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In November 2021, shortly after the Food and Drug Administration completed clinical trials on COVID-19 vaccines and approved their use for kids aged 5 and up, the Sesame Street character Big Bird posted a tweet about receiving the vaccine, writing that while his wing was a little sore, he was happy to get an extra protective boost to keep me and others healthy. As this tweet went viral, many conservative commentators, including U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, criticized Big Bird for pushing government propaganda. NBC News reported: As Cruz continued his attack on Big Bird — he tweeted or retweeted at least seven other follow-up messages about Big Bird — an image started to circulate online that supposedly showed the Muppet's pointed response to the senator's criticism. This message, which alludes to Cruz's trip to Cancun during a February 2021 energy crisis in Texas that left many of his constituents without power, is not a genuine tweet from the official Big Bird account. This message doesn't appear on Big Bird's timeline, doesn't appear in any archived versions of the page, and has not been documented by any reliable news outlets. In other words, this message was fabricated, as a joke. It's worth noting that children's characters, especially those residing on Sesame Street, have long been advocates for public health measures. In the 1970s, for example, Big Bird and his Sesame Street friends participated in an immunization campaign to encourage children to get vaccinated against polio, whooping cough, measles, rubella, tetanus and diphtheria. 17 May 1976, Mon Hartford Courant (Hartford, Connecticut) Newspapers.com
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