Elmo, Big Bird, Sesame Workshop help tackle hunger

December 08, 2010|By Alfred Lubrano, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • Sesame Workshop CEO Gary Knell (left), Super Food Broccoli, and Elmo at the event. "With 'Sesame Street' . . . it changes the whole nature of the conversation," said an advocate.
  • Sesame Workshop CEO Gary Knell (left), Super Food Broccoli, and Elmo at the event. "With 'Sesame Street' . . . it changes the whole nature of the conversation," said an advocate.
  • Tianna Gaines-Turner of Frankford with Elmo of "Sesame Street" at the event. "It changes the whole nature of the conversation," said an activist.
  • Tianna Gaines-Turner (left) of Frankford, Mariana Chilton of Drexel University, and Elmo welcome the campaign.

WASHINGTON - Tianna Gaines-Turner came face to face Tuesday with Elmo, her Sesame Street hero and fellow hunger fighter. She may never be the same.

Gaines-Turner, 31, of Frankford, is one of the Witnesses to Hunger, part of an advocacy program of women in poverty started at the Drexel University School of Public Health.

On Tuesday, she traveled to the Capital Area Food Bank to be part of the start of a national healthy-foods and antihunger campaign begun by Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit that produces Sesame Street.

That an institution with the clout and credibility of Sesame Workshop is tackling hunger is a huge step, antihunger advocates say. For Gaines-Turner, who has known hunger and hard times, it was a nearly unbelievable moment.

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"I grew up with Sesame Street," she said. "When this TV show is talking about hunger, it makes me feel like our voices are finally being heard."

Gaines-Turner, a married mother of three who now works as a researcher for the Witnesses project, beamed and stood close to the red puppet, voiced by puppeteer Kevin Clash. "Elmo, Elmo," she said over and over, like one of the 25 preschool children from the area who were on hand for the event.

Gaines-Turner, whose husband remains unemployed after losing his moving job in the recession, knows firsthand the challenges of feeding a family at the poverty level. She lives in the First Congressional District, the second-hungriest place in America behind the Bronx, according to a recent nationwide poll. It is also one of the 10 poorest districts in the country.

This wasn't Gaines-Turner's first trip to Washington. Two years ago, the Witnesses displayed in the rotunda of a Senate office building photos of the people, places, and things that constitute their tough lives.

But Tuesday felt different. "I was more excited about this than the photos in the rotunda," Gaines-Turner said.

"This feels more powerful than anything we've done," said Mariana Chilton, the anthropology professor and Drexel hunger expert who founded Witnesses and is an adviser to Sesame Workshop. She appeared with Elmo two weeks ago on ABC's Good Morning America.

Gaines-Turner agreed, adding, "Standing and talking about your life to U.S. senators is great. But no senator can get to the kids about hunger like Elmo."

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