Getting caught up on forum reading and just read this entire thread. Some various thoughts on recurring themes here...
A lot of people know how i feel about posers vs real Muppets. Hey they're great for getting some types of shots you can't easily otherwise get but the Muppets have become way too relient on them. A poser no matter how good it is can't capture the same kind of look a puppet can because the hand inside gives it its expression. Even the skilled poser photographer who's worked with posing Muppets for years can't get the kind of life out of the characters that a puppeteer with its hand inside can provide. Look at the shots of Kermit on the cover and contents pages of The Works compared with all the poser shots in the same book. Look at how beautiful all the older Muppet photos in the collage on the cover of Gikow's SST 40 yrs book are and how generic and awful the newer poser photos are. Posers should be the understudies for photos - the stunt men called in to do stuff the star can't do - rather than the "go to" Muppets to use. Remember those wonderful hilarious photos from last year of Super Grover, Maria and a sandwich? Perfect example of why real Muppets are always ready for their closeup, Mr. DeMille. And the dvd cover of C Is For Cookie a perfect example of why posers should be nixed.
In regards to Disney leadership in terms of Muppets' current support/success (this will be another familiar rant for older readers), yes i am thankful that the Muppets have the full support of the upper management of Disney especially befitting the 2011 movie but lets not ignore the heads of the Muppets Studio itself, specifically the current leader Lyelle Brier. Chris Curtin had lots of great ideas when he was first named chief. But when he was replaced for no other reason than internal politics when Iger first took over from Eisner and replaced with that awful Baby Einsteins guy who had no love of the Muppets nor idea of what to do with them, that was what hurt the Muppets after MWOO. All of CC's plans came to a screeching halt and Guy #2 (whose name i always forget mainly because he's best forgotten!) would have been perfectly contend to let them sit on the shelves and just be a nostalgia merchandise-only property.
Thankfully he was replaced with LB who loves the Muppets, understands them and has fought to make them what they are today (not only in terms of quality and big plans but also with securing aforementioned commitment and support from Disney's upper echelons). So any discussion of who within Disney should be given credit for and thanked for The Muppets' upswing would be severely amiss without bringing up Lyelle.