earned from grants, licensing deals, and royalties went back into its content, its total operating costs were over $100 million per year. Operating costs included salaries, $6 million in rent for its
Lincoln Center
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (also simply known as Lincoln Center) is a complex of buildings in the Lincoln Square neighborhood on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It has thirty indoor and outdoor facilities and is host to 5 millio ...
corporate offices, its production facilities in Queens, and the costs of producing content for its YouTube channels and other outlets. The organization employed about 400 people, including "several highly skilled puppeteers". Royalties and distribution fees, which accounted for $52.9 million in 2018, made up the Workshop's biggest revenue source. Donations brought in $47.8 million, or 31 percent of its income. Licensing revenue from games, toys, and clothing earned the organization $4.5 million.
Funding sources
After ''Sesame Street''s initial success, the CTW began to think about its survival beyond the development and first season of the show, since its funding sources were composed of organizations and institutions that tended to start projects, not sustain them.
[Davis, p. 203] Although the organization was what Cooney termed "the darling of the federal government for a brief period of two or three years", its first ten years of existence was marked by conflicts between the two; in 1978, the
US Department of Education refused to deliver a $2 million check until the last day of the CTW's fiscal year. According to Davis, the federal government was opposed to funding public television, but the Workshop used Cooney's prestige and fame, and the fact that there would be "great public outcry"
if the series was de-funded, to withstand the government's attacks on PBS. Eventually, the CTW got its own line item in the federal budget. By 2019, the U.S. government donated about four percent of the Workshop's budget, or less than $5 million a year.
For the first time, a public broadcasting series had the potential to earn a great deal of money. Immediately after its premiere, ''Sesame Street ''gained attention from marketers,
so the Workshop explored sources such as licensing arrangements, publishing, and international sales, and became, as Cooney envisioned, a "multiple media institution".
[Cherow-O'Leary in Fisch & Truglio, p. 197] Licensing became the foundation of, as writer Louise Gikow stated, the Sesame Workshop endowment,
[Gikow, p. 268] which had the potential to fund the organization and future productions and projects.
Muppet creator
Jim Henson
James Maury Henson (September 24, 1936 – May 16, 1990) was an American puppeteer, animator, cartoonist, actor, inventor, and filmmaker who achieved worldwide notice as the creator of The Muppets and '' Fraggle Rock'' (1983–1987) an ...
owned the trademarks to the
Muppet characters
The Muppets are an American ensemble cast of puppet characters known for an absurdist, burlesque, and self-referential style of variety-sketch comedy. Created by Jim Henson in 1955, they are the focus of a media franchise that encompasses t ...
: he was reluctant to market them at first, but agreed when the CTW promised that the profits from toys, books, and other products were to be used exclusively to fund the CTW. The producers demanded complete control of all products and product decisions throughout its history; any product line associated with the series had to be educational, inexpensive, and not advertised during broadcastings of ''Sesame Street''. As Davis reported, "Cooney stressed restraint, prudence, and caution" in their marketing and licensing efforts. In the early 1970s, the CTW negotiated with
Random House
Random House is an American book publisher and the largest general-interest paperback publisher in the world. The company has several independently managed subsidiaries around the world. It is part of Penguin Random House, which is owned by Ger ...
to establish and manage a non-broadcast materials division. Random House and the CTW named
Christopher Cerf to assist the CTW in publishing books and other materials that emphasized the series' curriculum.
[Davis, p. 205] By 2019, the Sesame Workshop had over 500 licensing agreements, and its total revenue in 2018 was $35 million. A million children play with ''Sesame Street''-themed toys per day.
Soon after the premiere of ''Sesame Street'', producers, educators, and officials of other nations began requesting that a version of the series be broadcast in their countries.
