Ugh! I hate that! Frank did not just voiced, he puppeterred for crying out loud... puppeteered (that means performed and did the voice of Miss Piggy, Animal, and Fozzie.Boy, Frank Oz is going to be ****** if he ever finds out about this:
On the Seasonal Music Choice channel, a blurb of trivia appeared on the screen that read, "Frank Oz played the voice of Miss Piggy, Animal, and Fozzie in The Muppet Christmas Carol."
Some people just really can't discern the different between puppeteering and voice work, can they?
Yeah, Looney Tunes, Garfield, Dr. Seuss... they do show some of the Peanuts specials and they've released a large number of them on DVD before they just gave up (where's my copy of that dumb live action hybrid special where Spike gets taken care of by a hot blonde that I wasn't too crazy about as a kid?)... but there used to be prime time specials all the time. Even episodes of cartoons sometimes, like the Planet of the Turtleoids and the very first episode of Tiny Toons. Now they barely show the Christmas ones.Yeah I remember. I know they used to have various Looney Tunes specials at some points. I remember being five and being angry because there was supposed to be a Bugs Bunny special one night but it was interrupted by the President's speech.
Though I am thankful they aren't airing that not at all a Christmas special Frosty Returns. I don't hate it... there's a LOT of great talent in that one... Brian Doyle Murray, Andrea Martin, John Goodman, Johnathan Winters... but it's too dated (the MTV line gets more cringe inducing every year), and I hate winter... I REALLY hate winter. The adults are completely right in this darn special, and they're treated like the villains because they don't understand the whimsy of not having to shovel 20 pounds per foot of icy, wet, dirty gray snow that the plow shoves onto your sidewalk. Okay, I ranted there. But seriously... It ain't a Christmas special. There's no mention of Christmas, just like the real Frosty song.
The Frosty Returns special is a horrible example, or rather a good example of them abusing that trope. It's not even about "The Magic of Christmas," so much as you're a horrible, godless heathen if you don't love snowstorms and winter. The story is basically someone invents an arisol spray can that melts snow really fast. They mention environmental issues in passing for like 1 second which would at least have given the "villain" an actual morally inferior motive. But the whole thing plays out as: If you don't like the magic of arctic temperatures, backbreaking manual clean ups, and being crammed in your house for days on end, you're a terrible, cynical, selfish evil person.I really hate the "Designated Villain" trope, especially when it comes to Christmas specials, because they'll be doing something totally logical that's just considered "villainous" because it's not what the heroes want, and because people are supposed to be "nice" at Christmastime (I've noticed that in a lot of more famous Christmas media, like the Grinch or A Christmas Carol, there is an actual villain, but he [or she, more rarely] comes around in the end, which is a lot better than having a Designated Villain). The trope in general irritates me (as most Informed Attribute tropes do), but it's especially grating when used in Christmas specials.