If the show gets renewed for a second season, then fantastic! If it gets cancelled, it wasn't due to lack of trying. Everyone: the performers, the writers, the producers, the directors and all of us as the fans put our hearts and souls into making this work.
There is no one thing to blame for things going downhill. The marketing was initially pushing it slightly to far with the adult content, which of course created a chain reaction with parental organizations going nuts. The general media didn't appreciate it either. We as the Muppet fandom tried to dispell these concerns, but we are a very small community. We can scream all we want, but it's still like keeping the tide back with a broom.
In hindsight, maybe the mockumentry style could have gone in a different direction. I don't think Piggy should have been the only Muppet on television from the beginning. There could have simply been the Muppets version of Saturday Night Live. We could've had sketches and songs from the get go. And as for the behind-the-scenes stuff, perhaps it could have been better to watch Kermit trying to keep his troops together as a family rather than just as coworkers.
I think the problem is one of the scale of Muppet fans who actually watched everything versus casual fans that tune in for one or two projects every so often is the reason this doesn't have the audience it deserves. Face it. As fans who followed every DTV movie, every 5 minute appearance on talk shows, and every cameo in some awful project (Remember the Jessica Simpsons Variety Special?), some of us are far more excited by a shake up or change of the characters' venue than those who haven't watched anything significant since the first comeback movie or earlier. There are those of us who
liked that this was supposed to be post 2000 era sitcomy, and felt it was a fresh change.
While I don't doubt they should have done crazier stuff and that could have totally fit in the format they had, the writers tried something new and spent several episodes trying to get the formula to work with the characters, only to have to redo everything to try and fit what could have fit there in the first place. I'll get that it would have had slightly better ratings if they had more chickens and penguins running around. But the key word is
slightly. Even if the show was a perfect remake of the Muppet Show that didn't come off as a retread, I'm sure the ratings would have sucked also. I've been saying this for years, The Muppets can't exist in today's TV markets. On the one hand,
anything they were going to go up against was going to hurt them. Unless it was Friday, which unless you're that
incredibly terrible Last Man Standing, is a death sentence for sitcoms (especially if you follow it). And frankly, the Muppets
never did well in prime time broadcast network slots. NBC pretty much pretended JHH didn't exist (though the unwieldy hour long always switching format had trouble drawing that audience in), and Muppets Tonight wasn't pulling in Boy Meets World numbers, so they threw around the time slot, produced a second season, and dumped it on Disney when they still had diverse programming.
The show deserves a second season on the merits of giving them a second chance, but that's clearly not going to be in the cards barring some miracle on ABC's part. Not saying the first season of The Muppet Show sucked, but they had some weak concepts and characters that didn't click. Heck, Miss Piggy didn't even have a solid performer (let alone a good looking puppet). Beaker didn't come in until season 2, and we all know about the value of that character. And I think we can all agree, at least it didn't turn out like the Cutesy Poo Poo Valentines Show pilot (though a Muppet show like Sex and Violence would have been awesome). If this show got a second season where everything is perfected and more Muppety, we can write season one off as struggling to find that common ground between a format that works on modern television and Muppet brand mayhem. Writing this stuff isn't easy, yet some of its competition seems to be. I'm not going to be upset if it doesn't. It simply wasn't meant to be.
Then again, I have to add, if wacky off the wall classic Muppety stuff is what the public wanted, why did they avoid MMW? The movie going audience couldn't all have been taken in by another crappily produced Tween Dystopia franchise written by someone that peaked at a Cliff Notes of "The Fountain head" once. I'm guessing the original title of "The Muppets...Again" was shockingly accurate, but that's a long rant I'm not going into. I have a feeling that no matter what, the Muppet supposedly loving audience would've bailed a few episodes in anyway because they still wouldn't get that warm fuzzy "watching an old tape of TMM at Grandma's house" nostalgia they wanted. Sure, they probably want a T-Shirt or a Christmas ornament, and probably bought one of the comics once.
Of course, it's embarrassing that Grandfathered was a bigger flop, but I bet Fox will renew that. Probably got a ratings boost from New Girl.