It's a Julia starts having a convulsion and Grover has to sit on her until she calms down episode

>it's a Julia starts having a convulsion and Grover has to sit on her until she calms down episode

>it's a Julia keeps lifting her dress and no one tells her to stop episode

...

>it's a Julia's mom tries to get her a job but she's unemployable and destined to be a useless, depressed neet her entire life episode

>its a Julia discovers Sonic episode

will she go full ETSUBATSU?

Julia a best.

>it's a Julia start inappropriately touching Elmo but whenever Elmo tries to make her stop she starts screaming so Elmo just lets her keep going episode

Julia is cute! autism is cute!

Fucking gold.

reddit gold xD

If none of these ever happen in the show then Sesame Street might as well not have added an autistic character at all. This is what real autism looks like and should be portrayed as such.

>making the autistic character a girl when boys are way way way more likely to have autism

What is it with the media wanting to push minorities?

Does Sesame Street have many female characters? I think it's just a way for them to hit two birds with one stone.

I think it's usually milder when in males.

Good thread

>it's a 'Julia watches the news, counts the number of Tomahawks flying into the sky and has a fit for 18 minutes because the number of Tomahawks she counted wasn't the number the news story had stated' episode

Those ones really grumble my gimbolds.

No.

>It's a "Elmo uses Julia's autistic math skills to count cards in the casino, but they're caught and Elmo has to watch her be dragged away by the mafia bouncers" episode

jesus christ

...

>it's a "someone buys Julia Mega Bloks instead of Lego" episode

Oh shit is there a download?

I heard that episode was canned because PBS said it was too violent to air.

It is though, more males are on the spectrum it's just not very apparent in a lot of them

>its a julia calls the black grocer a nigger episode

Not quite - girls are less likely to be diagnosed, due to how they grow up and learn to play, so if they are diagnosed, it's likely to be very noticeable.

This is honestly the best post I have seen in a long while