Sesame Street | |||||||||
Fixing Susan's leaky faucet | |||||||||
Air date | February 11, 1972 | ||||||||
Season | Season 3 (1971-1972) | ||||||||
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Picture | Segment | Description |
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SCENE 1 | Cookie Monster is confronted with a dripping faucet in Susan's kitchen. In an attempt to remedy the situation, Cookie first tries stuffing the faucet with a banana. When this fails, he tries placing a pot under the faucet, which only results in amplifying the dripping. Cookie places a dishrag in the pot, which reduces the noise, but he still doesn't like the idea of wasting water. The solution finally occurs to him -- he'll stand under the faucet and drink the dripping water! Susan returns, and with a firm twist of the faucet, she ends the dripping. Cookie then asks for a glass of water. | |
Cartoon | A boy and a dog fight over a letter "I." (First: Episode 0143) | |
Muppets | Harvey Kneeslapper asks a man, "Do you want me to keep an eye on your hat?" The man says yes. Harvey then puts a letter I on top of the man's hat, crushing it in the process. (First: Episode 0288) | |
Cartoon | Speech Balloon: I - ice cream. (First: Episode 0033) | |
Muppets | Ernie & Bert — Ernie can't decide which of the two different shelves he should place a large vase on, so Bert tells him to use his imagination. Ernie imagines the vase falling off the little shelf and Bert kicking him out of the apartment. Then, Ernie imagines putting the vase on the big shelf, and Bert rewarding him with a big surprise party. (First: Episode 0277) | |
Cartoon | Checkerboard transition cartoon (First: Episode 0105) | |
Cartoon | A Gary Owens-voiced man attempts to discuss the letter I, but is jeered by an offscreen voice. The man uses him as an example of the word "impolite". (First: Episode 0032) | |
Cast | Tom and a kid, as the Alphabet Dancers, make a lowercase i. (Jerry Nelson narrates). | |
SCENE 2 | Oscar the Grouch shows Grover how his pet, Slimey the Worm, can imitate the letter i (Oscar adds the dot on top). Grover tells Slimey he's proud of him, prompting a kiss from the worm. | |
Muppets | Cookie Monster asks a girl the instructions of creating an egg sandwich; which is by combining - slices of bread, butter, a hard boiled egg, and salt together. Cookie literally follows the instructions by placing the ingredients in his mouth, much to the chagrin of the girl. (First: Episode 0156) | |
Animation | Kids narrate a variety of shapes that come together to form an ice cream cone, a bird, a clown, a mouse, a carriage, a man, a sailboat, a lady, a dog, an umbrella, a cat, a face, a train, a see-saw, and a lollipop. (First: Episode 0284) | |
Transition | The screen fills up with fluid. (First: Episode 0105) | |
SCENE 3 | Susan sings "Someday, Little Children" to the kids. | |
Film | New Bridge #5 - Bounce (First: Episode 0105) | |
Celebrity | Bill Cosby counts to 20 with his "twin." (First: Episode 0135) | |
Muppets | An Anything Muppet girl shows the viewers that the number 11 is the same right side up and upside down. (First: Episode 0183) | |
Cartoon | Henson: Eleven Cheer (First: Episode 0273) | |
Cast | Bob and Gordon erect an 11. (First: Episode 0183) | |
Cast | Wally and Ralph use various objects trying to keep a newspaper from blowing away next to an open window. | |
Cartoon | Dot Bridge #14: Dots line up at the same time as some squares who ultimately dominate the board (First: Episode 0297) | |
SCENE 4 | Oscar stops by Hooper's Store, asking for a banana. Mr. Hooper produces the banana, and now Oscar wants it unpeeled. Oscar asks for another unpeeled banana, and then one more, adding up the bananas as he goes along. Now that he has all these bananas, Mr. Hooper imagines that he must be very hungry, but Oscar has no interest in the bananas; all he wants is the peels, so he can watch people trip on them. | |
Cartoon | Speech Balloon - I: An iron irons the word. (First: Episode 0314) | |
Cartoon | Speech Balloon: I for Island. (First: Episode 0314) | |
Muppets | Ernie & Bert — Ernie answers the telephone. Bert overhears the conversation, which involves a baseball game, a rainy day, and a gorilla stealing a bologna sandwich. When Bert asks who just called, Ernie says it was a wrong number. (First: Episode 0305) | |
Cartoon | A man has a J under his hat. (First: Episode 0231) | |
SCENE 5 | Susan sings "Here Are Some Things" using groups of kitchen utensils. | |
Cartoon | Dot Bridge #16: Dots kick aside a crumpled object (First: Episode 0283) | |
Cartoon | Batman and Robin catch the Penguin's gang who has dirty windows, teaching the opposite pairings of clean and dirty. (First: Episode 0099) | |
Cast | Bob and Gordon cooperate to clean up a mess. (First: Episode 0209) | |
Film | George the Farmer demonstrates noisy and quiet. (First: Episode 0241) | |
Muppets / Cast | Bob tells the story of a mother who had a loud child (who screamed all the time) and a quiet child (who whispered all the time). The Amazing Mumford casts a spell to reverse their afflictions. (First: Episode 0305) | |
Cartoon | A man talks about the letter J with a jack-in-the-box, whose lid ends up crushing him. (First: Episode 0071) | |
SCENE 6 | Boomer (Jerry Nelson) shows Seth (Frank Oz) his special throwing rock. Seth wants a try at throwing, claiming he can throw it really far. Boomer agrees to let Seth have a try at the rock -- if he'll agree to break a window with it. Seth hesitates. Boomer insists that if he throws the rock, he'll be cool, but if he refuses, he'll be a chicken and a scaredy-cat. Seth still refuses, when Jay enters. He's proud of Seth for not breaking the window, and comments that if anyone is chicken, it's Boomer. With that, Seth and Jay leave. | |
Muppets | The Hands count to 11. (First: Episode 0217) | |
Cast | Bob, Susan, Mr. Hooper, Big Bird, and Gordon line up in limbo and a voiceover (Fran Brill) asks how many of them there are, how many when they're all mixed up, and how many when each of them are subtracted one by one. (First: Episode 0260) | |
Muppets | Grover and Oscar the Grouch recite the alphabet. (First: Episode 0229) | |
Film | George the Farmer shows embedded shapes using drawing of geometric forms and household objects with the same shape. (First: Episode 0288) | |
Film | The kids form a triangle and a square. (First: Episode 0300) | |
SCENE 7 | Mr. Hooper has a large bag of groceries for Michael to take home, but the bag is too heavy for the kid to lift. If he had a wagon the load would be easier. Since they don't have a wagon, and rather than make two trips, Michael suggests someone can help carry them. Michael calls his friend Danny over, and they carry the groceries in two separate bags. | |
Animation | An orange pops out of a basket of fruits and gets "made up" as the face of Carmen, the role in the opera of the same name. While singing "Habanera," the famed aria from the opera, Carmen loses her "face" and can't resume singing until the wig returns. (First: Episode 0277) | |
Film | The Mad Painter #11 (First: Episode 0329) | |
Cartoon | A boy and a dog fight over a letter "I." (repeat) | |
SCENE 8 | Jay and the other kids toss a ball around in front of the carriage house. Susan announces the sponsors, and the credits roll. | |
CLOSING SIGNS | Cookie Monster holds the Sesame Street sign, and Mr. Hooper and Susan hold the CTW sign. |
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Episode 0339 | Episode 0341 |