I look at products like this as a misreading of the potential audience for Fraggle merchandise. Who is going to spend $1,200.00 on this? Fans on a budget won't, and fans who can drop the money would be better served going to get a puppet commissioned or something like that. Why not make something people might want? Like a collection of the picture books from the eighties in a coffee-table book type thing. They could charge a bit for that, but it would be something fans might want.
Again, it's all about retailers and licensees. Stores don't want to sell Nostalgic merchandise unless they're extremely evergreen or have a project coming up, and if no one's in the market to sell them, no one's going to be in the market to
make them. On the Big Henson three totem pole, Sesame Street is on top, The Muppets are second, and The Fraggles are at the bottom, as unlike the other two (not for the lack of trying) aren't constantly on the air (minus reruns) or in the middle of a series of movies. They have the Hub reruns, and that's about it. There's too much risk, and the companies that could provide the collectors with accessible, low to middle end products would rather get any other license there is. So, we're stuck with designers making high end collectibles for those with enough money to drop 1200 bucks n a limited edition ultra collectible with only a few pieces being made.
If that Doozers cartoon would at
least get picked up over here by one of any number of educational outlets (it deserves to be on PBS), we'd see Doozers preschool stuff, sure... but that would open the door for more collector friendly nostalgic merchandising. Something tells me we'll see the cartoon in a year or two.