It is often used in modern media today, especially in shows like The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That!, Arthur, Dragon Tales, Blue's Clues and Clifford the Big Red Dog. It would later find its way into Hanna-Barbera's sound library, and its earliest usage by them was The Ruff and Reddy Show episode "Rumble in the Jungle", first broadcast on December 27, 1958, and would be used in some of their cartoons (like The Flintstones, The Jetsons, The Huckleberry Hound Show, Wacky Races and The New Scooby-Doo Movies.), before the sound made its way to other studios like Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount Pictures and Universal Studios.
PLAY WITH ME SESAME ERNIE SAYS FOOD TV
Its earliest known usage is in "Outcast Marbles", a Gumby episode from 1956, and later would find its way into the TV Spots library, first used in the Popeye cartoon "When There's a Will" in 1960. It was mainly used for when someone bounces around or an object bounces like a ball, generally used for a comedic effect, but can oddly enough be used as a hit sound as well. First heard: "Outcast Marbles" (a Gumby episode).
PLAY WITH ME SESAME ERNIE SAYS FOOD FULL
I tried to watch Sesame Street of today and was very disappointed, There is hardly any of what made it special or original back in the day (CGI characters, mundane lessons.etc.). The colors, the catchy tunes, the characters. Sesame Street hands down taught me more about letters, numbers, and reading than anything I learned early on in school. The seasons, as the years in our lives.go so fast.Īnd oh yeah, I can definitely is a CONTAINER of milk, folks. "It's Springtime" is a beautiful little song/visual which makes me happy and sad at the same time. "My name is Fred.my name is Fred.when I get up I like to butter a slice'o.BREAD!!" The chef that wiped out with the cakes, pies.etc. which got turned into powder or cherries on the sundaes The little red ball that rolled through the flags.etc. Grover the Waiter (the gigantic hamburger.the alphabet soup."HEY CHARLIE!!!.) The spaceship that dropped off the lowercase n
Paul Benedict (Mr.Bentley from "The Jeffersons") as the Number Painter.
Holy cow, where to start? Some of my favorites: What’s your favorite “Sesame Street” video, be it old or new? In a video featuring the catchy tune “I Love my Hair,” a brown girl puppet tells viewers, "Don't need a trip to the beauty shop, 'cause I love what I got on top," and goes on to describe all the things her hair can do and how much she loves it just as it is. Sadly, his viewers aren’t monsters, but that doesn’t mean they can’t know what the word “on” means! “Anything is possible when you smell like a monster and know the word ‘on,’” he explains at the end.īut “Sesame Street” doesn’t limit its educational bits to just vocabulary, letters and counting – they also take on topics that affect self-esteem, like appreciating one’s natural hair color and texture. In the video, Grover dons a towel in a replica of the now-familiar bathroom, and tells his viewers to look at themselves and then back to Grover. The Old Spice parody falls in the vein of some of “Sesame Street’s” other spoofs on more adult themes, like when HBO’s “True Blood” turned into “True Mud,” or when they did a riff on the AMC hit “Mad Men.” If we’d had the ability to tweet, Facebook “like” and otherwise share stuff we think is awesome online back in the ‘70s and ‘80s, no doubt classic "Sesame Street" clips like the “Pinball Number Count” would have gone viral like some of the “Street’s” latest segments.Īside from the Katy Perry cleavage debacle (a video that made its Web rounds despite the fact that it won’t actually air on the children’s program), there have been a string of other videos passed around like lightning online, like Grover’s take on the now iconic Old Spice commercial “Smell like a Monster” and this week’s ode to rocking what you’ve got, “I Love My Hair.”