CBS executive
Michael Dann was required to quit his job at that network due to a change of corporate policy preceding the so-called "
rural purge"; upon his ouster, he became vice-president of the CTW and Cooney's assistant. Dann then began developing foreign versions of ''Sesame Street''
by arranging what were eventually termed
co-productions, or independent programs with their own sets, characters, and curriculum goals. By 2009, ''Sesame Street'' had expanded into 140 countries; ''
The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
'' reported in 2005 that income from the CTW's international co-productions of the series was $96 million. By 2008, the ''Sesame Street'' Muppets accounted for between $15 million and $17 million per year in licensing and merchandising fees, divided between the Workshop and
Henson Associates. The Workshop began pursuing funding from corporate sponsors in 1998; consumer advocate
Ralph Nader
Ralph Nader (; born February 27, 1934) is an American political activist, author, lecturer, and attorney noted for his involvement in consumer protection, environmentalism, and government reform causes.
The son of Lebanese immigrants to the U ...
urged parents to protest the move by boycotting the show. In 2018, the Workshop made a deal with
Apple
An apple is an edible fruit produced by an apple tree (''Malus domestica''). Apple trees are cultivated worldwide and are the most widely grown species in the genus '' Malus''. The tree originated in Central Asia, where its wild ances ...
to develop original content, including live-action, puppet, and animated series, for Apple's streaming service. In 2019, ''Parade Magazine'' reported that the organization had received two $100 million grants from the
MacArthur Foundation and from the
LEGO Foundation
Lego A/S (trade name: The Lego Group) is a Danish toy production company based in Billund, Denmark. It manufactures Lego-brand toys, consisting mostly of interlocking plastic bricks. The Lego Group has also built several amusement parks aro ...
; the funds were used to undertake "the largest early childhood intervention in the history of humanitarian response to help refugee children and families".
Publishing
In 1970, the CTW established a department managing the development of "nonbroadcast" materials based upon ''Sesame Street''. The Workshop decided that all materials its licensing program created would "underscore and amplify"
the series' curriculum. Coloring books, for example, were prohibited because the Workshop felt they would restrict children's imaginations.
The CTW published ''Sesame Street Magazine'' in 1970, which incorporated the show's curriculum goals in a magazine format. As with the series, research was performed for the magazine, initially by CTW's research department for a year and a half, and then by the Magazine Research Group in 1975.
Working with
Random House
Random House is an American book publisher and the largest general-interest paperback publisher in the world. The company has several independently managed subsidiaries around the world. It is part of Penguin Random House, which is owned by Ger ...
editor Jason Epstein, the CTW hired Christopher Cerf to manage ''Sesame Street''s book publishing program.
During the division's first year, Cerf earned $900,000 for the CTW. He quit to become more involved with writing and composing music for the series, and was replaced eventually by Bill Whaley. Ann Kearns, vice president of licensing for the CTW in 2000, stated that Whaley was responsible for expanding the licensing to other products, and for creating a licensing model used by other children's series.
As of 2019, the Workshop had published over 6,500 book titles.
and as researcher Renee Cherow-O'Leary stated in 2001, "the print materials produced by CTW have been an enduring part of the legacy of Sesame Street".
In one of these books, for example, the death of the ''Sesame Street'' character
Mr. Hooper was featured in a book entitled ''I'll Miss You, Mr. Hooper'', published soon after the series featured it in 1983. In 2019, ''Parade Magazine'' reported that 20 million copies of ''
The Monster at the End of the Book'' and ''Another Monster at the End of this Book'' had been sold, making them the top two best-selling e-books sold.
Its
YouTube
YouTube is a global online video sharing and social media platform headquartered in San Bruno, California. It was launched on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. It is owned by Google, and is the second most ...
channel had almost 5 million subscribers.
Music
According to director Jon Stone, the music of ''Sesame Street'' was unlike any other children's program on television. For the first time, the show's songs fulfilled a specific purpose and was related to its curriculum. Cooney observed in her initial report that children had an "affinity for commercial jingles", so many of the show's songs were like television advertisements.
To attract the best composers and lyricists, and to encourage them to compose more music for the series, the CTW allowed songwriters to retain the rights to the songs they wrote. For the first time in children's television, the writers earned lucrative profits, which as Davis reported, "helped the show sustain the level of public interest in the show".
[Davis, p. 256] Scriptwriters often wrote their own lyrics to accompany their scripts.
Songwriters of note were
Joe Raposo,
Jeff Moss,
Christopher Cerf,
Tony Geiss, and
Norman Stiles. Many of the songs written for ''Sesame Street'' have become what writer David Borgenicht termed "timeless classics". These songs included "
Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street?
