I'd put blame on the Henson kids for selling them to Disney in the first place, but I've unfortunately lost a lot of respect for JHC these days anyway, they really don't seem to care about the entities that Jim worked so hard to create anymore.
It would probably be the same story for any other larger corporate studio if they bought the Muppets instead, a lot of them (Universal is pretty notorious for it as well) either buy up the catalogs of these smaller, more independent companies, if not buying out the companies altogether, with really no intent on actually doing anything with them, they just want to own them.
Any company besides Disney would have just dumped them in their vault, sat on them for eternity, and we wouldn't have even got a T-shirt out of it. If JHC continued to own them, we'd see a long delayed DTV movie that would get a mixed reception, and then dozens of projects that don't go anywhere. Disney at least gave us a movie, and even if it was at the constant badgering of Jason and crew at the helm, we still got a theatrical movie that grossed modestly enough to warrant a sequel.
Of course, you look at how they treat Marvel since they bought them, and the approach is nuanced. In fact the only thing that I hate about Disney's Marvel ownership is Marvel's outright refusal to publish Disney character comics regularly. Not even so much as a Scrooge McDuck reprint or a continuation of the legendary Walt Disney's Comics and Stories.
Interesting pitch. I think you'll find most fans would love to see a show about the Muppets living in a house and/or neighborhood together.
The Muppets have always been inclusive to all ages. They're not known to pander to youngsters so that's my only concern with your proposal. If the Muppets and their classic brand of humor show up in a house, in a theater, on a boat or with a goat, audiences of all ages will show up too. The rest is marketing, not context.
Of course the last Muppet film capitalized on the fanbase. That's a no-brainer, especially considering that many of these nostalgic 30-somethings have kids. Because of this, the Muppets are ripe for a resurgence. The film's print marketing was bright and vibrant and not evocative of anything vintage. The commercials and the film reintroduced the characters so that a new generation could appreciate them and it was successful in doing so.
That's basically what I'd call for a TV series, myself. Something more sitcomish and current and not some attempt that tries too hard to be the original series. Jim wouldn't have remade the original series, and would be hungry to put the characters in another venue. That's why Muppets Tonight was of varying quality. It wanted to be the old show, but hip and current and the show didn't get really good
until they moved away from
both approaches and went to something more sitcom style. The difference is clear. Watch a season one episode, and then watch either Johnny Moves Out or the one where Beaker goes on a Star Trek cruise and gets his non-existent ears talked off by George Takei.
As for the marketing push, I don't think we'll see anything for the next film until, at least, Thanksgiving or Christmas, with Christmas being more likely. But they really should step it up and do some smaller, viral video style projects as soon as the film's done shooting. or at least on its downtime. I'd
love to see some video production blog arise out of this, but it didn't happen last time so I doubt they'd do it this time. Other than that, The Muppets have a decent presence in stores. We need more shirts and a few more toys, but they really only should step that up closer to the film's release. They just need a bigger presence in the Disney Store. A bean bag line and shirts that don't just feature Animal at least.