- “Elon Musk and Marjorie Taylor Greene are trying to defund Sesame Street and dismantle PBS and NPR,” Rep. Robert Garcia claimed during hearings on the two radical leftist organizations.
- “The Trump administration’s abrupt federal grant cuts have made their way to ‘Sesame Street’—and they risk pulling the rug out from under children,” Fortune Magazine claimed.
- “Sesame Street’s Future Is in Jeopardy”, Newsweek moaned.
- “Why Does Big Bird Look So Sad?” the New York Times asked. According to the paper, the Trump administration’s cuts to USAID “stripped Sesame Workshop of some valuable grants”.
Even assuming that there was some justifiable reason to spend $20 million making a Sesame Street for an oil-rich country which just passed a law legalizing adult men marrying members of the Sesame Street viewing audience, it has nothing to do with funding the American series.
And $20 million might be a big number somewhere, but it’s a drop in the Sesame bucket.
Every
time members of Congress discuss cuts to PBS, Democrats hide behind Big
Bird and Elmo, even sending the giant yellow creature to Congress in
the nineties, but only 4% of Sesame Workshop’s revenues come from the
federal government. If it all went away, even Count Von Count would
hardly notice. 4% of Sesame Workshop’s budget wouldn’t even cover the
salaries for its C-suite which were in excess of $6 million in the last
reported year.
Sesame CEO Stephen Youngwood makes over $1 million
a year, President Sherrie Rollins Westin earns $864,748 a year and
together with the rest of the top executives account for enough money to
bring Sesame Street to at least three different Islamic terrorist
states.
Sesame Workshop took in $187 million in 2023 and $271
million the year before that. The non-profit has assets of $607 million.
Over the last decade, those assets more than doubled.
A
non-profit with over half-a-billion is not about to disappear if we stop
funding Jihad Street in Iraq. The real question is why were taxpayers
ever subsidizing one of the wealthiest non-profit production companies
associated with PBS which can print money by selling merchandise?
20%
of Sesame Workshop’s revenues come from licensing. 50% from
distribution fees and royalties. Millions of dollars continue pouring in
from toy and music licensing.
Sesame Street already gets sizable
amounts of money from liberal foundations and billionaires like Michael
Bloomberg, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, the MacArthur Foundation, and
even CEO Stephen Youngwood chipped in under $49,000 of his million
dollar salary and Sherrie Westin under $100,000 of her nearly seven
figure salary to the Sesame Workshop.
And they can probably afford to chip in some more if Sesame Workshop is really in trouble.
The
real nightmare on Sesame Street came not from the end of its nonprofit
work or PBS productions, but the end of HBO MAX’s lucrative deal to
screen and showcase its episodes. The HBO deal made it clear that Sesame
Street was not primarily a public television property. But as
Discovery, HBO’s parent company, began cutting costs, the Sesame Street
deal was a casualty. It wasn’t Republican budget cuts that hurt Sesame
Street, but cutbacks by the Hollywood studio most closely associated
with funding BLM and other radical leftist movements.
Another
crisis was caused by the Professional Employees International Union
(OPEIU), one of those baffling conglomerate unions of bureaucrats that
includes everything from Canadians to minor league umpires to
leatherworkers, trying to unionize Sesame Street employees.
These
much more serious blows to Big Bird came from lefties, including
unions, not Trump, but you won’t see Democrats talking about how unions
are trying to kneecap Elmo.
The USAID grant to make Sesame Street
in Iraq does point to one source of the organization’s financial
problems, which is that it spends too much of its budget on
international programming while getting little in the way of its
revenues for licensing everything from toys to puppets in international
markets. Sesame Workshop brags about all the work it’s been doing in
Ukraine, Lebanon and India. And that’s work that American taxpayers and
audiences subsidize.
Sesame Street needs to decide whether it
wants to make puppet shows for American kids or for the children of the
world. Big Bird and Elmo remain lucrative in America, but there’s no
reason for American taxpayers to be subsidizing Sesame Street’s outreach
to Syrian migrants or teaching children in India about gender equality.
Democrats
used to pretend that budget cuts to PBS threaten Sesame Street, now
they admit that they’re no longer using Big Bird as an avian or puppet
shield for PBS but for USAID. Elmo isn’t just being used to defend
subsidies for American public television, but for Iraqi public
television, and even families with faded Grovers in the house will draw
the line there.
Sesame Workshop needs to choose between Sesame
Street and Iftah Ya Simsim, Sim Sim Hamara and the other Sesame Streets
for the Muslim world. The Pakistani Sesame Street previously had its
funds cut off in 2012 over allegations of fraud and Sharaa Simsim, the
version that airs in the Muslim terrorist-occupied territories in
Israel, after its leaders rejected a joint production with Israel, had
its funding cut over its problematic content.
Daoud Kuttab, the
executive producer of Sharaa Simsim, the ‘Palestinian’ Sesame Street,
wrote that the “Hamas’ operation against Israel on Oct. 7 was carried
out on the basis of the internationally sanctioned right of people to
resist” and that Hamas leaders did nothing wrong.
His ‘Palestinian’ Sesame Street, was funded by USAID,
Kuttab,
who often pops up representing the ‘Christian’ point of view, also
claimed that the Hamas attacks were a response to “Jewish supremacy” for
offending Muslim religious sensibilities by praying at a Jewish holy
site claimed by Islamic conquerors as a mosque.
But when funds
for Jihad Street were previously pulled, Brookings published an op-ed
claiming that, “Congress Makes Elmo Cry by Defunding Palestinian “Sesame
Street”. And Kuttab recently resurfaced in the New Republic with an
op-ed titled, “I Worked on the “Arab Sesame Street.” It Was Not a Waste
of Money” in which the terror apologist claimed that American taxpayer
funding for it encouraged “peace and tolerance among children of the
Middle East”.
If ‘Palestinian Elmo’ didn’t want to cry, he
shouldn’t have joined Hamas. And if the Sesame Workshop wants to justify
its $6 million C-suite salaries, it should stop working on
international shows and go back to its original mission of entertaining
and teaching American children.
Merchandising and licensing makes
Sesame Street financially viable and quite profitable in the United
States and some western nations. The real problem is that Sesame Street
became a vehicle for foreign aid and government grants in the third
world.
And that is what’s threatening Big Bird and making Elmo sad.
Sesame
Workshop is in trouble because it puts American kids last. Sesame
Street should go back to being a street in the U.S.A. and not in
Pakistan, Bangladesh or Hamastan.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.

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