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Has Cookie Monster given up sweets?
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typoon
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Apr 7, 2005, 04:44 PM
 
'Sesame Street' advocates healthy eating habits

WTF? I thought that was the parents job.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/TV/0....ap/index.html

By Chelsea J. Carter
Associated Press
Thursday, April 7, 2005 Posted: 4:08 PM EDT (2008 GMT)

NEW YORK (AP) -- Something must be wrong in the land of Muppets.

First PBS announced that "Sesame Street" would kick off its 35th season this week with a multiyear story arc about healthy habits. No problem there; childhood obesity rates are soaring. Then I learned of changes that turned my "Sesame Street" world upside-down.

My beloved blue, furry monster -- who sang "C is for cookie, that's good enough for me" -- is now advocating eating healthy. There's even a new song -- "A Cookie Is a Sometimes Food," where Cookie Monster learns there are "anytime" foods and "sometimes" foods.

"Sacrilege!" I cried. "That's akin to Oscar the Grouch being nice and clean." (Co-workers gave me strange looks. But I didn't care.)

Being a journalist, I did the only thing I knew how to do. I investigated why "Sesame Street" gave Cookie Monster a health makeover.

The answer would lead me into a world where television producers worked with health experts and politicians, a place where Cookie Monster does care about his health, and by association, the health of children.

The first place I headed was the Internet. On the Sesame Street Web site, little had changed. There was Cookie Monster, in all his blue furriness. He was holding a plate of cookies. He was chomping on a cookie. He still looked the same. But as we all know, looks can be deceiving.

So I searched the site for news on Cookie Monster and up popped a press release about the show's "Healthy Habits for Life" emphasis. Buried near the bottom was a one-sentence mention about Cookie Monster eating fewer cookies.

But what did that mean? Scarfing one plateful instead of two?
Talking vegetables

I picked up the telephone. "What's going on with Cookie Monster?" I asked the "Sesame Street" press office. "Why are you doing this?"

They sent me to Dr. Rosemarie T. Truglio, the show's vice president of research and education.

She said the show changes every year, focusing not just on teaching numbers and letters but also emotional and physical health. With the rise in childhood obesity, Truglio said "Sesame Street" is concentrating on the need to teach children about healthy foods and physical activity.

This season, each episode opens with a "health tip" about nutrition, exercise, hygiene and rest.

Truglio said "Sesame Street" also will introduce new characters, such as talking eggplants and carrots, and offer parodies, such as "American Fruit Stand." Even guest stars will address healthy activities, such as Alicia Keys talking and singing about the importance of physical activity.

Even politicians have gotten into the act, filming public service announcements with "Sesame Street" residents. In one taping, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist taught Elmo to exercise -- jumping up and down. In another, Sen. Hillary Clinton and the small red monster discuss the various textures and tastes of foods.

But what about their position on Cookiegate?

"Even Cookie Monster is learning to control his cookie cravings," Frist told me by e-mail. "His sage advice opened our eyes to the simple joys of a tasty cookie and now reminds us that moderation is the key to healthy living."

Cookie Monster was not available for comment. (I'm hoping he hasn't gone too Hollywood.)

"We are not putting him on a diet," said his spokesman, Truglio. "And we would never take the position of no sugar. We're teaching him moderation."
'Sometimes food'

The furry one also plans to try different kinds of cookies (read: healthier cookies) rather than his just staple, chocolate chip.

But will he still scarf his food? Yes, plus the occasional object, Truglio said.

But isn't that unhealthy? Her reply: He's still Cookie Monster.

Cookie Monster appears to be happy with the new "sometimes food" song, because at the end he warbles: "Is sometimes now?"

"Yes," he's told.

So there it is. Cookie Monster still gobbles cookies, he's just a healthier version of his old self. His eyes are still googly, his fur is still scruffy and he's still messy.

Even "Sesame Street" recognizes that we all need guilty pleasures.
"Evil is Powerless If the Good are Unafraid." -Ronald Reagan

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JohnSmithXTREME
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Apr 7, 2005, 04:55 PM
 
I doubt that will change the way that lazy parents bring up their children. Parents will keep giving their kids too much sugar, and the little sods will keep getting fatter.
     
historylme
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Apr 7, 2005, 04:58 PM
 
Next thing you know, they'll try to preven drug use... no wait, gun use!
     
andi*pandi
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Apr 7, 2005, 05:06 PM
 
I'm not sure cookie monster was ever supposed to be a role model.

no matter how much kids tv shows the kids exercising, eating healthy, etc., that doesn't mean they will do it. No matter how much you try to induce a 2 year old to eat veggies, they won't want to.
     
TailsToo
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Apr 7, 2005, 06:22 PM
 
It's a sad day when Cookie Monster is politically incorrect. It's about time that parents actually start doing something like actual parenting and stop blaming the rest of the world for their lack of effort.
     
Mafia
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Apr 7, 2005, 07:29 PM
 
carrot monster?! doesn't have the same effect.
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SimpleLife
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Apr 7, 2005, 08:41 PM
 
Originally posted by Mafia:
carrot monster?! doesn't have the same effect.
How about "cauliflower monster"?
     
Mafia
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Apr 7, 2005, 08:47 PM
 
Originally posted by SimpleLife:
How about "cauliflower monster"?
now that has PIZAZZ!
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Eriamjh
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Apr 8, 2005, 07:37 AM
 
Me was wondering when they was gonna do something about the way Cookie Monster talks. Me thinks that he is a bad role model.

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Millennium
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Apr 8, 2005, 08:24 AM
 
At least three generations of children have been raised on Sesame Street -including Cookie Monster's gluttonous habits- without any problems. It is only in this recent generation that we have begun to see obesity trouble, and Sesame Street has not changed since then. Logic dictates that this cannot be the cause; we must look elsewhere to find that.

This is nothing more than a society looking for an easy scapegoat, rather than taking responsibility for the mistakes it has made in recent years.
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ManOfSteal
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Apr 8, 2005, 08:35 AM
 
     
   
 
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