{"id":21300,"date":"2022-07-21T14:18:00","date_gmt":"2022-07-21T14:18:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/sesame-place-falls-short-of-sesame-street-and-after-my-own-childs-visit-i-should-have-known\/"},"modified":"2022-07-21T14:18:00","modified_gmt":"2022-07-21T14:18:00","slug":"sesame-place-falls-short-of-sesame-street-and-after-my-own-childs-visit-i-should-have-known","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/sesame-place-falls-short-of-sesame-street-and-after-my-own-childs-visit-i-should-have-known\/","title":{"rendered":"Sesame Place falls short of “Sesame Street” \u2014 and after my own child’s visit, I should have known"},"content":{"rendered":"
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“Racist Theme Park” is not a reputation any amusement park wants to earn, let alone one that licenses the branding of the iconically positive and inclusive children’s TV show “Sesame Street.” But this week Sesame Place, a Philadelphia-area children’s attraction, was forced to issue an apology for an event captured in a parent’s disturbing video that went viral. In the video, which the park initially sought to downplay, two little girls rocking Cookie Monster and Abby Cadabby gear appear to be deliberately snubbed by an employee, dressed as the Muppet character Rosita, who walks along a line of spectators handing out high-fives but shakes her finger “no” at the two little girls as they reach for her.<\/p>\n

I initially came across the video on social media. It originated on Instagram, with the following caption: “THIS DISGUSTING person blatantly told our kids NO then proceeded to hug the little white girl next to us! Then when I went to complain about it, they looking at me like I’m crazy. “<\/p>\n

On “Good Morning America” \u200b\u200bWednesday, parent Jodi Brown expanded on the Instagram post and the hurt that followed the encounter. “They were thinking they did something wrong when they did absolutely nothing wrong. And then to see other children be acknowledged when you’re not acknowledged…”<\/p>\n