Well I finally got it today. And it is a good documentary. I was a little surprised by all the images from The Muppet Show, which Clash did NOT perform on, as well as all the Sesame Street clips from before he joined. I expected Richard Hunt's Elmo, and maybe a few clips from when the show began, but was still a little surprised.
It's cool that the Ferlinghetti Donnizetti clip chosen is the one from the out-of-print "Getting Ready to Read". When Clash started talking about that character, I was expecting the "Rapping Alphabet" clip, and hoping for some Ferlignhetti clip I hadn't seen before.
It's a shame that when Clash talks about working on The Muppets at Walt Disney World they never show any clips or behind-the-scenes footage from that special. Maybe Disney didn't want to loan footage or charged too much, but they did manage to obtain footage from one of the Muppet Meeting Films (the only Disney-owned footage that appears in the documentary).
Interesting how on the packaging and main menu it mentions that Elmo is a trademark of Sesame Workshop, but doesn't mention the same about Sesame Street and its characters (and should I be surprised it doesn't give a trademark credit for the Muppets?). And I didn't notice this kind of trademark credit in the credits.
So in both this and the autobiography, Clifford gets the same amount of coverage, both for his appearance on The Arsenio Hall Show. Too bad neither acknowledges Clifford as a character on The Jim Henson Hour or Muppets Tonight (or The Muppets at Walt Disney World).
Although there's no talk about Dinosaurs, it is great that the talking Baby Sinclair doll appears in the background when Kevin's mom talks. And during the Muppet Workshop scenes near the end, it's cool that some of the puppets from The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss can be seen in the background (I would have thought they'd keep the Sesame Street puppets seperate from other Henson puppets while filming the documentary).
The only things I would have really changed about the documentary would be some clips of Leon from The Jim Henson Hour and a section on Dinosaurs, and the only change I'd make to the DVD would be the inclusion of some bonus Sesame Street clips. Otherwise, it's great, and I can't wait until the Caroll Spinney documentary (but I was already excited about that one).