beaker
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2002
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What if instead of just the lucky few who could afford HBO on top of cable; every kid in America could have had the chance to see Fraggle Rock? Imagine how many more fans there'd be, heck the Weinstein movie would probably have more juice behind it given EVERYONE would have remembered Fraggle Rock.
No telling how many potential fans and kids were denied the magic, because their families couldnt afford super premium cable.
Growing up ultra poor in the 80's, I had no cable let alone HBO on top of that. So from the early to late 80's my exposure and love of the world of Fraggle Rock mostly came from reading Fraggle books at Walden Books, collecting the merchandise, etc. But then came the late 80's, with the brief Fraggle Rock cartoon; so this was my only real exposure to Fraggle Rock and I loved it(until 1993 when the vhs episodes came out and 1994 when I got cable and Disney Channel was running FR reruns)
NBC, PBS and other networks did a bad thing by turning down Fraggle Rock, forcing the show to only be seen by a very small select few on HBO at a time when most Americans could afford HBO and thus defeating the purpose of being seen by all for its messages of peace, understanding, song, sillyness and togetherness.
Again I understand *why* the decision was made to have it on HBO since noone else was willing to give it a chance...but can you imagine had it been simply shown every week or saturday morning on regular tv?
Luckily in the UK and Canada it was free for all to see, but I think a lot of people forget that the reason Fraggle Rock is so unknown and obscure is because hardly anyone got to see it or was exposed to it. I grew up in the early, mid and late 80's(err, as well as the early 90's, mid 90's, late 90's and early 2000's...what can I say, Im a big kid!) and never got to be exposed to the live action show until the vhs tapes and Disney Channel reruns when I could afford cable.
Also on a side note, will we ever see as much Fraggle merchandise in the modern era as 2003? 2003 seems like it was about it.
No telling how many potential fans and kids were denied the magic, because their families couldnt afford super premium cable.
Growing up ultra poor in the 80's, I had no cable let alone HBO on top of that. So from the early to late 80's my exposure and love of the world of Fraggle Rock mostly came from reading Fraggle books at Walden Books, collecting the merchandise, etc. But then came the late 80's, with the brief Fraggle Rock cartoon; so this was my only real exposure to Fraggle Rock and I loved it(until 1993 when the vhs episodes came out and 1994 when I got cable and Disney Channel was running FR reruns)
NBC, PBS and other networks did a bad thing by turning down Fraggle Rock, forcing the show to only be seen by a very small select few on HBO at a time when most Americans could afford HBO and thus defeating the purpose of being seen by all for its messages of peace, understanding, song, sillyness and togetherness.
Again I understand *why* the decision was made to have it on HBO since noone else was willing to give it a chance...but can you imagine had it been simply shown every week or saturday morning on regular tv?
Luckily in the UK and Canada it was free for all to see, but I think a lot of people forget that the reason Fraggle Rock is so unknown and obscure is because hardly anyone got to see it or was exposed to it. I grew up in the early, mid and late 80's(err, as well as the early 90's, mid 90's, late 90's and early 2000's...what can I say, Im a big kid!) and never got to be exposed to the live action show until the vhs tapes and Disney Channel reruns when I could afford cable.
Also on a side note, will we ever see as much Fraggle merchandise in the modern era as 2003? 2003 seems like it was about it.