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Sesame Street’s new San Diego theme park is full of surprises

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Sesame Street’s new San Diego theme park is full of surprises

I’m strolling on Sesame Avenue, the place I see the famed stoop resulting in the two-story brownstone house constructing with an tackle of “123.” All the main points I do know and love from my favourite childhood present are there — the inexperienced lamp put up, the shady timber, the colourful material curtains peeking out from Elmo’s bed room window.

Solely now, Oscar the Grouch is telling my 3-year-old son Max to “scram!” as he giggles and prods at his dingy metallic trash can. Close by, my 9-year-old daughter Maggie takes a selfie inside Large Chook’s nest. Younger children and their dad and mom are ringing Bert and Ernie’s doorbell, procuring at Hooper’s Retailer and giving high-fives to a supersize Grover.

That is Sesame Place San Diego, a 17-acre theme park that opens Saturday in Chula Vista. It’s the second Sesame Place — the primary opened in Philadelphia in 1980 — and the primary theme park from Orlando-based SeaWorld Parks & Leisure in 9 years.

“It’s superb to look at the park come alive,” says Ed Wells, government vp of Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit group behind the favored tv present that has managed to stay related revolutionary, even — for greater than 50 years. At a media preview day, Wells tells me that he sees the brand new park as an “extension of the present, a reside embodiment of the Sesame Avenue program.”

Claire Ferraro, 6, rides Tremendous Grover’s Field Automobile Derby throughout a preview day at Sesame Place San Diego on Friday, March 25, 2022.

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(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

It’s actually a daring endeavor as theme parks have been hit laborious by the pandemic. Are sunny days forward for the brand new mission? Right here’s what it’s prefer to be there.

The rides are a mixture of waterslides and mellow coasters

One factor to find out about Sesame Place is that there are waterslides and conventional rides, and so they’re all blended collectively — no separate ticket is required. On scorching days, you’ll doubtless discover children prancing across the park in swimsuits and water sneakers, transferring from the lazy river to the parade to rides that dip, bounce and spin.

The water sights have various ranges of “scariness” — toddlers can splash round in a mellow space known as Elmo’s Foolish Sand Slides, whereas older, thrill-seeking company can get their scream-fix on slides like Cookie’s Monster Mixer, a six-story raft journey that sends you swirling round in a blue tube earlier than dropping you thru a sideways funnel for the stomach-dropping finale.

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Two girls ride an inflatable down Cookie's Monster Mixer at Sesame Place San Diego.

Brooklynn Gullickson, left, and Heidi Nicolle, proper, journey Cookie’s Monster Mixer throughout a preview day at Sesame Place San Diego on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

The rides on dry land, nonetheless, positively skew towards the under-8 set. There’s Rub-A-Dub Sub, which boards riders onto Ernie’s toy submarine (the S.S. Duckie), a spinning scorching air balloon journey known as Sesame Avenue Soar & Spin, and Tremendous Grover’s Field Automobile Derby, a mini curler coaster for these on the lookout for a bit extra motion. Maggie’s favourite was Abby’s Fairy Flight, a carnival-style swing journey that might be the right strategy to dry off after splashing round within the wave pool.

A woman smiles aboard the Rub-A-Dub Sub ride at Sesame Place

Devin Alexander pokes her head out the window whereas using the Rub-A-Dub Sub throughout a preview day at Sesame Place San Diego on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

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With 18 rides in all, it’s an intimate, manageable area, surrounded by the inexperienced hills of Chula Vista. To me, that’s fairly good. I’d don’t have any qualms about letting my 9-year-old roam round with a pal whereas parking myself on a poolside lounge chair.

The meals is meh, however there are vegetarian choices

It’s your normal amusement park fare — I had a $15.99 rooster sandwich and waffle fries at Grover’s Grill. There’s an Unimaginable Burger combo that prices $16.99, and a cheese pizza for $13.99. Different choices across the park embrace salads, wraps and PB&J sandwiches for teenagers.

Rides at Sesame Place seen from above

An total view of Sesame Place San Diego as seen on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

The massive present is an absolute delight

There’s just one present, “Welcome to Our Avenue,” an lively out of doors manufacturing with Elmo, Abby, Grover, Rosita, Cookie Monster and their human pal DJ Dani. I by no means knew I wanted to see furry characters doing a kick line to “C is for Cookie,” however I assume I did. It was superior. When Cookie Monster requested the viewers “What different phrases begin with ‘C’?” my 3-year-old yelled out “Cookie!” which was fairly nice too.

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A woman dances with Sesame Street characters on stage at Sesame Place

Sesame Avenue characters carry out “Welcome to Our Avenue” in a theater throughout a preview day at Sesame Place San Diego on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

There’s additionally just one parade: the Sesame Avenue Get together Parade. It’s shiny and vigorous, with colourful floats and loads of characters to wave at.

