The Associated Press, Thursday, February 14, 2013, 8:02am (PST) NEW YORK (AP) -- Nearing 1 billion views on YouTube, "Sesame Street" is
headed for Justin Bieber territory.
The children's program is closing in on the kind of rarified digital
milestone usually reserved for the likes of pop stars and cat videos. "Sesame
Street" will soon pass 1 billion views on YouTube and it's celebrating the mark
with a campaign to put itself over the hump.
"Sesame Street" on Thursday will post a video featuring the character Telly
Monster, urging viewers to click the show past the final 20 million views and
unlock a "top secret video." Naturally, for the nonprofit children's series,
it's a teaching moment, too. Don't be surprised if Count von Count shows up to
ponder such a big number.
For "Sesame Street," the milestone -- a first on YouTube for a nonprofit
or U.S. children's media outlet -- reflects the increasingly multimedia
nature of kid entertainment. Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch are now about as
likely to be watched on an iPad, phone or laptop as they are on PBS.
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"We have this theory that if we get content on multiple platforms and
devices, it gives kids and families a chance to reinforce and experience the
curriculum multiple times," says Terry Fitzpatrick, executive vice president of
content and distribution for Sesame Workshop, who emphasizes videos are best
co-viewed with child and parent. "It blows me away to think about how popular
and strong a platform (YouTube) has become for us."
"Sesame Street," a mainstay on PBS since 1970, launched its YouTube channel
in 2006, but has continually expanded its mindfulness of online and mobile
viewers.
Sesame Workshop last year integrated its digital media group into its TV
production, so that digital and interactive elements are considered from the
start of an idea. Its most popular video is "Elmo's Song," which has been
watched nearly 86 million times since being uploaded in 2009. More recently,
another PBS hit, "Downton Abbey," was parodied in "Upside Downton Abbey," a
video where British muppets have trouble drinking tea and eating crumpets
because, well, they're upside down.
Caitlin Hendrickson, strategic partner manager for YouTube's educational
realm, YouTube EDU, says that education is one of the fastest growing content
categories on the Google Inc.-owned site. "Sesame Street" reaching 1 billion
views, she said in a statement, "is proof of their outstanding leadership in
this space and their creative use of YouTube."