Toy giants such as Hamleys as well as Amazon, Walmart and Target have all recently released their predictions for the...
CINCINNATI — Look, up on the shelf! It’s Superman. There’s the king of the wild frontier himself, Davy Crockett. And...
SEATTLE — Sesame Street is taking its beloved, critically acclaimed brand of educational television into the highly profitable world of classroom curriculum — a move that experts say could open the door for other companies to move into the sensitive learning space with possible influence on children.
My family has a Christmas Snuffleupagus—adapted from the name of a friendly imaginary character on the TV show “Sesame Street.”
Sesame Street’s furry red monster inspired dozens of children to spread kindness and caring during a special Inquirer Read-Along session at Inquirer’s main office in Makati on Tuesday.
Sesame Street's furry red monster inspired some 50 kids to spread kindness and share the laughter during a special Inquirer Read-Along session at Inquirer's main office in Makati on Tuesday morning.
Elmo of Sesame Street is at the Inquirer headquarters in Makati City to encourage kids to #ShareKindness and #ShareTheLaughter in a special Inquirer Read-Along Session.
This was the concept behind the first Inquirer Read-Along session this year, which featured the comeback of “Batibot”—the Filipino version of the long-running American children’s television series “Sesame Street”—not on TV but on tablets and smartphones.