Here's a lion telling us some "good news" about Jesus. The head looks decent, but it's the constant flailing of the puppeteer's hand that makes it fit into this thread, not to mention the obvious looping of the dialogue in the studio due to the wind outside that would have been picked up by the mic. Even then, they couldn't be opted to use a pop filter or at least some pantyhose stretched over a wire hanger if they're that cheap because of all the popping sounds.
I'm very programmed. I can't even read the words "Good News" without hearing Prof. Farnsworth in my head.
Anyway, yeah. This is one of those rare cases where they actually have a good puppet, but everything else is wrong. I really rather like the lion here in design terms. Sure, he's no Theo, but he's relatively cute and cartoonish enough to be professionally built. Than they just hand it to someone who seems to be doing a bad impersonation of Sarah G. Latto from Gumball who doesn't have strong enough puppet skills. Almost seems like the production company (hehe heh using the term loosely) bought some puppets at an auction or something and just threw it to whoever was willing to perform it.
I actually think its pretty good,considering how cheaply made that whole show was.
It's a good build, but the colors are wrong and he's not (to quote a Garfield Barney parody) cute and non-threatening enough. Not a bad character design, but nothing that says lovable to a toddler. The dark purple just doesn't do well on screen as his lighter, pinker build he got once he hit television. Whatever I can say about Barney, someone knew that a brighter character would stick out, even in a brightly lit studio. The dark purple either blends in with a dark scene or it doesn't photograph very well on brighter ones. It probably looked great in person, but it seems like the TV show corrected the color theory these early ones lacked.
Now, to move onto another example, here's another clip from that show that has inconsistent puppetry.
This show puzzles me. There's just something to how inconsistent it is. The writing's inconsistent, the puppets are inconsistent, the puppetry is inconsistent. You either have puppets that look professional and well made, or ugly, amateurish things side by side. And as you can see in this sketch, the puppeteering is off. They can't even seem to look at each other, and they somehow feel they need to dart their heads back and forth from each other to the camera and everywhere in between. And the long headed puppet looks out of place with the humanoid ones. Like they're trying for a Muppet Show style of Scooter and other abstract looking characters being side by side with Wayne and Wanda and more cartoony looking humans and somehow still fitting together. But somehow it looks like they bought a box of puppets at a rummage sale and said "yeah, let's just use them."
The puppets here aren't bad looking (though the long headed one just doesn't work in any design sense), and sometimes the show seems like it could be entertaining genuinely. And unlike that purple thing that looks like it came out of a Cathy comic strip that's constantly shouting angrily about God and Jesus, it doesn't seem like this show is
painfully trying to be preachy. It just seems to fall apart quickly.