Pop this one on at lunchtime and watch the spoon actually make it to their mouth. Abby's Vehicles Songs🚗🚒🛩️Trucks, Excavators, Planes & MORE | Sesame Street | 30 Mins from Sesame Street is soft-spoken with cozy pastel visuals, and it slots neatly into the vehicles & trucks corner of any toddler's day. At roughly 30:32, it's a sensible length for short attention spans and has racked up 303,323 views plays from families around the world.

Beep Beep! Ride along with Abby in her new fairymobile as she presents her favorite songs about her favorite vehicles! Subscribe to the Sesame Street Channel here: http://www.youtube.com/subscrip...

What your toddler picks up

  • Names of trucks, diggers, and rescue vehicles toddlers love.
  • Cause and effect — what each machine does and why it matters.
  • Pattern recognition through musical repetition — choruses repeat, predictions form, confidence grows.
  • Rhythm and beat awareness, the foundation of both reading fluency and early math sense.
  • Emotional cues through expressive faces and friendly voices that model warmth and curiosity.

How to enjoy it together

Pair the video with toy trucks, then narrate together: "The dump truck is dumping rocks!" Toddlers learn verbs faster when they see the action and act it out. Save the video for predictable transition moments — after lunch, before pickup — so it becomes a cue, not a default.

Sing, dance, repeat

The chorus is the kind that even the dog ends up tilting its head to. The pacing is intentional. Producers leave just enough silence between phrases for a toddler to copy back what they just heard. That call-and-response is exactly how language is wired in early childhood.

About Sesame Street

Sesame Street is a familiar name in nurseries and preschools around the world, and parents recognize the style instantly. Their characters and theme songs become part of the household vocabulary fast.

Watching tips for tiny viewers

The American Academy of Pediatrics suggests keeping screen time short and shared for kids under five. Use a video like this as a co-watching moment: sit together, narrate what's happening on screen, and pause to point at colors or animals as they appear. After it ends, carry the song into the rest of the day — hum the tune at bath time, act out the animal noises during dinner, or pull out toys that match what you watched. The video is the spark; you and your child do the real magic with what comes next.