Re: "Classic Sesame Street Boxset" Out in October
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Originally Posted by Jack Platt
It would stand to reason that the executives of The Children's Television Workshop may have kept "The BEST" (by popularity) of Sesame Street skits preserved. But one may wonder how many complete unedited episodes still exist from the show's early days? (1969-1974 or so.) I don't think there would be a rush to put kiniscope episodes on DVD because of their presumed poor quality and the cost of the restoration process. Hopefully CTW, did the best they could with the prints and shows that are currently available.
Jack
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A few years ago, I would have asked the same question. It all comes back to my general belief that in certain cases (local TV productions, daytime shows, etc.) the likelihood of a show or series being preserved depends on whether the producers/networks/owners of the property believed (at the time) it could be repeated later. The Sesame Street shows were repeated a number of times over the current season (in Chicago, I remember it airing several times a day and in the early 70s, sometimes several episodes were shown over weekends) but those specific shows were never seen again once the new season started. So naturally, I was shocked to find that at least a selection of them had been preserved. Same goes for The Electric Company, although in the case of TEC, I did have a tape dupe of at least one episode (from a B/W kinescope) that later ended up airing on Noggin from a superior video source. I think those B/W kines that circulate on some shows were made for some other purpose, like showing on closed-circuit TV to the Armed Forces or something.
I read an article on line some years ago that described the archiving process for CTW's older shows. The article stated that "the library" (all the old episodes of SS, TEC and other shows) had been duplicated a few times over the years as newer video formats were introduced, and I got the strong impression that (against expectations) they did indeed preserve a large inventory of entire shows, because the article made reference to how much easier it is today (in the digital domain) to find older clips and film inserts to use again, and how in the past, they had to fast forward through an entire old episode to find those segments. It was very interesting reading.
Here's the article:
http://web.archive.org/web/200012042...721/0721.6.htm