I really need to read Joel Stein more often because the man is quite an entertaining read. In his latest column he takes a few shots at Elmo, which may seem like the equivalent of a grown man kicking a preschooler in the face, and it is, but he does seem to have a legitimate beef with the little red Muppet. Now, I usually dismiss tirades against Elmo as uniformed, because most of them accuse him of being somewhat low in IQ compared to the other Muppets on Sesame Street. The thing is, Elmo's character was evolved from a background character in such a way as to give him the mentality of a preschool age or younger child, someone the toddlers could relate to while their older siblings enjoyed other aspects of the show. Stein sees that as a real problem, however. To him, and to Wonder Showzen creators Vernon Chatman and John Lee, who he also quotes in his column, Elmo is a solipsistic creature infinitely infatuated with himself. As Stein puts it, "We are breeding a nation of Anna Nicole Smiths." Being 29 with no kids, I don't follow Sesame Street that closely anymore, but like a rock band that's way past its prime, it sounds like the show's glory days are way behind it now.
JoelStein-related stories
Is Elmo killing Sesame Street?
Behind the scenes of reality TV
Great piece by Joel Stein over at the LA Times. He goes behind the scenes of Bravo's Battle of the Network Reality Stars (which starts tonight). Among the many funny observations: the reality stars are exactly the same in real life as they are on their TV shows.
And that might be the scariest news you'll hear all day.
[via TV Tattle]
Another take on PBS
Joel Stein, writing for the LA Times, has a hilarious (and thought-provoking) take on the recent PBS debate. Stein's view is that more people complain about lack of funding for public broadcasting than actually watch it. He also contends that if PBS were to be tossed in the garbage that cable networks would be scrambling to pick up the most popular shows: "Nickelodeon and the Disney Channel would be in a bidding war for Sesame Street, and they'd be willing to produce a lot more episodes than the 26 a year that PBS has squeezed it down to." I've always been an advocate of public broadcasting, but I like Stein's no-nonsense approach. Even if I don't ultimately agree with him, I can't dismiss his viewpoint entirely.













