Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On an episode of Cake Boss, Buddy and his bakers visited Sesame Street, and Danny could be seen inside Oscar's trash can. He tries his best Oscar impression by saying "I live in the trash." Oscar can also be seen at the end when Buddy reveals his cake, but then goes back in his trash can, ostensibly to get away from the laughing and cheering.
Though Big Bird and Oscar were his main characters, Spinney also performed as other characters. At one point, he created and performed Bruno the Trashman, a full-bodied puppet representing a garbage man, who also carried Oscar's trash can. Bruno was used until the foam plastic of the character broke down. [17]
In the episode Sesame Street Visits the Firehouse, Gordon mentions that Oscar's trash can has "Two elephants, a puppy, a rhino, a goat, and a worm." The interior of Oscar's trash can was first explored in the 1999 film The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland when Elmo impatiently enters the trash can in search of his blanket. In Season 46, as part ...
Realizing Maria is right, Miss Finch officially declares Sesame Street to be his home and leaves with her job complete. Afterwards, Big Bird reunites with Mr. Snuffleupagus. As everyone celebrates Big Bird's return, Oscar the Grouch gets carried around the block in his trash can by Bruno the Trashman in order to get away from everyone's happiness.
United Airlines has a new "chief trash officer," and his name is Oscar the Grouch. That's right: the Chicago-based carrier paired up with Sesame Workshop on an education campaign to help travelers ...
With Oscar's help, some of the Sesame Street residents (Zoe, Telly, Gordon, Maria, Cookie Monster, and Big Bird) go to Grouchland to find Elmo, but when they encounter a Grouch police officer and try to ask him for assistance, they end up getting arrested as they are informed that it is against the law to ask for help in Grouchland, and they ...
Securing a nom for an animated movie in the top category can be tricky. Only three animated films have ever been nominated for best picture in Oscars history: “Beauty and the Beast” (1991 ...
Every few years, the Academy tweaks the rules for its animated feature category, with the net result that the nominees tend to skew ever more mainstream. That makes it tough for most of this year ...