Streaming Sesame Street: Vol. 2 - Old School Online. Streaming Sesame Street: Vol. 2 – Old School Online.

Movie Title: Sesame Street: Vol. 2 – Old School
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Sesame Street: Vol. 2 – Old School is available for streaming or downloading.

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This DVD state, released on my 40th birthday, proved the appropriate gift!

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But let’s fetch the negatives out of the arrangement first, to elaborate why I gave it four stars rather than five:

1) One reviewer for Volume 1 complained that there was too exiguous material extracted from a six-year period of broadcasts. Unfortunately, Volume 2 presents the same limits.

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2) If a Volume 3 is ever released, please omit the Falling Baker skit for the Number Two. With the fresh two volumes, it’s been repeated to death. Give us more variety — at least treat us to that elusive Number One skit (Baker falling with a wedding cake) .

3) Same packaging is outmoded as in Volume 1, with two of the three discs annoying stacked on top of each other.

4) One Super-Grover skit appears to be needlessly edited with current material.

5) That irritating disclaimer saying the DVDs may not be appropriate teaching material for today’s kids. (Might the lobster-trap segment be too un-PC? ) My 3-year-old nephew absolutely loves watching Volume 1, so I anticipate the same reception for Volume 2.

Nonetheless, this DVD status almost earned five stars from me for two main reasons:

1) The nostalgia do was remarkable enough to nearly override the negatives.

2) There’s one absolutely can’t-miss-feature in Disc One — the test pilot outmoded to pitch the point to to PBS! It’s one of the freakiest gems in this release, with a heavy and admirable “Soul Reveal” travel running through the episode, an atypically low Mr. Hooper, no kids singing “Sunny Day” (it took a moment for me to scrutinize the enlighten), and precious gripping skits that I wish had been included in Volume 1 (notably Triangle & Square) . And is that the actor that I deem it is, playing a FOURTH Gordon??!!

As with Volume 1, I nearly cried seeing some skits that jogged bittersweet memories out of my subconscious (horseback mailman delivering an divulge of “The Lifeless Truth” in the outskirts of Kentucky), and some that I understanding I’d never study again but which I’m grateful to say I bear at last (cows being fed hay in winter) . Some material almost unsettled me as a kid but I now secure hilarious (King Minus), while some is of unbiased downright laugh-out-loud quality (Grover’s show-and-tell with Maria’s head) .

You’ll also come by the following: Telephone Rock, I’m a hard-working dog, surprisingly more of Roosevelt Franklin, Cookie Monster in flamboyant Elton-John wardrobe, the moment when Woof-Woof’s name was changed to Barkley (a change I voted against as a kid, but which I now can’t imagine having occurred otherwise), and one moment when Snuffy came so halt to being discovered by David. I could go on! But you’ll have to see for yourselves.

I must admit my hope that, if there’s a Volume 3, it’s willing to go serve and cloak more of ‘69-’74.

Genius Products picks up the reigns for this second volume of nostalgic Sesame Street episodes aimed at adults who remember the series from their childhood.

The location contains five complete, hour-long episodes from the 6th through 10th seasons, 57 bonus segments, an unaired test pilot, a 12-page booklet with behind-the-scenes information and photos, and a special collectible animation cell from the classic provocative segment “Pinball Number Count” featuring vocals by The Pointer Sisters.

Episode screech includes the first episode with Roscoe Orman, the actor who level-headed plays Gordon today. Also the first appearance of Muppet characters Rodeo Rosie, Oscar’s trashman Bruno, the Two-Headed Monster and Barkley the Dog. Well-known songs include “What’s the Name of that Song? ” and “A Song From Kermit” with celebrity appearances by Judy Collins, Henry Winkler (as the Fonze), Paul Simon, Lily Tomlin, Richard Pryor, Ray Charles and others.
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