The Muppet Show
The must-see event of the year is here! Let us know your review of The Muppet Show special starring Sabrina Carpenter now streaming on Disney+.
Sesame Street Classics on YouTube
Full episodes of classic Sesame Street have arrived on YouTube. See the latest releases and join the discussion.
Sesame Street debuts on Netflix
Sesame Street Season 56 has premiered on Netflix and PBS. Let us know your thoughts on the anticipated season.
Back to the Rock Season 2
Fraggle Rock Back to the Rock Season 2 has premiered on AppleTV+. Watch the anticipated new season and let us know your thoughts.
Sam and Friends Book Read our review of the long-awaited book, "Sam and Friends - The Story of Jim Henson's First Television Show" by Muppet Historian Craig Shemin.
Jim Henson Idea Man
Remember the life. Honor the legacy. Inspire your soul. The new Jim Henson documentary "Idea Man" is now streaming exclusively on Disney+.
Bear arrives on Disney+ The beloved series has been off the air for the past 15 years. Now all four seasons are finally available for a whole new generation.
Since the season's over tomorrow, here's the season-long album I've been making:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/m57q60lg53jrkjj/Sesame%20Street%20Season%2043.zip
It includes:
All the songs from the street stories and inserts
All the Elmo the Musical songs
The songs from two resource videos...
That's Steve doing Kermit live, not dubbed. I think he might be using his left hand for the head for some reason, which would explain any wonkiness and why Kermit seems to be primarily moving his right arm.
...Or, they got some misc. puppeteers because anyone can play a chicken. Steve and Eric were probably the only main guys, which explains why Fozzie, Piggy and Animal could be used instead of someone like Gonzo.
I wasn't sure whether to post this in the Puppetry section or not, but I'll put it here for now and it can be moved it the admins see fit.
ANYWHO, my friend's final project at SVA was this puppet film, I puppeteered and voiced the Talvin character. There's a mistake or two where you see a...
Special website:
http://www.fragglerock30.com/
There's a special "classic music collection" coming soon, which sounds nice; I hope it has songs that aren't ones already on albums (and are the actual studio recordings and not the Special SS Xmas route, using the actual episode audio.)
Considering season 43 was filmed during two different season taping sessions, whatever they may have gotten a chance to film was part of the different seasons. I'm pretty sure I read Susan will be in season 44 somewhere, don't remember where though. Luis will be in it; he's part of the crew...
There's a search bar at the top of the site; searching "classic" won't bring up just classic clips, but it helps you find all the videos (though miscellaneous videos lost in the shuffle when they updated the video page).
No new classic clips have been added, as far as I know. They've been...
Well, you're not exactly the demographic for the show (you seem to be a couple of years over it), so it may just be the effect all kids shows have: kids love it, you're old enough to find the holes in it that keep you from enjoying it the way they do.
If there's anything I see wrong with this...
'Cause this one appearance will be the nail in the coffin for them...
We've made it a long way from Studio DC; this song is tons catchier than anything from those specials. Plus, if there's any fault in their appearance, blame the writers for not having any Muppet know-how and for having just...
Some more footage, with Miss Piggy's appearance:
Boy, did they nail the complexities of her character or what! And, I never really minded the new Fozzie puppet, but he's not lookin' so good in this clip.
Probably Marty, since he'd be there for Telly's scene. I don't know what season; after 25, they're all pretty much the same.
30-ish inserts is usually the average they have, and Six Muppet segments is also the average; basically three per every half-hour. Unlike minormuppetz, who uses probably...
Well, I think it's easier on the local producers; they wouldn't have to make as much original content and wouldn't have to use American material as a crutch. But, virtually every kids show in history is 30 minutes.
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