"Can You Tell Me How to Get to Sesame Street?" is the theme song of the children's television series ''Sesame Street''. It is the oldest song in ''Sesame Street''s history, dating back to the show's beginning on November 10, 1969, and has been u ...
", "
I Love Trash", "
Rubber Duckie", "
Bein' Green", and "
Sing
Singing is the act of creating musical sounds with the voice. A person who sings is called a singer, artist or vocalist (in jazz and/or popular music). Singers perform music ( arias, recitatives, songs, etc.) that can be sung with or ...
". Many ''Sesame Street'' songs were recorded by well-known artists such as
Barbra Streisand
Barbara Joan "Barbra" Streisand (; born April 24, 1942) is an American singer, actress and director. With a career spanning over six decades, she has achieved success in multiple fields of entertainment, and is among the few performers awar ...
,
Lena Horne,
Dizzy Gillespie,
Paul Simon, and
Jose Feliciano.
[Gikow, p. 221] By 2019, there were 180 albums of ''Sesame Street'' music produced.
The show's first album, ''Sesame Street Book & Record'', recorded in 1970, was a major success and won a Grammy Award. ''Parade Magazine'' reported in 2019 that the show's music had been honored with 11 children's
Grammys.
According to Gikow, Raposo won three Emmys and four Grammys for his work for the series.
International co-productions
Soon after ''Sesame Street'' debuted in the US, the CTW was asked independently by producers from several countries to produce versions of the series in their countries.
[Cole et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 147] Cooney remarked, "To be frank, I was really surprised, because we thought we were creating the quintessential American show. We thought the Muppets were quintessentially American, and it turns out they're the most international characters ever created".
She hired former
CBS executive Mike Dann, who quit commercial television to become her assistant, as a CTW vice-president. One of Dann's tasks was to manage offers to produce versions of ''Sesame Street'' in other countries. In response to Dann's appointment, television critic
Marvin Kitman said, "After
annsells
'Sesame Street''in Russia and Czechoslovakia, he might try Mississippi, where it is considered too controversial for educational TV".
[Davis, p. 209] This was a reference to the May 1970 decision by the state's
PBS station to not air the series. By summer 1970, Dann had made the first international agreements for what the CTW came to term "co-productions".
The earliest international versions were what CTW vice-president Charlotte Cole and her colleagues termed "fairly simple",
consisting of dubbed versions of the series with local language voice-overs and instructional cutaways. Dubbed versions of the series continued to be produced if the country's needs and resources warranted it. Eventually, a variant of the CTW model was used to create and produce independently produced preschool television series in other countries. By 2006, there were twenty co-productions.
In 2001, there were more than 120 million viewers of all international versions of ''Sesame Street'',
and by the show's 50th anniversary in 2019, 190 million children viewed over 160 versions of ''Sesame Street'' in 70 languages.
In 2005, Doreen Carvajal of ''The New York Times'' reported that income from the co-productions and international licensing accounted for $96 million. As Cole and her colleagues reported in 2000, "Children's Television Workshop (CTW) can be regarded as the single largest informal educator of young children in the world".
Interactive media
Ten years after the premiere of ''Sesame Street'', the CTW began experimenting with new technologies. In 1979, it began to plan the development of a theme park, Sesame Place, which opened in 1980 in
Langhorne, Pennsylvania
Langhorne Borough is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The population was 1,622 at the time of the 2010 census.
The mailing address "Langhorne" is used for Langhorne Borough, but it is also used broadly to describe the majority of surro ...
.
[Revelle et al. in Fisch & Truglio, p. 215] Three international parks, ''Parque Plaza Sesamo'' in
Monterrey, Mexico since 1995, Universal Studios
Japan, and ''Vila Sesamo'' Kids' Land in
Brazil
Brazil ( pt, Brasil; ), officially the Federative Republic of Brazil (Portuguese: ), is the largest country in both South America and Latin America. At and with over 217 million people, Brazil is the world's fifth-largest country by area ...
were later built. One of the park's features was a computer gallery, which was developed by a small in-house team and included 55 computer programs. The team evolved into the Children's Computer Workshop (CCW) in 1982, which was disbanded and became the Interactive Technologies division of the CTW in the late 1980s.
