theprawncracker
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ANSWERS- Jim Lewis – November 1, 2009
From theprawncracker…
Hey Jim! Did you write the FANTASTIC new Halloween sketches on Muppets.com? I can't decide which is my favorite... Probably The Swedish Chef "Pumpkin Carving," but the two Muppet Labs videos are top contenders as well. Are there any plans for these to go on YouTube? They would absolutely kill (pun definitely intended).
Also, when did Bunsen get a penguin intern?
Write them, no. Suggest ideas, sure. Expertly executed, dare I say.
Will they go on YouTube? I have no idea what that entails. Does one have to get letters of transit and visas, or can a video simply migrate to YouTube at will?
And at Muppet Labs, the penguins often fill in for the lab rats when there’s a scheduling conflict.
From Beauregard…
Jim! Will you fix it? (Random British 70's reference there...) Also! Was just chatting with Prawnie about the new Muppet Haunted Videos and I have to say, I am LOVING them beyond belief! Something that probably gets overlooked (but not by us superfans...) is the set designs, and I wondered who needed the praise for coming up with the brand new Muppet Labs clock, the awesome Muppet Laps screensaver, the black and orange balloons around the Muppet Lab, and the wonderful microwave in Chef's modern kitchen! Whoever it was, congrats! We love you! – Beau
I will pass along your congratulations just as soon as I find out who’s responsible. We all work under assumed names so it’s sometimes difficult to tell. I agree, however, that the verisimilitude of these locales is part of what makes the pieces so wonderful.
From dwayne1115…
I have a question! I just saw Monty Python on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, and was laughing the whole way through it. Do you like Monty Python, and do you sometimes use it as a reference. Also I know you mentioned that your love for the Three Stooges and The Marx brothers and such. Who is your favorite Stooge, Marx Brother, and so on?
Also don't feel bad for being a Packers fan. I'm a Tennessee Titans fan and we have not won a game this season.
Love Monty Python…and The Goon Show and Beyond the Fringe and all that exquisite British foolishness. It is definitely a point of reference for me, but being the youngest child of parents who both grew up during the Depression and came of age during the Second World War, my earliest influences were U.S. and from the 30’s, 40’s, 50’s (For instance, the Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis performances on the early TV variety show,u201CColgate Comedy Hour” are magnificent. Loose, free-form and yet always spot on funny. A Muppet Show-like sense of comic foreboding.) Long live Python…and anyone else who’s funny and doesn’t take it too seriously….My condolences on the Titans, who will always be the Oilers to me. Hey, a fan rides out the worst of times.
From Beauregard…
I have (another) question! I'm doing an assignment on hedonism, post-modernism and consumer over-consumption behaviour...and I couldn't help thinking of a certain pig from time to time. Do you think Miss Piggy represents over-consumption (in terms of clothes and shoes...not food specifically)? And do the Muppets represent post-modernism (the 'be yourself' age of reasoning)? Just some thoughts there...
Whoa! Dude! Heavy!
Okay, so I don’t really talk like that. But those are the kinds of questions you’d find nowhere else, but here, which is reason enough to pack and go someplace else until this line of inquiry blows over. That said, I’d have to concur that Miss Piggy, who lives by the credo “Too Much Is Never Enough” defines over-consumption. She is, by the nature of her desires and her DNA, a consuming being – a fact that no doubt leaves Kermit quivering in trepidation (or somewhere equally secluded). Does she get everything she wants? No. But it is her hunger that makes us love her. That, and she speaks aloud the words we often keep to ourselves: “I WANT THAT NOW!u201D
As for Post-modernism and the Muppets? I always think of post-modernism as a stance where one dissembles everything that has come before, and thus takes an ironic, distanced stance towards the creation of others. From that perspective, the Muppets are not post-modern. They are very much invested in whatever they try. They aren’t distanced. They are themselves, but only because they have a safe place to be themselves – among friends.
Beau
From dwayne1115…
I have one more question for Jim:
I have been watching SNL Seasons one and two and I was wondering if the Muppet Newsman was based on Chevy Chase doing the Weekend update?
I do not know. I suspect it was based on every newsman from the days of John Cameron Swayze, Eric Severaid, Huntley & Brinkley, Douglas Edwards, Walter Cronkite, et al – with a healthy dose of local anchor faux gravitas thrown in. Whenever you hit gravitas with a falling cow, it’s funny. Jerry Juhl taught me that.
From theprawncracker…
Another question for you, Jimmy Jim...
Are you pumped for Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary? I know you're not involved at all, but as a fan are you excited?
I am always excited about Sesame Street, especially knowing so many of the stellar talents who make it happen. It is a joy that at 40 it remains so astonishingly creative.
As I’ve said in the past, I am of an age that was too old for it when it started, but when my own children were in the Sesame age-range; I came to appreciate it as never before. Besides, Ernie and Bert are one of the great comedy teams of all time, right up there with Abbott & Costello, Laurel & Hardy, Wheeler & Woolsey….
