Sesame Street, American educational television series for children. It debuted in 1969 on the National Educational Television network, an entity that became the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in 1970. The show has been continually broadcast since its inception, making it one of the longest-running shows in American history. It is watched by almost half of all American preschool-age children.
A pioneering children’s education series, Sesame Street features animations, live actors, and a core cast of puppet characters, the Muppets. Designed by Jim Henson, the Muppets—especially the impossibly cute Elmo, Big Bird, the inseparable Bert and Ernie, and Cookie Monster—became American icons and starred in a series of motion pictures and television specials. The show’s name refers to the fictional urban street where many of its characters live and interact. Using brief skits, musical numbers, cartoons, and live-action video footage (e.g., of children in other countries), the program seeks to engage children’s minds and foster learning, basic academic skills, self-esteem, positive socialization, and problem solving.
Although geared toward children, the show also employs a subtle mature sense of humour intended to encourage parents to watch along with their children and take part in the learning process. The show has featured scores of guests, including prominent politicians, journalists, musicians, and actors. Over its long run, the show has won more than 100 Emmy Awards—more than any other program—and has inspired two feature films, along with various television specials and videos. Sesame Street is broadcast in 120 countries, with more than 30 international versions in production.
Since its inception the show has been produced by Sesame Workshop (formerly Children’s Television Workshop), a New York City-based nonprofit organization founded by Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett. Though the show initially aired 130 episodes each season, an eventual decline in funding resulted in seasons of fewer than 30 episodes by the early 21st century. In 2016 the show began running all of its new episodes on the cable channel HBO, with PBS getting the rights to air them nine months later. Sesame Street received licensing fees from the sales of books, toys, and games, as well as from stage shows and theme parks. A documentary about the series, Street Gang: How We Got to Sesame Street, appeared in 2021.