What scared you the most on Sesame Street?

VanHalbgott@lemmus.org to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world – 44 points –
41

Those things that snuck into your house and went yupyupyupyupyupyup uh huh uh huh may have freaked me out a little.

Me too! I had a dream when I was 4 or 5. In the dream I woke up and looked out the window at the backyard. There were a bunch of those things circling the tetherball pole in the yard and a light was shining down on them like a UFO hovered above them or something. But their yips got louder and more terrifying. I tried to hide but it only got worse. That was when I woke up. I couldn't stand the sound or sight of those things for years.

I-beam

If you don't watch the video: it's footage of an I-beam being created at a factory. As an adult, this is not scary. As a young child, this is terrifying. There is no narration, none of your Sesame Street friends are here with you. This is a large glowing letter I that the camera never breaks away from. It's mashed and chunks appear to break off of it. The music is a ominous sounding piano with occasional trumpet bursts and anvil clanks. At the very end the camera freezes on the I-beam and we get two final crashing piano and anvil notes. The whole thing lasts less than a minute, and then we're on to the next segment. There's no context for what you just saw, no lead-in, and no one makes mention of it after.

It scared the hell out of me. If I saw this early in the morning, I'd be in an anxious state for the rest of the day.

Coming in to this I really wondered how anybody could sincerely find anything on Sesame Street scary but watching this, I don't think it would have scared me but I get it. It's the music that really does it, unsettling and ominous and with the lack of context you described, I get it.

I have no memory of this as a kid, but even as a grown-ass mid 40s adult, it's weirdly ominous and unsettling. Wtf were they thinking?

To the confused comments, the mind of a pre-schooler (the target demographic) works differently from that of an adult. There were a ton of episodes, and they tried lots of different things, and I'm sure lots of very little kids were frightened by the show now and then. Actually, I got curious and found this Youtube video of some guy's "top ten scary Sesame Street moments," and while I remember watching most of those skits as a kid and never found them scary myself, he describes decently well how a very young child could be scared.

However while Sesame Street was never scary for me, there were some segments they did in the 80s/early 90s that were, well, in the style of the 80s/early 90s, and as such they were a bit creepy. Kind of in the same way that the Chuck-E-Cheese animatronics were a bit creepy. Some of the shorts I remember were MTV-parody music videos, or there would be a puppet with disembodied legs walking around, or the segment would use liminal space in an ominous way, things like that. I'm sure if I were to watch them today I wouldn't see anything off, but there was something I found slightly unsettling about some Sesame Street clips of that era.

There was a bit in one episode where the muppets where singing a song about wet paint, and at the end they threw a can at the camera and it splattered on the screen covering it. It was the first 4th wall break I'd ever seen in my very young life, and it traumatized me so bad I was afraid of multi-colored things that reminded me of wet paint for years.

Funnily enough I loved the Wet Paint song and looked forward to it BECAUSE they throw paint at the screen and I thought that was really neat. Just goes to show you how these little skits affect kids in wildly different ways

In the early years they had a robot character on Sesame Street that scared the absolute shit out of me. Any time he came on screen I'd go running for mommy, which would prompt our downstairs neighbor to pound on his ceiling because of the noise. That didn't help either.

Not seasame street, but thomas the tank engine. There was an episode where Thomas got covered in tar and feathers (i think? Was a while ago), and that freaked younger me out. Never watched it again.

Well yeah, of course Thomas the Tank Engine was scary: that's a show in which the boss once punished an engine who didn't want to work by fucking bricking him up in a tunnel forever, Edgar Allen Poe-style. Saying you were freaked out by that show is almost cheating!

I went down a YouTube rabbit hole once where someone was explaining how TtTE is all about late stage capitalism. Unfortunately I don't recall the YT channel.

Weirdly, i dont think that episode freaked me out, but yeah, in hindsight it probably should have.

I had a nightmare where Guy Smiley's head popped up between my bed and the wall. So... Guy Smiley.

Not me, but my wife said as a kid that the Incredible Mumford freaked her out when he'd have his accident.

I haven't seen a single Sesame Street episode ever but what gave me nightmares in my childhood was Morso

That’s because deep down you know that’s exactly what you’re gonna look like when you’re old

All the "human" Muppets. They would always take their noses off and it always weirded me out. But all in all it was the whole package. They were just so weird.

Obligatory not Sesame Street, but here's a horror from my childhood:

Je suis un ananas!

Ooh, neat! I've been working on learning French and I'd heard that a good way to practice was to watch kids' TV in the language you're trying to learn, but hadn't found much. This fucked-up talking pineapple show looks like just the ticket!

That's exactly what they showed it to us for. I still retain some French, and horrific memories that haunt me for eternity. Go for it!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VL7gD1k-Yv0

I don't know why, but the most ominous, terrifying howling-in-terror nightmare I ever had as a little kid was basically a still from that with an x-ray film over the top of it.

(my dad was a doctor, the things were part of the general clutter round the place)

Nothing about it should have been scary, but sweet jesus.

The human ears on the ducks, the musical change when the daddy is singing, and the way he sings, the uncertain fate of the tadpoles, the dolly being dizzy in the head because the daddy says so, the fact that the daughter is a doll,... so many reasons: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PWMAYFNIAco

Big Bird was always unsettling to me, even now it still haunts me sometimes.

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I always found Muppets creepy, so the whole thing.