Sesame Street’s Counting Songs: The Numbers That Got Stuck In Our Heads

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When people mention the Sesame Street counting song, a lot of us instantly hear that funky:

“1, 2, 3, 4, 5…”

The best-remembered version is the Pinball Number Count, the animated segment where a pinball rolls through wild little number-themed machines while the song counts up to 12. It was recorded by The Pointer Sisters in 1976, which explains why it had so much more groove than a regular kids’ counting song.

That was part of Sesame Street’s genius. They didn’t talk down to kids. They used real music, catchy animation, and repetition that worked. You learned numbers without feeling like you were being taught.

There were plenty of other number songs on Sesame Street, including ones focused on counting to 10, but the Pinball Number Count is probably the one most people remember first. It was funky, fast, colorful, and impossible to forget.

For a lot of us, that little pinball didn’t just teach numbers. It gave us one of the greatest earworms in children’s TV history.

Do You Remember All The Friends at Puzzle Place?

The Puzzle Place is an American children’s television series that aired on PBS Kids from 1995 to 1998 The show was set in a magical place called The Puzzle Place, where children could come to learn about different kinds of puzzles The puzzles were used to teach the children about math, science, language arts, and other subjects The show’s episodes often dealt with important social issues, such as bullying, racism, and sexism It became one of PBS Kids’ most popular series on the line-up since Sesame Street Despite its popularity it was replaced by Between The Lions in April 2000.

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