I ♥ Sesame Street + Google

Nice to see these this week to bring back some great memories. Happy Birthday Sesame Street!

Thanks Google!

structure > behavior > results

“Change the structure, to change behavior that will change the results.” - David Butler

I recently came back from the AIGA Make/Think Conference and one of the presentations that stuck out the most was a presentation by David Butler of Coca-Cola. Part of David’s presentation focused on this idea that design needs to look and grow past project-based solutions, that we as designers need to begin thinking of design in terms of systems. In order to change the results of any given problem, we need to change the behavior; but to do so, we must first change the structure that drives the behavior.

The following video clip is from The Fun Theory which exemplifies this idea that in order to change the result, we have to change the behavior and the structure. The experiment’s premise, “can we get more people to choose the stairs by making it fun to do?”

cab-driving photographer

Sevket Sahintas, a cab driver in Istanbul, not only picks up customers during his graveyard shift but occasionally stops to  take some beautiful photoghraphy.

Originally spotted on cnn.com.

Jeff Goodby & Poems

Originally published in Creativity Online, Jeff Goodby of Goodby, Silverstein & Partners decides to paint his house but in a very unusual way, Goodby decides to create art in the process.

Direct Marketing?

I love it when direct marketing thinks it’s doing its job.

Legos + Photography

Interesting photography by British photographer Mike Stimpson.

“in order to move forward, you have to give something back.”

The quote “in order to move forward, you have to give something back” is from Oprah’s 2008 Stanford Commencement Address. I feel very optimistic that this message resonates strongly within our society today, especially in our youth The two in the video, Quinn and Kelsey, are a perfect example  of how little things can make a BIG difference. Take a look at their grassroots project for Heifer International,be inspired and help spread the message - http://tinyurl.com/mzo57u

I stumbled upon Quinn and Kelsey’s story from Bacon is My Enemy (and no, I don’t support that URL address because I loves me some bacon!). But I digress. The author, Giyen, also has a very interesting story. 2009 for Giyen is year of saying “yes” to a more meaningful life. As she says on her blog “part of the resolution was the commitment to saying ‘yes’ to new opportunities – but the other part of the resolution was meant to me to start saying ‘yes’ to new opportunities that presented themselves…”.

words of wisdom

- From Hugh McLeod

the weingart homeless project

Found this wonderful campaign by the ad agency David & Goliath. The goal of the project was to raise awareness for the Weingart Homeless Center. D&G took a non-traditional approach that made people imagine themselves homeless, if even for a moment. D&G photographed a dozen of the 70,000 homeless people living on the streets of LA with cardboard signs. Each homeless person wrote the same simple message “Before you turn away, put yourself in my place.” followed by the URL, weingert.org. Each life-sized cardboard cutout was placed in upscale shopping centers in Beverly Hills and Santa Monica.

“C is for cookie, and that’s good enough for me!”

 

Originally published on NPR

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Cookie Monster, v.1.0: The Wheel Steeler, as seen above in Jim Henson’s original doodle created for a never-aired snack food commercial.

This week, NPR’s In Character takes a look at a deeply sensuous character who speaks to our most basic appetites and desires.

That’s right: Cookie Monster.

He’s always been blue, always been furry, always been voracious. But he — or at least his predecessor — didn’t always eat cookies.

Years before Sesame Street, Muppet creator Jim Henson made a very similar monster who ate snack foods and computers in television commercials. The basic look and spirit were there, but the character we know today was still a ways off.

Enter puppeteer Frank Oz. For nearly 30 years, Henson and Oz were an extraordinary team. Cheryl Henson, Jim’s daughter and the president of the Jim Henson Foundation, says the two men shared a subversive sense of humor. Their Muppets were regulars on The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show.

It was later, on a Muppet game show, that the cookie-fixated creature we know emerged, Oz says. The winning contestant was offered the chance to choose a prize: a vacation, a new house, $10,000 cash, or a cookie. He chose the cookie — and the Cookie Monster was born.

“As opposed to many of us who need many things to try and make us happy, he only needs one thing, and that’s a cookie,” Oz says. “That is his one obsession, and he’s insatiable.”

Though Cookie Monster was the improvisational brainchild of several writers, producers and puppeteers, Oz is most often credited for his existence. The puppeteer, who also created Miss Piggy and Bert, was known for taking character development seriously — often refusing to break out of Cookie Monster’s voice during writing sessions.

“Frank puts everything that you can into that part,” saysSesame Street veteran Chris Cerf. “People have said this when they’ve analyzed it: It’s really like Frank’s id, with no control over it whatsoever.”

But id, in the Cookie Monster sense at least, isn’t a dark term.

“All of his monomania … would not stop him from caring about someone else,” says longtime Sesame Street writer Norman Stiles. “He’s not gonna knock anybody over to get the cookie. He’s gonna try to get around them to get the cookie. He’s gonna beg for the cookie.”

As part of their Healthy Habits for Life campaign, Sesame Street producers tried to rein in Cookie Monster’s obsession a few years ago. Hootsy the Owl serenaded him with a little ditty called “A Cookie Is a Sometimes Food.” There were rumors that he’d be replaced by a Veggie Monster.

It wasn’t true, but angry fans inundated the Sesame Workshop with letters, and more than 3,000 people signed an online petition.

“What’s wrong with you people?” one of them wrote, “To quote the monster himself: ‘C is for Cookie, and that’s good enough for me!’”