The Autism Middle is a world’s first

Sesame Place is the primary theme park on the planet to be designated as a Licensed Autism Middle. For teenagers who may be overstimulated, or simply want some downtime, there are “quiet rooms” and low sensory areas. (Sitting in a low sensory space on the parade route means the characters won’t ever greet you with direct interplay, like with a hug or high-five.) Workforce members obtain particular coaching to cater to youngsters with particular wants, and an informational signal at each journey features a sensory information so dad and mom can resolve if it’s proper for his or her youngster.

Sesame Place is for teenagers, not nostalgic grown-ups

People ride Abby's Fairy Flight at Sesame Place

Folks journey Abby’s Fairy Flight throughout a preview day at Sesame Place on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

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As somebody who grew up with the present, it could have been great to see some nods to Sesame Avenue’s roots, the way in which that Disneyland reveals classic Mickey movies and Legoland Florida is opening a walk-through attraction on the origin story of Lego. I may think about one thing comparable right here interesting to all of us grown-ups, who on this tumultuous world wouldn’t thoughts being taken again to the times when our life’s greatest query was whether or not Grover was close to or far.

However this place is especially for the children. And that’s OK. I used to be delighted to look at my youngsters hang around with Elmo, Large Chook, Grover, Oscar and the entire gang. (I seemed for Ji-Younger, Sesame Avenue’s first Asian American Muppet, however couldn’t discover her, sadly.) They’d a blast.

At a time when my children have a dizzying variety of reveals and streaming channels to select from, I don’t know if the characters will stick with them as they develop up, the identical approach they stayed with me. (At one level Max requested, “Is Elmo the pink one?”) However because the model continues to seek out methods to achieve new audiences, with the present and now with the park, we at all times appear to know learn how to get to Sesame Avenue once we want it probably the most.

A girl stands at the 123 Sesame Street Stoop at Sesame Place

Lydia Anderson interacts with the 123 Sesame Avenue Stoop throughout a preview day at Sesame Place San Diego on Friday, March 25, 2022.

(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Instances)

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It's not just D.C.: Satirical Trump statues are appearing in cities across the U.S.

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It's not just D.C.: Satirical Trump statues are appearing in cities across the U.S.

Pedestrians look at a statue of Donald Trump behind Gerhard Marcks’ sculpture Maja, in Maja Park in Philidelphia.

Caroline Gutman/The Washington Post via Getty Images


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Divisive statues mocking former President Donald Trump aren’t just sprouting up in Washington, D.C.: Similar structures have spread to other cities in recent days.

Last week, two bronze-colored statues caused a stir when they abruptly appeared in the nation’s capital.

First, a replica of former House Speaker Nancy Peloi’s desk, defaced with a pile of poop, was plopped within view of the U.S. Capitol. Its plaque explains that it honors the “brave men and women who broke into the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021 to loot, urinate and defecate throughout those hallowed halls in order to overturn an election.”

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Then, over the weekend, a plaza near the White House suddenly became host to a tall sculpture of a hand gripping a tiki torch, reminiscent of the torches that white supremacists held at the deadly 2017 Unite the Right rally. Its plaque dedicates it to “Trump and the ‘very fine people’ he boldly stood to defend when they marched in Charlottesville, Virginia.”

As it turns out, two other satirical statues briefly popped up in Philadelphia and Portland, Ore., around the same time.

Both feature a life-sized model of a suit-clad Trump, were placed near an existing statue of a woman and are titled In Honor of a Lifetime of Sexual Assault. It shows him with a closed-mouth smile and one hand curled in what could be interpreted as a suggestive gesture.

The plaques also quote from the infamous 2005 Access Hollywood tape, in which a hot mic captured him telling then-host Billy Bush about kissing women and grabbing them between their legs without permission, in crude terms.

“[W]hen you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything,” Trump said in the clip, which surfaced a month before the 2016 election. It earned him much criticism but didn’t keep him out of the White House.

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Dozens of women have publicly accused Trump of sexual misconduct dating back as far as the 1970s, which he has denied.

Former Sports Illustrated model Stacey Williams became the latest to accuse Trump of inappropriate sexual behavior last week, alleging he groped her in 1993 while Jeffrey Epstein, who was later convicted of sex offenses, looked on. Another, writer E. Jean Carroll, sued Trump twice for defamation after he denied sexually abusing her in a Manhattan department store dressing room in 1996 — for which a jury found him liable in 2023.

The Trump statue appeared on a Portland sidewalk on Sunday, an arm’s length away from a sculpture of a nude woman that has been there since 1975.

