Convincing John
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- Aug 27, 2003
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I think this is the key thing here. If this were 1981, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Back then, Kermit and Piggy were all over the place. Once they switched TMS's time slot in the UK to a kid's time slot and people got mad that they couldn't see the show, so they changed it back. (This was in...1979, I think).Looks like the common theme is, suffice to say, slight embarrassment. And I admit, while I proudly display my influences and love of all things Muppety and Jim Henson on my online profiles/facebook/etc; in real life it's not exactly something I bring up or share with anyone I meet; even people I hang with. Of course if someone comes over, they're going to see how my living room has a zillions of Muppet stuff I've collected since the 80's.
(hey maybe it's a good thing I don't get dates? ha) Though I have to say, I'd love it if I found a girl who had even slight nerdy enthusiasm for the Muppets or Fraggle Rock.
But isn't it sad that we feel it's like this? I mean, what could possibly be bad about proudly proclaiming or even passively being into something thats created an endless source of inspiration and happiness for millions worldwide for 55 years. Has Looney tunes, or heck even Disney cartoons provided the kind of laughter, zanyness, warmth and inspiration consistently as the Muppets have? I guess it's a sad commentary on society where we feel we're embarassed to say we're fans of Henson's work.
But yeah, while I always see people at the mall with Sesame shirts, *actual* Muppet show character interest or love is non existent. Hopefully that'll change with Disney's push next year, but in a way...it's kind of cool with it all being rather underground. Kind of shows who the real fans are, and makes it fun whenever you do find someone into it all.
But now? Think of what has happened since the Muppet Show ended. What did the public generally see? Muppet Babies and Sesame Street. Those with HBO got Fraggle Rock, but that too was considered a "kid's show", although with the stellar writing, brilliant symbolism and unbelievable quality, it can be enjoyed by anyone of any age.
Us? We know about every fact there is about the Muppets. We see it all. We discuss it all. Think of all the discussions that have happened here and at Tough Pigs about the most obscure stuff. We see all that.
The general public sees this and follows this equation:
Muppets=Muppet Babies and/or Muppets=Sesame Street. Sesame Street=Elmo and nothing else. Conclusion: All Muppet fans are childish and immature.
Disney is such a huge corporation that it's okay to like their stuff, no matter your age, because they've been around since the late 1920's. Looney Tunes? Same thing. You have that, plus all the adult stuff they have done with their cartoons without being edgy (the WWII-related cartoons come to mind). The cartoons from both corporations were seen in the theaters, meant for adults.
True, the Muppets have been around for a long time, but they just need a more solid adult fanbase again. I think this is a reason why people hate Elmo. He's so out in front of everything that that's all people see. What did the regular Muppets do in the late 90's? They got cancelled and had some movies that either had the characters play other roles or flopped.
The viral videos are helping turn their popularity around. We'll just have to see what happens.
Convincing John