An HIV-Positive Muppet

Bob Peale

angeli ribelli
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Sep 4, 1999
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An HIV-positive Muppet is moving into Sesame Street.
The character, who will be a five-year-old female, will be unveiled this September on the South African version of the show, called Takalani Sesame. The Muppet is still being designed and doesn't yet have a name or a color. She will interact with the show's other Muppets, including Elmo, in an attempt to overcome the myths that surround HIV and AIDS in a country where more than 10 percent of the population is infected.

The new addition to the Muppet roster was announced this week at the 14th International AIDS Conference in Barcelona by Sesame Street Workshop's vice president and senior adviser, Joel Schneider.

"This character will be fully a part of the community," Schneider tells Reuters. "She will have high self-esteem. Women are often stigmatized about HIV and we are providing a good role model as to how to deal with one's situation and how to interact with the community."

Although scripts are still being hammered out, officials at the South African Broadcasting Corporation, which airs the program, have a general idea of how the character will behave.

"It will have, in a childlike manner, open discussions about sexuality, HIV and AIDS, and death and dying," the broadcaster's Yvonne Kgame tells the Associated Press. "The reality is that children as young as they are affected very closely by HIV/AIDS. They experience death and dying of people very close to them."

South Africa has the world's largest population infected by HIV, with more than 4.7 million people living with the virus.

The HIV-educational outreach was initiated by Sesame Street in cooperation with South Africa's Department of Education, the South African Broadcasting Corporation and the U.S. Agency for International Development.

"Sesame Street works with all of its partners to develop content specific to that country and that's what we do broadcasters all over the world," says Sesame Street Workshop spokeswoman Beatrice Chow.

And for those parents worried that the children's show may be crossing the line into sex ed, Schneider says the subject matter would be handled like all serious topics with appropriate delicacy.

"Not every show will deal explicitly with HIV/AIDS," he tells Reuters. "We want to show that here is an HIV-positive member of our community who you can touch and interact with. We will be very careful to fashion our messages so they are appropriate to the age group. What do I do when I cut my finger? What do I do when you cut your finger? That sort of thing."

The show is no stranger to difficult themes, having taken on school-bullying, death and even the September 11 tragedy.

Sesame Street, which is broadcast in 70 countries, has no immediate plans to debut the character for American viewers. But it's possible she could turn up on other international editions of the show where AIDS education is needed.
 
Sesame street is such a great way to disperse vast amounts of necessary information to very young children who might not ever have heard about such things before, or at least in such an open manner. Let's just be glad that the producers are so careful about what they do - it would be far too easy to exploit such a great system.
A muppet with HIV is a fantastic addition to the African show, after all - it's a pressing issue in Africa, and the world for that matter. I say, good for them. Maybe the US could use a Muslim muppet right about now... :rolleyes:

:rose:
 
Wow. I'm impressed. SS has come a long way from when I watched it. I am glad that people realize what a tremendous need for education of delicate matters our world has.

Thumbs up to Sesame Street for this one.
 
HIV is a politically-correct, made-up disease, to cover up lifestyle in the United States and poverty and mayhem in third world countries (and to justify, gasp, a HUGE transfer of wealth from the United States).

I heard a caller on O'Reilly with a great line...

"How about an Abstinence Muppet."

First we scare seniors and minorities.

Now we scare kids.

Adults...
 
SINthysist said:
HIV is a politically-correct, made-up disease, to cover up lifestyle in the United States and poverty and mayhem in third world countries (and to justify, gasp, a HUGE transfer of wealth from the United States).

I heard a caller on O'Reilly with a great line...

"How about an Abstinence Muppet."

First we scare seniors and minorities.

Now we scare kids.

Adults...

I don't want to sound like a bitch here - ok, maybe I do, but HIV is not a made up disease. People die. that's not make-believe.

I think the whole point is not to scare kids. Children are often sheltered from the difficult and frightening aspects of their world, and that leads to further fear and loathing of those they fear.
 
You are right. People do die. People who take AZT die even faster...



You know, we used to bleed people with leeches, too.



Don't let emotion get in the way of the facts!
 
Man, my three-year old barely knows how to tell us when she is sick.

What I need is SS to teach her to look for disease.

And I was counting on the ABC's.

Not the HIV's...

What next?

Gonorreah Elmo...

Drip drip drip,
Drip drip drip,
Drip drip drip drip drip....
 
http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20020917/capt.1032288016.south_africa_aids_muppet_joh106.jpg

Kami, a mustard colored furry Muppet, who likes nature, telling stories and collecting stuff, is seen during a news conference in Cape Town, South Africa, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2002. She also happens to be HIV-positive. To plaudits from education officials and AIDS activists, the producers of South Africa's version of Sesame Street on Tuesday unveiled the world's first Muppet infected with the virus that causes AIDS. (AP Photo)
Yahoo! News - South Africa's Sesame Street Gets HIV+ Muppet

In the full story, it's revealed that this character was originally developed for the American show, but rejected.
 
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