That sculpture, Kvinneakt (“nude woman” in Norwegian), has its own storied history: It was featured in the “Expose Yourself to Art” poster in the 1970s, which showed future Portland Mayor Bud Clark flashing the woman in a raincoat.

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Decades later, the figure of Trump towering over the woman, with the two statues’ bases touching, made for a strikingly similar image. But it didn’t last long.

The Trump statue was beheaded by mid-afternoon, according to KOIN, and passersby dismantled it piece by piece throughout the day until “all that was left was one golden shoe.”

At least one of the culprits was Portland City Council candidate and self-described “fearless Trump supporter” Brandon Farley.

Farley tweeted a video of himself arriving at the scene of the already-headless statue and chipping away at what he described as the “slanderous plaque,” eventually tearing it off completely.

The second Trump statue was similarly short-lived.

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It arrived in Philadelphia’s Maja Park on Wednesday, according to BillyPenn at WHYY. It was placed about 15 feet behind, and facing, Maja, a statue of a nude woman with her eyes closed and arms above her head.

The Maja was sculpted by German artist Gerhard Marcks in the 1940s, and installed in the park in 2021.

City workers took the Trump statue down and put it into a pickup truck before noon, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

It’s not clear if the same artist or artists are behind all four installations. But the style of the bronze sculptures and the tone and font of their accompanying plaques look nearly identical.

The D.C. sculptures are intended to “express the principles of democracy justice and freedom,” a group called Civic Crafted LLC wrote in its request to display them in D.C. The National Park Service granted them a permit to display the torch until Thursday, and the desk until next Wednesday — the day after Election Day.

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Opinion: Happy Halloween? Living with unease, uncertainty and the uncanny in a scary season

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Opinion: Happy Halloween? Living with unease, uncertainty and the uncanny in a scary season

One of the best parts of new parenthood is figuring out what your child is going to be for Halloween. Considering the costume possibilities for my 15-month-old, I have been surprised and often delighted by what one can find on the internet. For a reasonable price, you can dress your baby up as Cher Horowitz, Doc Brown, Lord Farquaad, Mary Poppins or a Rydell High cheerleader while you yourself take on the persona of Austin Powers, Forrest Gump, Harry Potter or Wonder Woman. The holiday seems nostalgic and innocent, even unifying in its appeal to the one thing we all share: that we were children once.

That is, of course, until I walk outside, where I am reminded of my lifelong discomfort with the more lurid aspects of Halloween. All around me are homes festooned with terrifying man-made skeletons, goblins, clowns and witches. “How can anyone stand this?” I keep asking myself.

As it turns out, Halloween has always been rooted in dueling ideas of the otherworldly. Set aside in the 9th century as a day to honor the Catholic saints, it succeeded an even older Gaelic celebration of transition between seasons and states of being. Our modern holiday might be thought of as a portmanteau of All Hallows’ Eve — the Christian feast that precedes All Saints’ (or Hallows’) Day — and Samhain, an ancient Celtic holiday marking the final harvest of the year and the beginning of winter.

As Katherine May writes in her book “Wintering,” Samhain (pronounced sah-win) represents a seasonal and spiritual threshold at which the veil between this world and the next is at its thinnest, inviting loved ones we have lost to visit us. Between fall’s radiant foliage and the year’s first snow, it’s “a time between two worlds, between two phases of the year,” and “a way of marking that ambiguous moment when you didn’t know who you were about to become, or what the future would hold.”

Today we have lost much of this reverence for Halloween, yet the holiday continues to thrive. Oblivious to its original purpose, our modern version is an expression of the American idea that you can be whoever you want to be as well as a vehicle for our tensions and anxieties, turning death into a joke with temporary disguises and decorative one-upmanship.

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Maybe the detached skulls and bloody hands on our lawns are part of an endeavor to harness or reclaim our fears. Or maybe the fantastical monsters of our imaginations have become easier to face than the human monsters running for our public offices — a process that culminates every few years, as it happens, just days after Halloween.

In the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections, Elizabeth Bruenig wrote for the Washington Post that Halloween “gets its depth and intrigue from the layering of things that seem frightening but are really benign — toothy jack-o’-lanterns, ghoulish costumes, tales of ghosts and witches and monsters — atop things that seem benign but are really frightening, such as the passage of the harvest season into the long, cold dark.”

Yet what if we should really be frightened not so much of the “long, cold dark” as our unwillingness to confront it? Americans sometimes seem unable to face the real darkness of the world, much less embrace what can be gained from it: compassion for others’ suffering; acceptance of the seasonality of life; separation from the capitalist hustle; and a greater sense of gratitude, belonging and purpose.

The passage of time, grief for those we have lost, longing for a better world that seems perpetually out of reach — all of these things can be frightening. But they don’t have to be.

