Rappel du premier message :
Un classique: John John fut un régulier à l'époque, hier à aujourd'hui!
Un classique: John John fut un régulier à l'époque, hier à aujourd'hui!
I guess Dr. Nobel Price's 'dirt-pusher' must've blown up in business, everybody uses them now. From season 14.
I do not own this. All rights belong to Sesame Workshop.
Take off, hosers! Time for Sesame Street, eh?! From 1985, the Canadian broadcast of the best darn kids show ever (Ep 2058: Snuffy joins the Grouchketeers). Includes "A Quarter Has a Caribou on It", and "There's a Big Heap of Trash at the End of the Rainbow". CLICK ON SHOW MORE FOR INFO AND LINKS!
The US airdate was March 27, 1985. I can't say for sure if it aired on the same day in Canada.
Too early for the Canadian Muppets, I'm afraid. Basil the polar bear, Louis the otter, and Dodi the bush pilot, debuted in 1987.
Canadian cartoons: Bonne Nuit (Good Night), Caribou Puzzle, Cheval (Horse), Claymation Dog Fetches a Ball, My Poupée (My Doll), Fill in the Blank Puzzle (Wheels), Letter L, Sand Animals (L for Leopard), A Quarter Has a Caribou on It, Rubik's Cube Blowup, Turn Off the Lights, Counting 12 Eggs and Chicks, and the Where Does This Belong Puzzle
Canadian film/song segments: Cat's Cradle (Hand String Game), Everybody's Doing It (Making It Go Round), I Am A Fisherman, I Love Animals, Je T'Aime means I Love You, Professor's Full and Empty Can Race w/Al Simmons, and Supermarket Song.
You'll find them all linked via the Canadian playlist, enjoy! With mucho thanks to +Sesame 101.
PLAYLISTS: http://bit.ly/Sesame_Street_FULL_Epis..., http://bit.ly/Canadian_Sesame_Street
http://www.bobanddoug.com/sounds.html
http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Sesame_Park
http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Episode_... (US Version)
http://mentalfloss.com/article/51399/...
Here is a very short clip from an off-air recording of an episode of SESAME STREET that featured Canadian content (sometimes referred to as "Canadian Sesame Street") Sadly the tape was in terrible shape and was literally falling apart as we transferred it. Hoping to find more episodes (and in better quality!)
Hello, out there! No hugging allowed right now, so here's a bit of virtual love from the multicultural kids of Canadian Sesame Street (Episode 3370), with thanks to +RoliHashmi2013. Aired in 1995, I'm thinking it may have been filmed in the late '80s or so. Come on, dig those tube socks! And a personal shout-out to the boys playing tetherball. I see you there, little man, you go, hon ;-)
PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/Canadian_Sesame_Street
https://muppet.fandom.com/wiki/Sesame...
US Broadcast: https://muppet.fandom.com/wiki/Episod...
https://www.cbc.ca/arts/in-canada-ses...
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-...
https://www.ket.org/education/news/ha...
https://www.pbs.org/parents/thrive/ho...
https://www.who.int/emergencies/disea...
https://www.canada.ca/en/public-healt...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TinyDancer500
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tinyd500/
Web: https://bit.ly/Sesame_Street_Lyrics_A...
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/TinyDanc...
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheSesameStr...
From 1995, the opening credits for Episode 3370 (US Air Date: April 14, 1995), with thanks to @RoliHashmi2013. Blocked from uploading the whole thing, I'm posting the bits and pieces I can. Luckily, the street scenes have been posted on Dailymotion (link below).
VIDEO (Street Scenes): http://bit.ly/2YMi2Kg
PLAYLIST: http://bit.ly/Canadian_Sesame_Street
https://muppet.fandom.com/wiki/Sesame...
US Broadcast: https://muppet.fandom.com/wiki/Episod...
https://www.cbc.ca/arts/in-canada-ses...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TinyDancer500
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tinyd500/
Web: https://bit.ly/Sesame_Street_Lyrics_A...
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/TinyDanc...
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheSesameStr...
Um... Ok.
Taken from an episode of Sesame Street on CBC, June 1994.
More end credits, introducing the well-known Barkley closing sequence, complete with the funky chimes and PBS logo.
Taken from episode #1450 (4 episodes after the 12th season premiere), this is exactly what would be presented on the Old School: Volume 3 DVD, if they hadn't discontinued the credit crawls.
From around 1983, a pretty neat French alphabet cartoon from the Canadian version of Episode 1813, with thanks to +Sesame 101. So eerie to see the John Lennon style glasses for the letter L ("lunettes"). NOTE: Slightly out-of-synch as you can tell from the ending. I didn't think it detracted from the video. CLICK ON SHOW MORE FOR LINKS!
PLAYLISTS: http://bit.ly/Canadian_Sesame_Street, http://bit.ly/Sesame_Street_Cartoons_1
http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Sesame_Park
http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Episode_... (US content)
On Nov. 10, Sesame Street turns 50, and to state the obvious, plenty has changed — even if Big Bird's still learning to count that high. In 1969, kids actually watched a thing called television. Oscar the Grouch? He was orange. And Cookie Monster's diet sure didn't look like Captain Vegetable's.
But over the decades, Sesame Street's educational bent has never wavered, remaining as constant and true as a loyal rubber duckie. Generations of preschoolers have learned their ABCs watching Sesame Street. They've learned about friendship and kindness and the consequences of eating in bed. And for kids growing up on this side of the border, there was a bonus lesson snuck in: Sesame Street taught us how to be Canadian.W is for what?!
Matthew Hayday is a history professor at the University of Guelph who researches Canadian children's media, and he's studied the show's influence on national identity. In 2016, he published a paper on the topic. (Its spot-on title? "Brought To You by the Letters C,R,T, and C: Sesame Street and Canadian Nationalism.") And the paper charts the twisted journey of how Sesame Street, a staple of just about every North American childhood, even made it to our airwaves.
Sesame Street in 1969. The series marks its 50th anniversary on Nov. 10. (Getty Images)
Surprised by all that? He was, too. So let's rehash a bunch of the details.
It's not like Sesame Street itself is Canadian. Oscar occasionally talks up his family from the Maritimes, but sure as you won't find a Brooklyn brownstone in Vancouver, that bit's obvious. The show's a U.S. creation, developed by the New York–based Children's Television Workshop (CTW), and it was first broadcast on American networks. Indeed, it wouldn't officially hit Canadian TV until Sept. 28, 1970, when CBC and its 32 affiliate stations around the country picked up the show, then billed (in a CBC press release) as a "revolutionary educational series."
Here's some old footage of Lloyd Robertson announcing that news on CBC. (He throws to a clip of O.G. Sesame Street, too — and through 2019 eyes, it's like something from another dimension.)
A Tribute To Emilio Delgado (Luis).
R.I.P
Emilio Delgado (Luis)
(1940-2022)
#RIPEmilioDelgado
#EmilioDelgado
#SesameStreet
Sesame Street Calypso Intro (US vs. Canadian Comparison)
Requested by Baby Lamb Creations.
In honor of Sesame Street's 50th Anniversary
Rosita is missing from Sesame Place after allegations of "racial bias" on the part of an actor playing the character during a parade. It's weird to see Sesame Street being accused of racism when the very first kids you see on the very first episode are not white. So let's talk about muppets getting cancelled.