First aired in season 52, this animated segment shows Elmo and his new puppy Tango solving mysteries around Sesame Street.
First aired in season 54, the five-minute animated segment star Elmo, his puppy Tango, and Gabrielle (with a little help from Grandma Nell), who go on adventures to discover different parts of nature.
In each episode, Cookie Monster learns about self-control and regulation as the team thwarts the dastardly attacks of a villainous baker known simply as "The Crumb."
Introduced in Season 48, the segments star Cookie Monster and Gonger (from The Furchester Hotel), working in their own food truck and fielding orders from live children via video message.
To complete their recipe, the monsters drive the truck to a specific location and learn about where certain foods originally come from.
A new version of the song was recorded for Season 50, notably featuring a same lead vocal by Elmo and with Zoe and Rudy replacing Murray in the character lineup.
Starting with season 45, Count von Count took the lead of a new song (along with Big Bird, Abby Cadabby, Elmo, Grover, Bert, Ernie, Cookie Monster, Rosita and Murray Monster), encouraging viewers as they introduced the number of the day.
A new song debuted in season 50, led by Elmo and Abby Cadabby as astronauts in outer space counting Martians.
Introduced in Season 49, the series stars Abby Cadabby and her stepbrother Rudy in animated form.
In the series, Big Bird interviews a child from cities across the United States of America (as well as the occasional international locale).
Her class features all new characters: classmates Blögg and Gonnigan, fairies, trolls, and a part-gerbil part-unicorn called Niblet.
He speaks with people about what the word of the day means and instructs the audience to listen for its usage in the following episode.
In a series of 11 sketches, Baby Bear brings Hero Guy to life by drawing a picture of him and singing his theme song.
In 2003, the segment changed with Big Bird looking for clues and finds Ernie in a location that is hinted at in the beginning.
Despite the popularity of the segment among the younger viewers, according to the book Sesame Street: A Celebration - 40 Years of Life on the Street, the segment was eventually dropped after 2005 because "The look and feel of the animation was too similar to other shows on the television schedule and, while funny, it didn't mesh with the whole show.
The series parodies plays and films to stress the importance of mealtime and healthy eating habits.
The lamb will give clues in Spanish; examples include soccer, music, baseball and gymnastics.
Worms in Space first aired in 1997, in which Slimey and his fellow WASA astronauts form letters or numbers aboard the Wiggleprise.
Super Morphin Mega Monsters was a recurring segment in the 1990s written as a parody of Power Rangers.
The characters Elmo-saurus, Zoe-ceratops, Telly-dactyl, and Rosita-raptor would "morph" into caped and helmeted outfits when trouble arose.
In contrast to the fight scenes on the real Power Rangers, the Mega Monsters would run around and wave their arms in vaguely martial arts-style motions, but would only reason with others instead of attacking.
There was also the one based on Star Trek: The Next Generation, where the new crew went to the planet H. Animated segment about various creatures and their everyday situations, produced by Jim Jinkins and his studio, Cartoon Pizza.
A segment that appears on Season 32 of Sesame Street where Big Bird, mostly accompanied by some of his friends, go to a museum and look at a famous painting.
However, Guy Smiley continued to appear in other recurring game show segments for many future seasons, such as Name That Sound and Beat the Time.
A prehistoric stop-motion series based on the works of Francesco Misseri, starring a different-colored facial haired caveman duo, the somewhat conceited and mischievous brown-haired caveman with two teeth on the top of his mouth (voiced by Eric Jacobson), and his best friend the cheerful and good-natured redhead without teeth and wearing a bone necklace (voiced by Joey Mazzarino).
Six number of the day skits (14-19) that would see use in the show from 1997 to 2010, where a group of young kids in white t-shirts and painter's overalls start by analyzing a small mural template in the grass.
They then set up to paint the large mural on a big canvas tied between two trees in a backyard in time-lapse form.
Also during the segment, the group is also shown playfully splattering paint all around each other or pressing it on panels of glass with their hands and feet just for fun.
A series of shorts produced by Mo Willems, they featured a young girl named Suzie Kabloozie (voiced by Ruth Buzzi), and her pet cat Feff (also voiced by Buzzi), and would sing about certain subjects like imagination and reading, or announce the Number of the Day.
A series of shorts produced by John R. Dilworth and his studio, Stretch Films, that were introduced in Season 29.