From theprawncracker…
Hey Jim! Did you write the FANTASTIC new Halloween sketches on Muppets.com? I can't decide which is my favorite... Probably The Swedish Chef "Pumpkin Carving," but the two Muppet Labs videos are top contenders as well. Are there any plans for these to go on YouTube? They would absolutely kill (pun definitely intended).
Also, when did Bunsen get a penguin intern?
Write them, no. Suggest ideas, sure. Expertly executed, dare I say.
Will they go on YouTube? I have no idea what that entails. Does one have to get letters of transit and visas, or can a video simply migrate to YouTube at will?
And at Muppet Labs, the penguins often fill in for the lab rats when there’s a scheduling conflict.
From Beauregard…
Jim! Will you fix it? (Random British 70's reference there...) Also! Was just chatting with Prawnie about the new Muppet Haunted Videos and I have to say, I am LOVING them beyond belief! Something that probably gets overlooked (but not by us superfans...) is the set designs, and I wondered who needed the praise for coming up with the brand new Muppet Labs clock, the awesome Muppet Laps screensaver, the black and orange balloons around the Muppet Lab, and the wonderful microwave in Chef's modern kitchen! Whoever it was, congrats! We love you! – Beau
I will pass along your congratulations just as soon as I find out who’s responsible. We all work under assumed names so it’s sometimes difficult to tell. I agree, however, that the verisimilitude of these locales is part of what makes the pieces so wonderful.
From dwayne1115…
I have a question! I just saw Monty Python on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, and was laughing the whole way through it. Do you like Monty Python, and do you sometimes use it as a reference. Also I know you mentioned that your love for the Three Stooges and The Marx brothers and such. Who is your favorite Stooge, Marx Brother, and so on?
Also don't feel bad for being a Packers fan. I'm a Tennessee Titans fan and we have not won a game this season.
Love Monty Python…and The Goon Show and Beyond the Fringe and all that exquisite British foolishness. It is definitely a point of reference for me, but being the youngest child of parents who both grew up during the Depression and came of age during the Second World War, my earliest influences were U.S. and from the 30’s, 40’s, 50’s (For instance, the Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis performances on the early TV variety show,u201CColgate Comedy Hour” are magnificent. Loose, free-form and yet always spot on funny. A Muppet Show-like sense of comic foreboding.) Long live Python…and anyone else who’s funny and doesn’t take it too seriously….My condolences on the Titans, who will always be the Oilers to me. Hey, a fan rides out the worst of times.
From Beauregard…
I have (another) question! I'm doing an assignment on hedonism, post-modernism and consumer over-consumption behaviour...and I couldn't help thinking of a certain pig from time to time. Do you think Miss Piggy represents over-consumption (in terms of clothes and shoes...not food specifically)? And do the Muppets represent post-modernism (the 'be yourself' age of reasoning)? Just some thoughts there...
Whoa! Dude! Heavy!
Okay, so I don’t really talk like that. But those are the kinds of questions you’d find nowhere else, but here, which is reason enough to pack and go someplace else until this line of inquiry blows over. That said, I’d have to concur that Miss Piggy, who lives by the credo “Too Much Is Never Enough” defines over-consumption. She is, by the nature of her desires and her DNA, a consuming being – a fact that no doubt leaves Kermit quivering in trepidation (or somewhere equally secluded). Does she get everything she wants? No. But it is her hunger that makes us love her. That, and she speaks aloud the words we often keep to ourselves: “I WANT THAT NOW!u201D
As for Post-modernism and the Muppets? I always think of post-modernism as a stance where one dissembles everything that has come before, and thus takes an ironic, distanced stance towards the creation of others. From that perspective, the Muppets are not post-modern. They are very much invested in whatever they try. They aren’t distanced. They are themselves, but only because they have a safe place to be themselves – among friends.
Beau
From dwayne1115…
I have one more question for Jim:
I have been watching SNL Seasons one and two and I was wondering if the Muppet Newsman was based on Chevy Chase doing the Weekend update?
I do not know. I suspect it was based on every newsman from the days of John Cameron Swayze, Eric Severaid, Huntley & Brinkley, Douglas Edwards, Walter Cronkite, et al – with a healthy dose of local anchor faux gravitas thrown in. Whenever you hit gravitas with a falling cow, it’s funny. Jerry Juhl taught me that.
From theprawncracker…
Another question for you, Jimmy Jim...
Are you pumped for Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary? I know you're not involved at all, but as a fan are you excited?
I am always excited about Sesame Street, especially knowing so many of the stellar talents who make it happen. It is a joy that at 40 it remains so astonishingly creative.
As I’ve said in the past, I am of an age that was too old for it when it started, but when my own children were in the Sesame age-range; I came to appreciate it as never before. Besides, Ernie and Bert are one of the great comedy teams of all time, right up there with Abbott & Costello, Laurel & Hardy, Wheeler & Woolsey….