Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A promotional image for the special. The Cookie Thief is a 2015 Sesame Street special that aired on PBS Kids on February 16, 2015. [1] The film is set in a new museum on Sesame Street, the Museum of Cookie Art and features Cookie Monster, who has to deal with suspicion that he is eating all of the museum's exhibits.
In 1993 Sesame Workshop recruited Natasha Lance Rogoff to produce Ulitsa Sezam. [3] [5] It was funded by Russian advertising agency VideoArt and the U.S. Agency for International Development. [6] A total of 279 Russians were recruited to help develop and produce the series, and the show's budget totaled US$6 million. [7] [8] Production began in ...
According to the book Sesame Street: A Celebration - 40 Years of Life on the Street the segment was discontinued after 2003 because, "kids didn't know the new Muppets and became confused, and the frenetic pace of the segment raised concerns. The puppets Mooba, Mel, Narf, and Groogel literally bounced off the walls.
Pinball Number Count (or Pinball Countdown) is a collective title referring to 11 one-minute animated segments on the children's television series Sesame Street that teach children to count to 12 by following the journey of a pinball through a fanciful pinball machine.
Episode 847 aired in the United States on February 10, 1976, at 4:30 PM as the 52nd episode of Sesame Street's seventh season. [1] The episode sparked an immediate backlash against series creators Joan Ganz and Lloyd Morrisett and the Children's Television Workshop (CTW, now Sesame Workshop) with an unusually large number of letters from angry ...
3-2-1 Contact is an American science educational television show produced by the Children's Television Workshop (CTW, now known as Sesame Workshop). It aired on PBS from 1980 to 1988 and later ran on Noggin (a joint venture between the CTW and Nickelodeon) from 1999 to 2003.
The special ranked 68th out of 80 shows that week and brought in a 7.7/14 rating/share and was watched by around 12.6 million viewers, finishing third in its timeslot behind ABC's Perfect Strangers (13.0/25, 18.6 million, 44th) and Full House (14.6/26, 21.5 million, 30th), and CBS's Beauty and the Beast (10.7/20, 15.2 million, 55th).
Zhima Jie (Chinese: 芝麻街; pinyin: Zhīma Jiē) is the Chinese co-production of Sesame Street. [1] The show was produced from 1998 to 2001, for a total run of 130 half-hour episodes. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was filmed in Shanghai and aired on Shanghai Television .