Sesame Street: Big Bird Looks at the World (芝麻街: 大鸟看世界, Zhima Jie: Da Niao Kan Shijie) is a Chinese Sesame Street co-production which premiered on the Ha Ha Channel on December 22, 2010. The fifty-two episode 11-minute series features features Big Bird and Elmo, and introduces a new character, a tiger cub named Lily, who loves martial arts and learning to read. It is a follow-up to China's previous Sesame Street co-production Zhima Jie. In 2012, it was announced that there would be a second Chinese-language program, Fun Fun Elmo. Big Bird has made reference on the show to his grandmother.
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| - Sesame Street: Big Bird Looks at the World (芝麻街: 大鸟看世界, Zhima Jie: Da Niao Kan Shijie) is a Chinese Sesame Street co-production which premiered on the Ha Ha Channel on December 22, 2010. The fifty-two episode 11-minute series features features Big Bird and Elmo, and introduces a new character, a tiger cub named Lily, who loves martial arts and learning to read. It is a follow-up to China's previous Sesame Street co-production Zhima Jie. In 2012, it was announced that there would be a second Chinese-language program, Fun Fun Elmo. Big Bird has made reference on the show to his grandmother.
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| - Sesame Street: Big Bird Looks at the World (芝麻街: 大鸟看世界, Zhima Jie: Da Niao Kan Shijie) is a Chinese Sesame Street co-production which premiered on the Ha Ha Channel on December 22, 2010. The fifty-two episode 11-minute series features features Big Bird and Elmo, and introduces a new character, a tiger cub named Lily, who loves martial arts and learning to read. It is a follow-up to China's previous Sesame Street co-production Zhima Jie. The series promotes scientific discovery and the characters will try to search answers to questions such as: "Why do birds fly?" or "Why are polar bears white?" The series was a successful in China with 400,000 preschoolers and nearly one million moms with young children watching in the first two months. The show won the 2011 Hugo Award for its 'innovative and outstanding' contribution to the world of television. In 2012, it was announced that there would be a second Chinese-language program, Fun Fun Elmo. Big Bird has made reference on the show to his grandmother.
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