logo
Sesame Street responds to vile hacking of Elmo's X account

Sesame Street responds to vile hacking of Elmo's X account

Daily Mail​a day ago
Sesame Workshop has again addressed the embarrassing hack it suffered on Monday when a hacker accessed the Elmo account and posted a series of shocking posts targeting Jewish people and trolling President Donald Trump.
'On Sunday, Elmo's X account was briefly hacked by an outside party, in spite of the security measures in place,' read a tweet from the Sesame Workshop.
The statement continued, 'We strongly condemn the abhorrent antisemitic and racist content, and the account has since been secured.
'These posts in no way reflect the values of Sesame Workshop or Sesame Street, and no one at the organization was involved.'
A spokesperson for Sesame Workshop previously confirmed the digital security breach to Daily Mail on Sunday evening.
'Elmo's X account was compromised today by an unknown hacker who posted disgusting messages, including antisemitic and racist posts,' the rep said. 'We are working to restore full control of the account.'
Following the post from the Sesame Workshop, a number of followers on the platform peppered in responses that ranged from jokes to troubleshooting.
'I don't believe you were hacked,' said one user. 'I think the real Elmo came out.'
Another user wryly chimed in, 'Big Bird's silence on this issue has been deafening.'
One user went on a long rant at the character, saying, 'Elmo, I've been crying and throwing up ever since you posted those very hateful things.
'The truth of it is you were a role model to me growing up and because of that I would always tickle you whenever you asked.
The statement ended, 'After what happened on Sunday I was forced to throw you in the dumpster out back my local Chili's and will no longer be having you in my life. Goodbye old friend.'
Multiple users rejected Sesame Workshop's denial anyone from their side was involved.
'Sesame workshop has become beyond woke and I guarantee it was someone internal,' one user said. 'If I allowed some sort of breach like this at my job, I would be fired. @SesameWorkshop take accountability.
The user said the late Sesame Street founder Jim Henson 'would be horrified' at the lack of accountability in the wake of the humiliating security breach.
Following the post from the Sesame Workshop, a number of followers on the platform peppered in responses that ranged from jokes to troubleshooting
Another added: 'Serious question. Is anyone ever hacked by an "inside party?" Your inability to apologize MUCH SOONER is weak. But most concerning is that no one believes you were hacked.
'We believe you have an employee who did this intentionally but you haven't explained this because then, of course, we'd all want to know who did it and then expect them to be fired, etc.
'See, the longer you all don't provide details, the more the pressure grows to know more.'
The account for Elmo, under the handle @elmo, has more than 639,800 followers, and has been on the platform since November of 2012.
'Elmo lives on Sesame Street and was told to tell you that Elmo is official!' a bio line on the social media page read.
On Sunday, it was clear the account had been commandeered by rogue actors, as a series of messages posted called for violence against Jewish people.
The post repeated a series of antisemitic tropes and called for harm against Jewish people.
The post also took aim at the president, saying, ' DONALD TRUMP IS NETANYAHU'S PUPPET BECAUSE HE IS IN THE EPSTEIN FILE.'
One message tagged in President Donald Trump that read: 'RELEASE THE FILES @readDonaldTrump' along with an offensive term directed at Trump.
The hacker also peppered in more sharp responses to people who condemned the racist prank.
When one person expressed their frustration with the posts from the account, a profane response used a racial epithet aimed at Black people.
When another person said they were going to mute Elmo, a response from the Elmo account contained a transphobic slur.
The unlikely hack and subsequent shock messages led for Elmo to become a trending topic on the platform, with a number of different takes on the incident.
'Hacking the official Elmo account gotta be one of the most diabolical things this app has ever seen,' one response read.
The account for Elmo, under the handle @elmo, has more than 639,800 followers, and has been on the platform since November of 2012
One social media user said that the incident provided an insight into how deeply antisemitism is embedded in some people
A few people made reference to rapper Kanye West's history of antisemitic X posts, which he has since distanced himself from.
'Kanye and Elmo should collab sometime,' one user said, while another asked, 'Who let Kanye on Elmo's account?'
One user posted a long-circulating meme of the Sesame Street character standing in front of flames to aptly summarize the situation with the hacker.
One social media user said that the incident provided an insight into how deeply antisemitism is embedded in some people.
'This is a real tweet from the Elmo X account. It has since been deleted,' said the user. 'We're dealing with depraved immoral sociopaths who target even a beloved children's character in order to incite violence and hate against Jews.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WNBA All-Stars dazzle fans with stunning fashion on the Orange Carpet
WNBA All-Stars dazzle fans with stunning fashion on the Orange Carpet

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

WNBA All-Stars dazzle fans with stunning fashion on the Orange Carpet

The WNBA All-Stars tipped off the weekend by showing off their best fashion fits Thursday, turning the orange carpet into their own catwalk. They walked across a stage at the Indianapolis convention center with hundreds of adoring fans cheering them. It was a fun new wrinkle to the WNBA All-Star weekend, showing off for the fans on stage. 'This was definitely a lot of fun,' said Los Angeles Sparks guard Kelsey Plum, who wore a shiny long-sleeved red dress and heels. Indiana Fever star Aliyah Boston, who wore a long, dark gown and heels, agreed. 'I think it just kind of gets the fans a little bit more excited about seeing all the outfits,' she said. WNBA players have been amping up their clothes game over the past few seasons, garnering attention off the court for their pregame fashion choices. Tunnel Fits — as the players arrival to the arena is called — is not new to the league, but it has risen to a whole new level of fashion. Angel Reese of the Chicago Sky wowed the crowd in a leopard print coat and stylish sunglasses. 'I missed this last year because of flight issues, but was so glad to be here this year for it,' Reese said. Reigning league MVP A'ja Wilson, of the Las Vegas Aces, wore a Di Petsa-designed maroon sleeveless gown that exposed her left leg from the hip and sported stunning gold Saint Laurent earrings. The New York Liberty's Natasha Cloud, who will compete in the skills competition on Friday night, admitted she was a little intimidated walking across the stage. 'It took me out of my comfort zone,' she said, sticking with pants and shirt. Napheesa Collier of the Minnesota Lynx loved the chance to walk across the stage, but as a mom of a young daughter, wished she knew that there was going to be kids in the audience, as she might have chosen a different, less revealing outfit, she said. ___

