Sesame Street introduces first homeless Muppet

I was just on Bing not too long ago and happened to stumble upon this:
'Now we don't have our own place to live': 'Sesame Street' introduces first homeless character

Lily, the hot pink puppet with red hair, is the first character to be homeless on "Sesame Street."

She was first introduced to the series in 2011 where she explained that her family was experiencing food insecurity -- they didn't have enough to eat.

In new online clips, the seven-year-old character explains that she is staying with friends on "Sesame Street" because her family has lost their home.

"Now we don't have our own place to live, and sometimes I wonder if we'll ever have our own home," Lily expressed to Elmo.

Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit organization behind "Sesame Street," is reintroducing Lily as the first homeless character on the show in order to provide hope for those children that are currently without a home of their own. The story line was created as a new initiative, and part of the Sesame Street in Communities program, to alleviate the stigma around homelessness.

In the videos, Lily is also shown to be supported by Elmo who tells her "we got this" and that her friends will always be there for her.

Sesame Street in Communities has also provided resources for parents and caregivers with free, bilingual resources and activities and suggestions that help mitigate the effects of homelessness in children. There are videos that show Lily being loved by her friends Elmo and Sofia and others that show other kids who don't have homes sharing what the idea of "home" means to them.

One in 20 children younger than 6 years old in the United States experienced homelessness, according to a 2017 release of a 2014-15 report by the Administration for Children and Families, a division of the Department of Health & Human Services.

“We know children experiencing homelessness are often caught up in a devastating cycle of trauma—the lack of affordable housing, poverty, domestic violence, or other trauma that caused them to lose their home, the trauma of actually losing their home, and the daily trauma of the uncertainty and insecurity of being homeless,” said Sherrie Westin, President of Global Impact and Philanthropy at Sesame Workshop in a press release. “We want to help disrupt that cycle by comforting children, empowering them, and giving them hope for the future. We want them to know that they are not alone and home is more than a house or an apartment—home is wherever the love lives.”
https://www.usatoday.com/story/life...treet-addresses-homelessness-lily/2287252002/
 
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Shouldn't kids try to let the state know if a family isn't providing shelter for a kid? I mean, sympathy aside, at a certain point the kid is getting fucked up because he's homeless. Like people say, it's not the kid's fault, so why recognize homelessness as something that's ok? It's like having a muppet whose parents beat him and he's always got bruises, to teach people about the diversity of child abuse...
 
Yeah, all the broadcast stations are still broadcasting. Modern TVs have a digital tuner, if you have an old TV you need a digital - analog converter, but they are pretty cheap. Aside from that all you need is an antenna.

I still sometimes watch stuff on the antenna from time to time. The switch to digital was a total scam, though, it was just a way for cable companies to make broadcast TV less usable, as it reduces the range. Instead of a snowy image or an image with a weird shadow, you just get nothing. Instead of watching a football game that goes staticky now and then instead it freezes and you get weird sounds and video artifacts until it gets a new key frame or whatever.
It has certainly made TV less portable than it used to be. We used to had a TV in our RV and picked up any channel even in movement.

The analog-to-digital switch added support for a lot more dense data transmission. So higher audio/video quality. But yeah, the digital dropoff is a bitch.

A good outdoor antenna can really boost the signal though. Like 100+ mile range. They're pretty cheap, you can get one for less than $40 on amazon.
That is your best hope. My grandoarents always had the "Channel Master" brand antennas, rotors and towers. Anyone who gets a house with a tower still standing is best to keep it up.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Marvin
This is a great thing. Sesame Street's demographic is the right age group for kids to start understanding that other kids have different troubles because of greater problems. Homelessness is a terrible societal ill and young kids should start getting the idea that it's not just something that happens to people you'll never meet.
 
Shouldn't kids try to let the state know if a family isn't providing shelter for a kid? I mean, sympathy aside, at a certain point the kid is getting fucked up because he's homeless. Like people say, it's not the kid's fault, so why recognize homelessness as something that's ok? It's like having a muppet whose parents beat him and he's always got bruises, to teach people about the diversity of child abuse...
This is theoretically true, but honestly, many times kids are better off in homeless shelters than the American foster care system.
Also if foster care were better, and children were safely taken from homeless situations, then that wouldn't stop kids from suffering from homelessness. They'd just suffer differently, being taken from their parents and everything. Overall as long as Sesame Street doesn't try and present homelessness as something that's okay and not a problem, this can only be for the better. It might just seem like a thin line between telling children they'll be okay and have support in bad situations VS. telling children bad situations are good in the first place or something, but the intent is probably a lot clearer in the show itself rather than an article just reporting on it.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: DirkBloodStormKing
Shouldn't kids try to let the state know if a family isn't providing shelter for a kid? I mean, sympathy aside, at a certain point the kid is getting fucked up because he's homeless. Like people say, it's not the kid's fault, so why recognize homelessness as something that's ok? It's like having a muppet whose parents beat him and he's always got bruises, to teach people about the diversity of child abuse...
I think they're aiming their sights a bit low for now; as people upthread have shown, there's plenty of people who view the homeless as gutter slime undeserving of kindness of sympathy.
 
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