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SNL: Big Bird Visits Weekend Update

Sagemind says...

Sesame Workshop is a nonprofit educational 501(c)(3) organization with charitable, tax-exempt status. We maintain a balanced mix of revenue sources with support coming from foundations, corporations, government agencies, individuals, program sales, and product licensing. The Workshop uses the funding it receives to develop and produce multimedia initiatives that address critical needs of children in the U.S. and around the world. Through these projects, we are able to make a meaningful, measurable, and lasting difference in children’s lives.


CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND
SUPPLEMENTAL CONSOLIDATING SCHEDULES TOGETHER WITH
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
SESAME WORKSHOP AND SUBSIDIARIES
For the years ended June 30, 2011 and 2010

-http://www.sesameworkshop.org/about-us/financials.html

SNL: Big Bird Visits Weekend Update

Sagemind says...

No, They do not have profits in excess of $140 per year. And No they are not 1%ers

Sesame Workshop, formerly known as the Children's Television Workshop (CTW), is a Worldwide American non-profit organization behind the production of several educational children's programs that have run on public broadcasting around the world (including PBS in the United States).

Although Sesame Workshop is occasionally confused with PBS,[citation needed] Sesame Workshop is an entirely separate and independent organization. Some Workshop programs are broadcast on PBS, and although PBS provides some funding for those programs, the money received covers only a fraction of production costs. Other financial support comes from individual donors, charitable foundations, corporations, government agencies, program sales and licensed products. Sesame Workshop grants licenses to various manufacturers who create toys, apparel and other products featuring Sesame Street characters, and Sesame Workshop receives a portion of the proceeds.

On March 12, 2009, Sesame Workshop announced that it had planned to cut 20% of its workforce due to the recession.
-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesame_Workshop

>> ^lantern53:

Sesame Street earns $140 million a year, but somehow they get 10% of that from the American taxpayer when they could easily make it and make it quite well, on their own.
Those folks are all 1%ers, aren't they?

SNL: Big Bird Visits Weekend Update

lantern53 says...

Sesame Street earns $140 million a year, but somehow they get 10% of that from the American taxpayer when they could easily make it and make it quite well, on their own.

Those folks are all 1%ers, aren't they?

Sesame Street: The Voice Spoof/Parody (Updated & Longer)

Sesame Street: The Voice Spoof/Parody (Updated & Longer)

The Rhyming Game - Bert and Ernie

Patrick Stewart on Sesame Street

Sesame Street: Soliloquy On B

Video Challenge: Nostalgia (Sift Talk Post)

Sesame Street: Soliloquy On B

Sesame Street: Soliloquy On B

Pinball Countdown - Sesame Street

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'flashback, sesame street, Pointer Sisters, seven' to 'flashback, sesame street, Pointer Sisters' - edited by messenger

Pinball Countdown - Sesame Street

siftbot says...

Tags for this video have been changed from 'flashback, sesame street, Pointer Sisters' to 'flashback, sesame street, Pointer Sisters, seven' - edited by messenger

*audio (Audio Talk Post)

rottenseed says...

I first started with the light stuff — you know — Barney, Sesame Street, maybe some Elephant Show. Then some lady I knew, we'll call her "mom" to protect her identity, introduced me to some shit that blew my mind. At first she pushed the less harsh brand of audio like Mr. Mister but that quickly elevated — as it does — when she introduced me to dealers of the brash, sometimes heady, audio like Billy Idol or Pat Benatar. By then, I was in deep man. I still hung around "mom", but soon started mixing in with the likes of another crowd. Leader of that group we'll call "grandma". She wasn't as gentle as "mom" was when getting me hooked on her personal audio dealers. Dealers like "the Moody Blues," "the Rolling Stones," and finally "Pink Floyd." At that point...it was game over.

The Count Censored



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