Well, Disney owns several networks, and none of them could be a place for the Muppets, sadly (at least, for the time being). ABC doesn't know what it wants to be except for the network "Grey's Anatomy" is on, and their schedule and programming is always in a state of flux. These were the people that didn't want to give Pushing Daisies a second chance, but sunk lots and lots of money into sitcoms... and ABC hasn't had a successful sitcom since... well, maybe the 80's or 90's. And everything else is reality shows. I mean, "Dating in the Dark?" that's so scraped off the bottom of the barrel it has splinters on it.I think Disney would disagree with you most strongly there, come back to this thread in 12 months time and i'm sure opinions would be different on that. Remember Disney owns a TV network. What the Muppets are currently doing is part of a longterm plan - it isn't a case of them taking whatever they can get.
The Disney channel, well... we ALL know what's on that... and ABC Family... what the heck is on ABC family?
I'd love to see ABC have a regular Muppet TV show, but somehow I could see them running 3 episodes, and then keeping the rest for summer replacements, airing all of them in a "contractual obligation/ get rid of them" marathon (like they did with Knights of Prosperity and a handful of others).
I still say the movie has to happen first... and before that a couple specials to hype up the movie.
I still wish that somehow Joey would leak the unused script for MFS online so we can all read what was REALLY supposed to go down. Again, there was so much wrong with OZ that I can't even begin to start talking about what was wrong with it. I think the entire concept was pointless, especially since it came at a time (something I've said hundreds of times before) when they were considering so many better, more original scripts. Remember, TMM was a parallel to the original Oz movie. Plus, another thing I've been saying, they were trying to get too many focus groups at once, so they forgot what made the movies lovable in the first place. LTS, say what you will about being "Kiddy" or "juveinle" but at least they didn't jump around all over the place looking for an audience. They knew who the Muppets where and what they were about. No jaded pop culture references needed.I agree that what's lacking is good writing. The last two major Muppet projects for television were written by newcomers, and Oz definitely failed because of it.