Press play and watch a small face light up. Cooking with Elmo and Cookie Monster!🍰🍕 | FOUR Sesame Street Full Episodes | 90 Minutes from Sesame Street is playful with big silly faces and exaggerated sound effects, and it slots neatly into the pretend play corner of any toddler's day. At roughly 1:42:14, it's a sensible length for short attention spans and has racked up 561,737 views plays from families around the world.
Let's get cooking! Watch Cookie Monster enter a cake baking competition, Abby make pizza with her family, and more fun with fruits and vegetables here on Sesame Street! 🥒🥦🍎 0:00 Sesame...
What your toddler picks up
- Social scripts: ordering food, visiting the doctor, hosting a tea party.
- Role-taking and empathy through familiar make-believe scenes.
- New vocabulary tied to familiar tunes, which is the easiest way for toddlers to remember words.
- 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.
How to enjoy it together
Recreate a scene from the video with the toys you already own. A wooden block can be a sandwich, a scarf can be a doctor's coat — toddlers prefer real-world stand-ins to perfect props. Limit it to one or two viewings in a row, then move on to a hands-on activity that builds on the same idea.
Sing, dance, repeat
The catchy bits stick fast. Expect the song to migrate beyond the screen — into the bath, into the car seat, into the moment your kid waits in line at the grocery store. That is a feature, not a bug. Once a tune lives in their head, the words and concepts come along for the ride.
About Sesame Street
Sesame Street has built a library that toddlers and parents both trust — bright animation, gentle pacing, and music that does not grate on adult ears after the fifth replay. Once a toddler discovers them, expect them to ask for more by name.
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.