As election day looms just beyond this ancient celebration, it’s time to put the “hallow” back in Halloween. Amid the bare branches, flickering candles and migrating birds lies an invitation to reflect not only on the children we once were but also on the adults we aspire to become — and to dwell, for a moment, in the seasonal and spiritual in-between.

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Cornelia Powers is a writer who is working on a book about the golfer Bessie Anthony, her great-great-grandmother.

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Keri Russell returns as 'The Diplomat,' which is just as savvy in Season 2

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Keri Russell returns as 'The Diplomat,' which is just as savvy in Season 2

Keri Russell and Rufus Sewell as Kate and Hal Wyler.

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At a time when it seems political rhetoric couldn’t get more bitter or outrageous, it’s easy to see the world’s leaders and the people who support them in the worst possible light.

But Netflix’s The Diplomat offers a different vision of politics: one where sharp staffers are often the backseat drivers in government, and many of those involved are truly interested in improving lives – even when they do awful things along the way.

That’s the universe Netflix’s series thrives in, where The Americans alum Keri Russell plays a hard-nosed, practical mid-level diplomat suddenly elevated to serve as ambassador to Britain, amid plans to groom her to become America’s next vice president.

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Starting season two with a bang

As the show’s second season kicks off, Russell’s Ambassador Kate Wyler is dealing with the aftermath of a cliffhanger that ended the first season. Her husband — former ambassador Hal Wyler — along with her deputy, Stuart Hayford and another aide were caught in the blast of a car bomb while trying to meet with an official from the British government.

The official may have had information about who really initiated a deadly attack against a British aircraft carrier from the first season. But instead of learning more, Kate’s husband and two members of her staff were caught in another attack.

While British and American officials scamper to figure out exactly what happened, we see The Diplomat ride a delicious, compelling line between serving up hefty slices of political drama and revealing the mournful humanity of co-workers trying to recover from a massively traumatic event.

Every performance here is golden. Rory Kinnear is particularly excellent as an egotistical blowhard of a British Prime minister, Nicol Trowbridge. Ali Ahn, currently earning raves for her performance as a witch on Disney+’s Agatha All Along, shines here as CIA station chief Eidra Park – trying to offer savvy, effective support to Kate while not-so-secretly fretting about Kate’s deputy Stuart, with whom she had a relationship.

Rufus Sewell is magnetic as Kate’s husband Hal; she suspects he sees her ascension to vice president as his best route back to power, but he insists otherwise, testing their relationship. David Gyasi plays U.K. foreign secretary Austin Dennison as a precise-yet-passionate power player, focused on doing the right thing for Britain, even as he grows closer to Kate and her marriage frays.

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Allison Janney as Vice President Grace Penn.

Allison Janney as Vice President Grace Penn.

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But it’s not until West Wing alum Allison Janney arrives as current Vice President Grace Penn that we see the show’s drama really come alive. As a brilliant vice president who may be forced to step down because of a financial scandal involving her husband, Penn excels at maneuvering others into doing what she wants while leaving them convinced it was all their idea.

Some may have been concerned that Janney is playing a souped-up version of her West Wing character, White House staffer C.J. Cregg. But ultimately, they don’t have much in common beyond a habit of speaking directly and a predilection for pantsuits.

A show centered on smart women leading

What both of Janney’s characters do have in common, however, is that they are accomplished, effective women – making a difference in environments where their talents and achievements are often underestimated or overlooked.

Indeed, several storylines in The Diplomat revolve around smart women deftly guiding powerful men into making better decisions than they could manage on their own. These men aren’t complete idiots, but also are not as smart as they believe – especially Trowbridge, a vociferous bully who leans heavily on several sharp-thinking women, including his wife.

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In a particularly pointed exchange, as Hal notes all the humiliating reasons why Penn should accept her fate and resign without damaging the president’s agenda, Kate responds with a telling line. “What do you think my husband would do if it was him?” she says to Penn. “Would he quit?”

The answer – that Hal naturally assumes the benefits he brings would outweigh any political cost – neatly outlines the specter of sexism which hangs over The Diplomat. In a world free from that particular “ism,” you get the sense these women would actually occupy the seats of power, instead of acting as backseat drivers for the men who do.

Complicated plots that pay off

Compelling as all of this is, the plot gets even more complicated in the second season, as Kate and her team begin to sort what really happened in both the warship attack and the car bomb. New viewers trying to jump into the series now could be thoroughly confused — best to make sure you know the events of the first season before joining in for the second.

But once acclimated, you can sit back and enjoy a story set in a political universe where expertise is valued, competition plays out like a protracted, 3D chess game and several staffers caught in the middle truly believe in the possibility of using their offices to make life better for everyone.

Who knew a visceral, fast-paced series about a global political conspiracy could also – thanks to the terrible state of our real-world political clashes – feel like something of a fantasy?

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