That may be true, but at the same time, Muppet Babies was many kids (including myself) jumping off point for the Muppets. Watching Muppet Babies and The Muppet Show on Nickelodeon was a very memorable part of my childhood. Though I would probably still be a Muppet fan, I still don't know. And just for the record, I am a fan of all things Muppets. Though I grew up on Muppet Babies and still like it, The Muppet Show and the movies are what really keep my interest.
You know, I have to say I was fortunate to live in an area that reran the Muppet Show early on Saturdays (before the network programming) before the Muppet babies. So, other than the fact Fraggles were on Cable and I could only see the animated version, I got exposed to the major projects of the day.
I don't think the kid-vids should have been made with the Muppet Show lot of characters. Some find them well produced, other fans do not, but that's not really the point I'm making. Why utilize the characters for only the kid market when Sesame already does that very well? That's the very thing that set the Muppet Show apart.
I have my issues with the Muppet Babies cartoon, but it was not a mistake to make the project. It was very popular, highly regarded and a good source of revenue for the Henson Company. However, it was the only running Muppet project when there should have been something else to balance it.
As for the kid vids, I have to admit, they just don't have that much appeal unless you're really young. I was no more than 8 when I saw "Hey! You're as Funny as Fozzie Bear" and was just disappointed in every aspect. Especially the fact that Fozzie was only in 5 minutes of a half hour project. However, I reccomend seeing "Hey! You're a Cartoonist" (Working title, "Hey! Draw our copyrighted characters just like us!"), mainly for the appearance of Picklepuss and Pops. Not only was this the first outside SS project featuring Carol Spinney, these were actually his original characters. And he even drew in the large Puppet suits (he was able to see out of a small slit in between Pop's Head and neck, BTW). But other than that, I wondered about that myself.
As for Muppet Babies, I have to say, I miss that kind of preschool show. They actually treated the kids as an audience, and not a consumer group shouting back obvious answers at the tv. It was a major cartoon series in the 1980's, and the source of many insignificant copies over the years, ranging from Baby Popeye to Baby Felix (A horrible little cartoon that comes from Japan, and is more a knockoff of Doraemon than MB). Not to mention numerous awards and revenue. Fraggle Rock animated was kinda a mistake, and I wish NBC would have just reran some of the HBO episodes instead.
That said, I feel that Jim wanted to psuh Muppet show characters to kids, while coming up with more fantasy and artistic style programs before he passed on. Which is why you saw a lot of projects like Greek Myths, the Storyteller, Jim Henson Hour, etc... I just get that feeling. I still think that Kermit should have been the only Muppet on those kid vids, though.