But those two decades gave him a lot of time to be building and creating puppets instead of starting from scratch at the beginning of TMS.
True, but the problem I guess from my end is that building puppets are very expensive. I remember talking to a puppet builder online and he told me that a Muppet Style puppet would cost close to a thousand. Which blew my mind because I used to spend only $100 worth of materials each month and build that way. Unfortunatly I found out that I could draw better than build puppets. Plus sculpt with clay better so I wanted to get into the liquid foam molding sort of thing but not only is it health hazardous but it's way more expensive plus I don't have a clay / latex oven that can go up to 100 c within 3 hours. I'd be kicked out of my apartment if I ever tried to attempt that. lol
Anyway I have a forum some where under the Puppet Building part called "Trying to get back into puppetry". I figure I mention it so I don't get into trouble for talking about the same thing in two threads. lol
Although I am kind of looking at motion capture puppetry and autodesk mudbox as an alternative. It's almost accomplishing the same thing but the puppet is a graphic and a mocap foam puppet.
It's a bit complicated and about a few thousand dollars but I think it might be a way to save budget a bit because within animation and graphics there's no limit except for disk space. Headcases once said that it was expensive and they only made 60 characters which I don't understand but perhaps it's in the matter of working hard with a team in terms of a due date, I don't know.
Anyway It would have been kind of hard to get into the spotlight today because reality TV kind of took place of comedy variety shows and the commercial world doesn't seem too creative driven. I wonder how Jim fought for creative freedom in terms of making commercials and making deals in contracts.
Plus also no one wanted The Muppets in America and it wasn't until Lord Lew Grade in the UK was interested. Though I wonder how the copyright thing was settled because if you look at the original ending credits it says that the show was copyrighted ITN (I think that's Grade's company) but the characters (c) Henson Associates. That's really rare to find, I think George Lucas was like that with Star Wars on how he owns the characters and Fox owned the movies. I wonder how you do that in terms of contract deals.