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-   -   The Muppets - Do you still love them? (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=5403)

Not Afraid 03-03-2007 08:38 PM

I never really even liked the Muppets. It's one of those things that I just don't "get".

Gemini Cricket 03-03-2007 09:36 PM

I liked the Henson-ified Muppets. Their humor used to be targeted towards adults, now it seems like they don't know what to do with Kermit and friends.

I love watching the older films and the Muppet Show.

:)

"Listen, I don't take my clothes off for anyone, even if it IS 'artistic'."

Alex 03-03-2007 09:55 PM

I never loved them in the first place. It seems to have been a development stage I skipped and have never understood the appeal either when I was a kid or as an adult.

Probably because I skipped Sesame Street completely as a kid (went straight on to 3-2-1 Contact, Electric Company and CNN Headline News) and therefore didn't have the infant/toddler introduction to them. Doing a crossword puzzle I learned a couple weeks ago that Bert and Ernie live together; I knew of both characters but not this apparently dumbfoundingly obvious detail.

A girlfriend at the time caused me to see A Muppet Christmas Carol in the theater and I think I've seen The Great Muppet Caper at some point. Various episodes of the TV show over the years. A lot of the Muppet Babies cartoon mixed in with other Saturday morning toons.

I did like Fraggle Rock, though.

RStar 03-03-2007 11:23 PM

I definatly feel that Jim Henson was the heart of the Muppets, and particularly Kermit. Jim was the creator, and the voice of Kermit, and much the way Walt Disney was the voice of Mickey that launched the Disney Empire, Jim's Kermit launched the Hensen Empire (no Yoda pun intended).

The problem is not just writers, or actors reading a script. The heart that was Jim Henson could carry on only so far after his death (the same may be said about Walt). Most of the shows afterward could be funny and intertaining, but with a hollow, empty heart. I mean when Kermit sang "it's not easy being Green" you felt for the little guy, and he seemed so real and so alive. That magic just hasn't been there post Jim, in my opinion.

And if I go see the Muppit Mobile tomorrow, it will be out of curiosity for the technology, not for the Muppets.

katiesue 03-04-2007 08:36 AM

I love the muppets. Loved Sesame Street, loved the Muppet Show, loved the movies (except Muppet Treasure Island - I worked for a company at the time making the game from the movie it was a nightmare).

They do hold up and if done right could come back I think. But the odds of done right are pretty slim. If you look back now every "star" of the day was in the show or had movie cameos. I'm not sure you could get that today.

mousepod 03-04-2007 08:42 AM

Did we know this already?

(If you don't want to follow the link - new Muppet Show in development)

katiesue 03-04-2007 08:52 AM

Interesting concept. If done right it could definately work.

flippyshark 03-04-2007 09:58 AM

That was news to me, very welcome news.

RStar 03-04-2007 05:49 PM

I was hoping to see the 10 minute Pilot! Shucks!

Matterhorn Fan 03-04-2007 05:58 PM

With the exception of one very, very long and dull song, I really like Muppet Treasure Island. I liked Muppets Tonight.

Muppets has bad attendance in DCA compared to the Studios for two reasons: (1) it's in DCA, and (2) everyone in SoCal's seen it a million times by now. I love MuppetVision, but it's still a movie. Once you've seen it a million times, once a year or so will do.


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