
I still can’t believe Rosita ignored me.
Sesame Street has generally been a forerunner on racial justice issues since, well, it started. Since its start, Sesame Street has been a cute and effective way to introduce young folks to diversity and equality, occasionally with a song and dance to boot. They’re one of the few companies where their track record pretty much speaks for itself.
If you think this isn't an important show, you haven't seen how many racists are already screaming about it online and in the press. Sesame St has 50 years of experience doing this stuff well. Watch it with your kids, watch it with the kid inside you, but either way, watch. https://t.co/idXPTjKmNC
— John Byrne (@dearjohnbyrne) June 5, 2020
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Unfortunately, that’s not how the cookie (Monster) crumbled in Philadelphia. Kelly Rowland did her part to spread awareness on a dream-crushing interaction children had with Rosita.
Sesame Place Philadelphia has issued an apology and said its employees will undergo more training following backlash from a video showing an employee in a Sesame character costume seemingly ignore two small Black girls during a parade.
The video shows the two girls decked out in Cookie Monster and Abby Cadabby sparkly backpacks waiting along the side of the parade as a person in a costume of another character, Rosita, makes their way down. Before reaching the girls, the character gives out high-fives to another small child and an adult, both who appear white.
…
Backlash swiftly followed after the video took off on social media, where others shared similar experiences and videos, and prompted Sesame Street Philadelphia to issue a statement on its Instagram account in which it said it was not the character’s intention to ignore the girls.
Don’t just take NPR’s word for it, take a look for yourself:
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Sesame Street don’t like Black kids?! pic.twitter.com/4DbsVYcw7z
— Kevín (@KevOnStage) July 19, 2022
Sesame Place Philly gave an apology but I’m channeling The Count on this one – things just ain’t adding up:
“The costumes sometimes make it hard to see at lower levels”. Strange how that character sees short WHITE kids just fine.
— Tangled Web (@Presleytal) July 18, 2022
It’s gotta be rough on these meme streets for Sesame — they’re getting cooked right now.
Now Big Bird gotta call an emergency shareholders meeting. Rosita fucking ip the bottom line.臘♀️ pic.twitter.com/rvLkxirwO9
— QueenS (@LittleMs514) July 18, 2022
Street isn’t getting all of the pushback though. Some think those kids should have known better:
https://twitter.com/kiwi8734/status/1549042157775773696?s=20&t=b7F1Qt2qoD6342thTnNRUA
The legal consequences of this remain unclear. Sesame said all the things you’d expect as terminal defense to a lawsuit — apologies, employees will undergo diversity training, etc. The good news is that Sesame Philly didn’t double down and anchor the slighting in religious belief. While I don’t buy the couldn’t see out of my mask story, I hope that whatever went wrong here — hiring or otherwise — gets fixed so I can get back to loving Sesame Street. If not, I might have to find my way there and settle it myself.
… Let’s just hope whatever is going wrong is fixed before The Swedish Chef serves up some prejudice. You know the right loves their bakers.
Sesame Place apologizes after Video Shows 2 Black Girls Being Passed Over At A Parade [NPR]
Chris Williams became a social media manager and assistant editor for Above the Law in June 2021. Prior to joining the staff, he moonlighted as a minor Memelord™ in the Facebook group Law School Memes for Edgy T14s. He endured Missouri long enough to graduate from Washington University in St. Louis School of Law. He is a former boatbuilder who cannot swim, a published author on critical race theory, philosophy, and humor, and has a love for cycling that occasionally annoys his peers. You can reach him by email at [email protected] and by tweet at @WritesForRent.