CBS cancels Stephen Colbert's late-night show, calling decision 'financial'
CBS cancels Stephen Colbert's late-night show, calling decision 'financial'

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

CBS cancels Stephen Colbert's late-night show, calling decision 'financial'

LOS ANGELES, July 17 (Reuters) - "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," the most-watched late-night program on U.S. broadcast television and a frequent platform of satire aimed at President Donald Trump, will end its 10-year run on CBS in May 2026, the network said on Thursday. The show will be retired and Colbert will not be replaced. New episodes will air until the end of the broadcast TV season in May 2026, a network statement said. "This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount," CBS executives said in a statement. Paramount Global (PARA.O), opens new tab, the parent company of CBS, is seeking approval from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission for an $8.4 billion merger with Skydance Media. This month, Paramount agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by Republican President Donald Trump over an interview with his former Democratic challenger, Kamala Harris, that CBS's "60 Minutes" broadcast in October. Colbert told his audience on Thursday that he was informed of his show's cancellation the night before. The audience booed, and Colbert responded: "Yeah, I share your feelings." "I'm not being replaced. This is all just going away," the 61-year-old comedian said. "The Late Show" debuted in 1993 with David Letterman as host after he was passed over for NBC's "The Tonight Show." Colbert, a regular on "The Daily Show" before he hosted "The Colbert Report" on Comedy Central, took over "The Late Show" in 2015. "It is a fantastic job," Colbert said on Thursday. "I wish somebody else was getting it, and it's a job that I'm looking forward to doing with this usual gang of idiots for another 10 months." He thanked executives at CBS, his show's audience and the 200 people who work on the show. Senator Adam Schiff of California, a Democrat, was a guest on Thursday's episode. "If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know. And deserves better," Schiff wrote on X. Late-night shows have seen their audiences shrink as viewers have shifted from traditional television to streaming. "Our admiration, affection, and respect for the talents of Stephen Colbert and his incredible team made this agonizing decision even more difficult," said the statement from Paramount Co-CEO and CBS CEO George Cheeks, CBS Entertainment President Amy Reisenbach and CBS Studios President David Stapf. CBS canceled another late-night show, "After Midnight," in March. That show had run immediately after the "Late Show." During the second quarter of 2025, the most-watched late-night program was "Gutfeld!" on Fox News Channel with an average audience of 3 million, according to Nielsen data. "The Late Show" drew roughly 1.9 million viewers, ahead of 1.5 million for ABC's "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" and NBC's "The Tonight Show" hosted by Jimmy Fallon with 1.1 million.

Woody Allen to publish his first novel
Woody Allen to publish his first novel

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Woody Allen to publish his first novel

The first novel by the film-maker Woody Allen is due to be released later this year by independent publisher Swift Press. The book, titled What's With Baum?, is about a middle-aged Jewish journalist turned novelist 'consumed with anxiety about everything under the sun', according to a description from the publisher. Baum's 'turgid philosophical books receive tepid reviews and his prestigious New York publisher has dropped him'. Baum's third marriage is 'on the rocks', and 'in a moment of irrationality, he has impulsively tried to kiss a pretty young journalist during an interview that she is about to go public with'. Since the 1970s, Allen has written several books of short stories and essays, as well as a memoir, Apropos of Nothing, published in 2020. The memoir was dropped by its original US publisher, Hachette, after a staff walkout over allegations that Allen sexually abused his daughter in the early 90s, which have come to define his public image in recent years. The memoir was eventually published by Arcade. Allen's daughter, Dylan Farrow, has alleged that he sexually assaulted her in 1992, when she was seven years old. Allen has always denied the allegations, calling them 'a total fabrication from start to finish' in his memoir. Two investigations at the time did not lead to criminal charges. What's With Baum?, which runs to 160 pages, is 'a portrait of an intellectual crippled by neurotic concerns about the futility and emptiness of life', said Swift Press. Baum 'suspects his handsome and successful younger brother may have seduced his Harvard-educated wife. He is uneasy with her close relationship with her son, a more successful author than he, and suspicious of her closeness with their neighbour in Connecticut.' 'Is it any wonder Baum has started talking to himself?' states the publisher's description. 'Strangers shake their heads and walk around him on the street. Meanwhile he learns a startling secret that could cause havoc should he expose it. Should he keep it to himself or reveal it and blow up his marriage?' The novel is due to be published in September. Swift Press publisher Mark Richards said the company was 'thrilled' to be publishing the book. 'It is all we could have hoped – funny, clever, engrossing and wonderfully human. Woody Allen may have waited almost 90 years before he wrote a novel, but it's been worth the wait.' Swift Press was established in June 2020. In 2022, it launched an imprint, Forum, to publish 'thinkers who expand the realms of debate and aren't afraid to question contemporary orthodoxies', and has since published titles including Liberal Bullies: Inside the Mind of the Authoritarian Left by Luke Conway and Gay Shame: The Rise of Gender Ideology and the New Homophobia by Gareth Roberts.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store