[Gikow, p. 282] As ''Sesame Street'' researcher Shalom M. Fisch stated, no television series could be as interactive as computer games, even "participatory" shows like ''
Blue's Clues'' or the ''Sesame Street'' segment "
Elmo's World". The CTW has chosen to take advantage of the contingent feedback inherent in interactive computer games by developing and creating educational software based upon the television series' content and curriculum.
In 2008, the Sesame Workshop began to offer clips and full-length episodes on the websites
Hulu
Hulu () is an American subscription streaming service majority-owned by The Walt Disney Company, with Comcast's NBCUniversal holding a minority stake. It was launched on October 29, 2007 and it offers a library of films and television seri ...
,
YouTube
YouTube is a global online video sharing and social media platform headquartered in San Bruno, California. It was launched on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. It is owned by Google, and is the second most ...
, and
iTunes, where "Word on the Street" segments became the most popular webcast. Sesame Workshop won a Peabody Award in 2009 for its website, sesamestreet.org. In 2010, the Workshop began offering, for a subscription fee, a library of over 100
eBooks
An ebook (short for electronic book), also known as an e-book or eBook, is a book publication made available in digital form, consisting of text, images, or both, readable on the flat-panel display of computers or other electronic devices. Alt ...
. The on-line publishing platform was managed by the electronic publishing company
Impelsys
Impelsys is a global technology company founded in January 2001. The company is headquartered in New York and operates in the United States, European Union, and India. It supports businesses worldwide in their transition to digital-first, data-dri ...
.
See also
*
List of Sesame Workshop productions
*
Avenue Q
*
Higher Ground Productions
**
Waffles + Mochi
''Waffles + Mochi'' is an American children's cooking television series. Produced by Higher Ground Productions with Michelle Obama as executive producer, it was released on Netflix on March 16, 2021.
Three companion books were also released in ...
*
The Muppets Studio
Notes
Citations
Bibliography
* Davis, Michael (2008). ''Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street''. New York: Viking Penguin.
* Fisch, Shalom M. and Rosemarie T. Truglio, eds. (2001). ''"G" Is for Growing: Thirty Years of Research on Children and Sesame Street''. Mahweh, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers.
** Cole, Charlotte F.; Beth A. Richman; Susan A. McCann Brown, "The World of Sesame Street Research", pp. 147–180.
** Cherow-O'Leary, Renee, "Carrying Sesame Street Into Print: Sesame Street Magazine, Sesame Street Parents, and Sesame Street Books" pp. 197–214.
** Palmer, Edward and Shalom M. Fisch, "The Beginnings of Sesame Street Research", pp. 3–24
** Revelle, Glenda L.; Lisa Medoff; Erik F. Strommen, "Interactive Technologies Research at Children's Television Workshop", pp. 215–230
** Yotive, William and Shalom M. Fisch, "The Role of Sesame Street-Based Materials in Child-Care Settings", pp. 181–196
* Gikow, Louise A. (2009). ''Sesame Street: A Celebration—Forty Years of Life on the Street''. New York: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. .
* Lesser, Gerald S. (1974). ''Children and Television: Lessons From Sesame Street.'' New York: Vintage Books.
* Mitgang, Lee D. (2000). ''Big Bird and Beyond: The New Media and the Markle Foundation''. New York: Fordham University Press.
* Morrow, Robert W. (2006). ''Sesame Street and the Reform of Children's Television.'' Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press.
* O'Dell, Cary (1997). ''Women Pioneers in Television: Biographies of Fifteen Industry Leaders''. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. .
External links
Official websiteSesame Street Ebookstore websiteChildren's Television Workshop recordsat the
University of Maryland Libraries
The University of Maryland Libraries is the largest university library in the Washington, D.C. - Baltimore area. The university's library system includes eight libraries: six are located on the College Park campus, while the Severn Library, an o ...
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1968 establishments in New York City
Film production companies of the United States
Non-profit organizations based in New York City
Organizations established in 1968
Peabody Award winners
Television production companies of the United States
Asia Game Changer Award winners