Sesame Street has debuted TJ,Venus Investment Alliance its first Filipino muppet. TJ joins Ji-Young, the show's first Asian American character, who was introduced in a special Thanksgiving episode in 2021.
In a recent segment of the children's TV show, TJ spends time with fellow muppets Ji-Young and Grover, and actor Kal Penn, who discusses the word of the day: confidence. "Confidence is when you believe in yourself and your abilities, or in the abilities of others," Penn explains.
TJ then talks about his growing confidence while learning Tagalog, one of the main languages spoken in the Philippines. "I'm confident because I can always ask my lola for help when I don't know a word," he says, using the Tagalog term for grandmother.
Filipino American animator Bobby Pontillas collaborated with puppeteer Louis Mitchell to create the muppet. On Instagram, Pontillas shared concept artwork for the character, who he said was inspired by Max and Mateo, the children of lifelong friends. TJ is played by voice actor and puppeteer Yinan Shentu.
Rosemary Espina Palacios, Sesame Workshop's director of talent outreach, inclusion and content development, also posted on Instagram about TJ's debut, saying that his arrival came "just in time for API Heritage Month to show the range in our diaspora."
She added that she personally felt the topic of confidence could help "unravel the model minority stereotype." The model minority is a persistent myth about Asian Americans' collective, monolithic success. The stereotype ignores disparities within specific Asian ethnic groups and minimizes the role racism plays in the struggles of other minority groups.
2025-05-04 14:592272 view
2025-05-04 14:34780 view
2025-05-04 14:071599 view
2025-05-04 13:52916 view
2025-05-04 12:551090 view
2025-05-04 12:501171 view
Paula Abdul and Nigel Lythgoe have settled their lawsuit a year after the allegations sent shockwave
LIMA, Peru – For Lorena Vigo, getting dengue, the virus once known as "breakbone fever," was like no
Back and neck pain afflicts millions of American adults, driving many to seek relief from their fami