Cracks aka "Crack Master" (found animated "Sesame Street" short; 1975)

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Cracks Opening Shot HQ.png

The short's opening shot.

Status: Found

Date found: 24 Dec 2013 (English) / 15 Mar 2017 (Spanish) / 28 April 2019 (Hebrew)

Found by: Anonymous and Dycaite (English) / Patriot712 (Spanish)

Cracks (also known as Crack Master) was an animated Sesame Street short that aired for its first time on December 31st, 1975. The short gained notoriety in the late 2000s due to its mysterious disappearance from the show, having abruptly stopped airing in 1980 and never been mentioned officially since.

Plot Synopsis

The official description of the short (as found in documentation sourced from the Children's Television Workshop archives at the University of Maryland, College Park) reads "A girl lying in bed imagines she sees a crack in the wall (DIVERGENT THINKING) (TIME 1:29)".[1] 'Divergent thinking' references the educational goals for the short, based around creative ideas and by extension problem-solving.

It is narrated in a dreamlike rhyming sing-song by Dorothy Moskowitz (later of the indie-electronica group United States of America). As indicated it tells the story of a young girl kept indoors by a rainy day, making friends with the 'crack creatures' (a camel, a hen, and a monkey) she sees in various cracks in the walls of her house. The creatures come to life to greet her, and together they set out to find the source of mysterious noises in the attic. Instead of 'a new crack friend' they encounter the unnerving 'Crack Master', a large, distorted face that bellows angrily at the group, moments before crumbling to the ground. The narrator makes the point that Crack Master "destroyed himself trying to be mean", as everyone disperses back to their respective walls and - since the rain has stopped - the girl runs out to play, promising to "go and see the cracks again, someday."

The Search

In late 2008, the short re-entered the pop-culture consciousness via Internet posters reminiscing about seeing it as children, and in particular how unsettling the Crack Master had seemed to them.

One of these posters, a man by the name of Jon Armond, spearheaded a search; it quickly emerged that the Sesame Workshop not only had entirely dropped the short but were extremely reluctant even to discuss it. No official explanation why has ever been provided, but it's thought a combination of the short's unsettling undertones plus emerging sensitivities around the word 'crack' [ie. cocaine], especially in the context of an obviously low-income environment, made a discreet scrubbing from Street history imperative.

Armond did, however, come into possession of a copy of the short from a mysterious source - though with hefty strings attached: he was forbidden from sharing his acquisition with anyone and was under no circumstances to reproduce it for public viewing. While he freely offered and held showings in his home (and, on a select few occasions, to small audiences elsewhere) he upheld his contractual obligations and refrained from uploading the short online, much to the dismay of many. He relented to the extent of recording a 9-minute 'audio documentary' on the short in 2009, including a word-for-word reading of the script. This was shared with a handful of people that he'd previously been in contact with and eventually found its way to YouTube.

Armond was unable even to confirm the short's correct title or the names of those involved in its creation; to this day the identities of its executive producers and animators are still completely unknown. For a time, famed animator Cosmo Anzilotti was rumoured to have worked on it, though when questioned he denied any involvement - or at least the memory of it.[2] All Moskowitz can recall is being summoned for a gig in a recording studio, where a woman in white handed her a script and asked her to improvise a musical narration (which does help explain the dreamlike atmosphere that gives the short both its charm and notoriety).

In the years following Armond's acquisition, several Latin American lost media enthusiasts came forward with claims that the short had aired in the 1990s and 2000s on the Spanish dub of Sesame Street, Plaza Sesamo. This version was uploaded to YouTube by user AT Productions (Patriot712 on the Lost Media Wiki) on March 15th, 2017, with a higher quality VHS recording being released on March 31st, 2017.

Wide release

After conducting an extensive search effort of his own - involving letters and emails to both Sesame Workshop and the archives of their predecessor, the Children's Television Workshop - Lost Media Wiki founder Dycaite was sent a copy of the original English-language short by a generous anonymous source on December 24th, 2013; it was uploaded to YouTube shortly thereafter and has since garnered nearly a million views.

It has been confirmed by blogger Jennifer Bourne, aka Namowal (who was among those who privately screened Armond's copy) that the version sent to Dycaite is not the same one that Armond had been provided with, as the latter was taken from an actual episode of Sesame Street and began with a brief glimpse of a previous skit. By contrast, Dycaite's version appears to have been directly sourced from an official archive of some kind, beginning with a formal title card complete with production code and runtime.[3] This cataloguing system fits well within the original format of Sesame Street, which featured an extensive library of short animations that would be re-aired at random over several episodes.

Airdates

Cracks aired only 12 times in the original series, from 1975-1980. It aired in the mid-1990s (probably 1993-1995) on Plaza Sesamo. Hebrew and Turkish dubs have also been found, and it's probable there are other international versions as well.

Season Episode number Airdate
7 0818

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
December 31st, 1975
7 0848 February 11th, 1976
7 0903 April 28th, 1976
8 0928

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
December 1st, 1976
8 0979 (repeat of 0698)

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
February 10th, 1977
8 1016 April 4th, 1977
9 1067

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
December 13th, 1977
9 1140

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
March 24th, 1978
10 1239 (repeat of 0964)

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
February 8th, 1979
11 1323

NOTE: Episode guide is based on script and may not reflect the final version.
December 5th, 1979
11 1386 (repeat of 1091) March 3rd, 1980
11 1430 May 2nd, 1980

Reception

The short's release caught the attention of numerous media outlets, notably The Huffington Post, who described it as "eerie" and "haunting".[4]

Studio 360

On February 19th, 2019, Studio 360 devoted a podcast episode to an attempt to track down the short's origins. Kurt Andersen discovered that it was produced by "P Imagination", which led him to Moskowitz and a few other names: Mel Martin composed the saxophone portion of the soundtrack, and Peter Scott was the radio producer.[5]

Gallery

Images

Footage

The Crack Master English dub.

The Crack Master Spanish dub.

The Crack Master Hebrew dub.

The Crack Master Turkish dub.

Videos

TheGamerFromMars' video on the subject.

Blameitonjorge's video on the subject.

Bedhead Bernie's video on the subject.

External Links

References