I only count 4.
Mine is probably one a different setting than you.
I only count 4.
At the time (and in previous times) I did. Regardless we've already talked about this and it's water under the bridge. Thanks for explaining yourself, I appreciate that.
Mine is probably one a different setting than you.
Man, devil and nam used to be buddies. Look what you've done, Sesame Street! I hope you're real ****ing happy with yourself!
That's not, and should never be, Sesame Street's concern.
Underaged boys, underaged girls; as long as they "tickle" Elmo, he'll be happy. He seems to like it a lot when he's tickled...
People shouldn't rely on a television show to parent their own children.
What are shows like Sesame street if not an electronic babysitter or parental surrogate? Parents used to spend time with their children to teach them and play games with them to raise them before more households had to have both parents work. Sesame Street is a substitute for parenting. That is what it is there for. The same went for Mr. Rogers. Those shows provide a valuable public service.
Maybe if your devilof's kid (if/when he ever gets around to having one), since he clearly wants Sesame Street to parent his. Mine use it as a moderated means of entertainment with educational value. They shouldn't have to sit through someone else's dirty laundry because parents can't be responsible enough to include their children in conversations that involve them.
Like I said, Sesame street is optional viewing. By implication, it is the parent's responsibility to exercise discretion as far as what they allow their children to watch. Not all households are the same and not all children are the same. A lot of children could benefit from some guidance about the issue of divorce, and enough to justify including it on Sesame street, because it is such an important social issue.
Watching the show is optional. You cannot on the one hand say that Sesame Street should not be teaching your children about life and then on the other hand use it to do exactly that for your own children.
like you said, it's all ultimately about PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY.
Like I said, Sesame street is optional viewing. By implication, it is the parent's responsibility to exercise discretion as far as what they allow their children to watch. Not all households are the same and not all children are the same. A lot of children could benefit from some guidance about the issue of divorce, and enough to justify including it on Sesame street, because it is such an important social issue.
Watching the show is optional. You cannot on the one hand say that Sesame Street should not be teaching your children about life and then on the other hand use it to do exactly that for your own children.
like you said, it's all ultimately about PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY.
You can pretty much guess where it goes from there: Gordon explains why divorces happen. Viewers learn that sometimes divorce can be “for the best.” We are assured that Snuffy and his sister Alice will always be loved. And yet when Sesame Street tested the segment on preschoolers, just weeks before it was scheduled to air, it was nothing short of a disaster. The children didn’t know where Snuffy was going to live. They didn’t think his parents loved him. Some worried their own parents might get a divorce. They cried. “It was really the first time we’d produced something, put all this money into it, tested it, and it just didn’t work,” says Susan Scheiner, a longtime Sesame Street researcher, who worked on the segment. “We thought we had it. We thought this was really revolutionary, and then it was just bad.”...Sesame Street killed the segment, and for the two decades since, producers have avoided the D word on air — until now.
The segment itself won’t air on TV — it’s among Sesame Street’s “targeted” programming aimed at specific populations...But perhaps the most important difference had to do with audience: targeting only the kids who are experiencing a divorce or whose parents wanted to make the point of downloading the content.
I don't recall ever stating Sesame Street should be teaching children about life. I was stating to the contrary.
I have no problem with this. Some children will go through situations such as divorce, and it is a difficult topic that honestly might be better heard from their favorite tv show characters than from an emotional mommy or daddy. Regardless, I think Sesame Street generally handles real world children "issues" with great tact. Yes, they may teach something you don't want your child to learn, but your child will learn it at school soon enough, and without your permission.
I think one moral of this story is, always engage with your kids. Each day after Pre-K or school, ask them what they learned. Whether you like it or not, you children are going to learn about divorce. They're going to learn that gay people exist. They're going to learn about s-e-x. By asking them what they learned, this gives you the opportunity to fill in any blanks or answer lingering questions they may have. This still gives you the opportunity as a parent to teach them about life. And they will always remember it.