Then there was "The Land of Gorch" Muppets who were on SNL for the first season, appearing before there was a Muppet Show on U.S. television! I just barely remember their appearances. I guess they were like the primitive Simpsons animations on Tracy Ullman's show that
Yeah, a take on Robin Hood would be fun. So would a take on Camelot. I could just picture Kermit singing Camelot.![]()
Or maybe a Muppet Superhero movie.
Muppet Die Hard.
Yippee ki-yay, mother-frogger!![]()
Yippedoo kiyaykaaar goom, der mooder fjurker....bork bork bork!![]()
I'm sure there are some who might be "bothered" to see the Muppets motor vehicles lately, but those people are likely unaware Jim Henson creations were used to promote products like Wilkins Coffee as far back as 1957.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPUwPKThFxU
So, in a way, they are returning to their roots.
Sincerely,
Bill
I'm sure there are some who might be "bothered" to see the Muppets motor vehicles lately, but those people are likely unaware Jim Henson creations were used to promote products like Wilkins Coffee as far back as 1957.
5 seconds after Henson died there stopped being one, & it's fully possible they'll fade away eventually, but until then, the nostalgia is always received well, they always manage to remain relevant, & if nothing else, they can always belong on childrens television in the Sesame Street venue, but mass appeal like they once knew is unlikely. They are an analog concept competing in a digital age, and as lovable as they are, they don't match the flashI'm wondering about the gang's bigger mass-media future here.
They are an analog concept competing in a digital age, and as lovable as they are, they don't match the flash
I'm sure there are some who might be "bothered" to see the Muppets motor vehicles lately, but those people are likely unaware Jim Henson creations were used to promote products like Wilkins Coffee as far back as 1957.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPUwPKThFxU
So, in a way, they are returning to their roots.
Sincerely,
Bill
Yippee ki-yay, mother-frogger!![]()
Yippedoo kiyaykaaar goom, der mooder fjurker....bork bork bork!![]()
yes the der mooder fjurker would well and truly be borked![]()
I'm sure there are some who might be "bothered" to see the Muppets motor vehicles lately, but those people are likely unaware Jim Henson creations were used to promote products like Wilkins Coffee as far back as 1957.
Do you mean bothered to see the Muppets promoting motor vehicles? I'm used to seeing them doing commercials, but what bugs me about the recent car commercials are the terrible lyrics. The refrain "No, we ain't got no room for boring" has awful rhythm; the stress should be on "room" but instead it's on "no," and the "room for" is just crammed into a single beat. It's a very annoying, badly written song.
A Muppet fan covered all the songs of Jesus Christ Superstar in the voices of the Muppets.
Yep, and they didn't exactly necessarily hasten the production of a new movie or series.Between Muppets in Space and the 2011 film weren't there a few TV specials and youtube music videos?
It did strike me the other day that, IP rights notwithstanding, SNL might be the ideal home to today's Muppets - they could do a sketch or two per ep, enough to keep current and produce regular viral content when particular skits land, but not have the burden of producing full half-hour shows on the own to an audience that might not be willing to watch that much puppet stuff.Aside from that, the "Muppets Tonight" show from the 90s already showed the potential of an updated Muppet TV show which would get its inspiration more from comedy sketch shows like SNL than classical vaudeville. Even on the original Muppet Show, they had some segments which were more parody of then current TV, like the Muppet News Flash, Pigs In Space and Vetenarian Hospital.
So, yeah, I think a new Muppet TV show could very well succeed.
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