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Toon-Cracks

The girl and the crack animals meet the Crack Master.

"Cracks" was an animated musical insert produced for Sesame Street in the 1970s. A young girl is unable to go outside to play because of the rain, and so she imagines the cracks in her wall form a camel. The camel takes her on an adventure through the wall where she meets a hen and a monkey, also made out of cracks. They soon encounter the "Crack Master," an angry creature that tries to scare them but ultimately ends up destroying the plaster around it from being too mean. The camel returns the girl to her room and, seeing the rain has stopped, she goes outside to play while hoping to see the cracks again another day. The CTW archival notes for Episode 0979 at the University of Maryland describe the short as teaching "Divergent Thinking," the process of generating creative ideas using many possible solutions.[1]

The segment's earliest known appearance was in Episode 0818 and it remained in circulation as one of the show's recurring animated segments until 1980, its last known appearance being Episode 1430. However, the insert was later dubbed and aired on several episodes of Plaza Sésamo in the 1990s.

In the years since its last appearance on the show, "Cracks" gathered a cult following on the internet due its relative obscurity and the mystery of who created it.

The Search for the Missing Short

Cracks_-_Short

Cracks - Short

The short, posted by the Lost Media Wiki

On September 20, 2008, cartoonist Jennifer Bourne posted about "The Crack Monster!" on her blog Tail O' the Rat. The post was an illustrated recollection of "Cracks," which Bourne been trying to find for some time but could only find other internet users who also remembered it.[2] Soon a small conglomeration of people trying to find the "Cracks" short formed, although they had little success.[3]

File:Cracks - Spanish dub

Spanish dub of the short, aired in the 1990s on Plaza Sésamo.

One of them, voiceover actor Jon Armond (who had been searching for "Cracks" for several decades), eventually received a fax from an untraceable number offering to send him a copy of the short on the condition that he not share it publicly. Armond agreed, and shortly after received an envelope containing a DVD with the short. Although he privately showed the recording to Bourne and some fans and even screened it at an event, he kept his contractual obligation and did not release the short to the public. Nonetheless, Armond made a 2009 audio documentary describing the short in detail with a recreated soundtrack.[3]

Daniel Wilson (the founder of the Lost Media Wiki) continued his search for another copy that could be released to the public, ultimately receiving his own recording of "Cracks" in December 2012 via an anonymous email. Wilson subsequently posted the video on YouTube.[3] Bourne confirmed the copy Wilson has is different from Armond's, noting Armond's tape appeared to have been taken out of an episode due to a short 2-second appearance of Bert and Ernie right before the clip (possibly Episode 0848), whereas Wilson's recording appears to come from a film archive due to it having a title card.[4] The title card, which confirms the segment's title, sports the production code "06-0431," suggesting it was produced for Season 6.

Studio 360 Investigation

In 2019, following the internet's reaction to the discovery of "Cracks," Studio 360 host Kurt Andersen began an investigation into who created the segment. He spoke directly with Sesame Street executive producer Benjamin Lehmann, who showed the short was easily accessible in Sesame Street's digital archive. Lehmann did not know why the short had become so obscure, but noted the liberal use of the term "crack" may have seemed inappropriate during the War on Drugs in the 1980s. He also suggested the description of a house full of cracks in the wall during the 1970s housing crisis in New York could have felt insensitive.[5]

Lehmann found that the insert was produced by a studio called "P. Imagination," but could not find any information about it. Andersen noted the name was similar to "Imagination, Inc.," the animation studio run by Sesame Street animator Jeff Hale, but privately doubted the short was Hale's work. He could not follow up, however, as Imagination, Inc. closed in 1979 and Hale passed away in 2015. After some further investigation, Joe Hennes gave Andersen the credits for the music: saxophonist Mel Martin, radio producer Peter Scott, and vocalist Dorothy Moskowitz, the former lead singer of the experimental rock band United States of America.[5]

Moskowitz, who now works as a music teacher in California, was stunned to learn of the short's cult following after Andersen contacted her for an interview. She provided information on the recording of the music, which she dubbed "the most goddamn strange recording session I ever attended": Moskowitz performed the vocals by improvising the melody where she felt it was appropriate in the text, and Martin added music to her narration. Moskowitz could not tell Andersen who animated the short, but remembered a woman whose name she could not recall (besides being "vaguely hippy-ish") was present at the recording session. She suspected the woman was either the animator or someone from the animation studio.[5]

Who Made It?

As of 2019, it is still not known who or what studio animated "Cracks." Animators who confirmed the short is not their work include:

Sources

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