Shows with exceptional quality, like Sesame and Mr. Rogers, will never need a revival.
Yeah. Cuz Sesame Street has never been cancelled. Though the deal with HBO pretty much saved the series from it.
I like to think of Sesame Street, The Simpsons, and Saturday Night Live as the extreme opposite of a revival. Shows that have been on long enough, change were gradual enough that if you never stopped watching them, you don't notice the change as much as someone who stopped watching and then came back to it. No wonder a lot of 70's kids back in the day were adamant about how much they hate Elmo. Where as a revival, no matter how close to the original they try to get, it's always completely different and the fans hate it for some reason. Theoretically, a show that's never been cancelled is the same as a show that has and came back, at least with fan reaction is involved.
But the thing is, Barney gets a revival because, unlike Sesame Street, he didn't quite have the staying power. Granted, he was on a
loooong time too before PBS just gave up on it. Not 46 years, but a decent 10-15. And from what I understand, Barney did go through the same changes Sesame went, only comparatively to Sesame Street's Around the Corner 90's rebrand and eventually the not so beloved season 33, Barney's "we're still relevant" rebrand came relatively early in the show's run. Hilariously, ATC was meant to combat the popularity of Barney, those changes were meant to combat the popularity of Dora type shows....and frankly they're worse than Barney. Much worse.
At least they didn't try to reboot Mr. Rogers with someone else replacing him. Captain Kangaroo tried it without Bob Keeshan ... and the silence was deafening.
I'm sure that the Rogers Estate or whoever owns the rights to the original series is smart enough to know that a fake Mr. Rogers would annoy enough of those who grew up with him that it would be unsuccessful on every level. Mr. Rogers wasn't a character, he was a live person. That's why Daniel Tiger was a compromise. It's not exactly the same show and it doesn't do exactly the same thing, but I don't think it needs to be. It gives enough of the everything but Mr. Rogers himself that they didn't turn it into a cash grab like...well...these Barney and Teletubbies revivals.
And you totally know that 25 year olds with kids will be saying "Hurrrumph! Teletubbies was much better in my day. Now when they show the same video clip twice it feels
forced."