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Sesame Street/Easy Street

Sesame Workshop, which reported revenue of $130,606,413, in 2009, says 35 percent comes from “corporate, foundation and government support.” The latter includes the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Department of Education, the Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

Gary Knell, chief operating officer of Sesame Workshop from 2000–2011, made a salary of $684,144. He is now the president and CEO of National Public Radio. Sesame Workshop President and CEO H. Melvin Ming earned a salary of $447,885 in 2009.

Direct government grants amounted to $7,968,918. Its Form 990 reported lobbying expenses of $1 million a year, in order to keep the federal dollars flowing. Lobbying is carried out by Tracy Garrett, Director of Government Affairs at Sesame Workshop.

Investments include $17,172,065 in a “hedge fund” that is not named, and almost $6 million in “private equity,” similar to the kind of investment fund that Romney used to run.

Senator Jim DeMint has pointed out that “From 2003 to 2006, Sesame Street made more than $211 million from toy & consumer product sales” and that it could obviously survive without public funding.

Speaking of China, Sesame Workshop not only operates on funds borrowed from China but works directly with the Chinese regime and its communist army.

The NSF grant money involves the “One World, One Sky: Big Bird’s Adventure [1]” initiative, designed in part “to foster cross-cultural appreciation between children” and conducted in partnership with the China Youth Development Foundation. On the Chinese end of the relationship, one of the partners [2] is the People’s Liberation Army.

In response to the controversy over Romney’s comments, Sesame Workshop issued a Statement On Our Partnership With PBS Sesame Street [3], saying it has been “a proud partner of PBS for 43 years, and is dependent on PBS to distribute our commercial-free educational programming to all children in the United States.”

It went on, “At a time when improvements in school readiness are recognized as being much needed for a significant number of America’s preschoolers, PBS’s ability to connect Big Bird and Friends to these children is essential. We highly value that connection. Sesame Workshop is a nonpartisan, nonprofit, educational organization. We do not comment on political campaigns, but we’re happy we can all agree that everyone likes Big Bird.”

In fact, Big Bird itself has gotten political over the years, especially in the area of spreading messages to children about how the U.N. has supposedly been a force for good in the world. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was a recent guest [4] on the program to promote the U.N. “Every Woman Every Child movement.”

As we have previously reported, back in 2001, then-U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan appeared on Sesame Street “to help teach children how to resolve conflict.” This was followed, on January 7, 2003, by PBS airing “Kofi Annan: Center of the Storm,” a glowing portrait of Annan and his efforts to “revitalize” the U.N.

The Sesame Street Workshop Annual Benefit Gala always draws an assortment of personalities from politics and the media. This year’s event, which was held on May 30, 2012, in New York City, included [5] such figures as “The Daily Show’s” Jon Stewart. The event was designed to honor Bill Clinton, the disgraced and impeached former president. Stewart posed for a picture [6] with him and later featured him on his program, praising Clinton [7] for using “facts” and “numbers that were real” in his speech at the Democratic National Convention.

 

Cliff Kincaid is the Director of the AIM Center for Investigative Journalism, and can be contacted at cliff.kincaid@aim.org [8].

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