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.
I agree. That's one of the best Biff and Sully moments. What happens is that they're building a doghouse, but they imagine themselves as other things besides carpenters. I don't know the exact lyrics but it goes.
We coulda, we coulda, but someone's gotta hammer. Someone's gotta saw. That...
I checked it out. Actually, I can't believe it wasn't Dave and Steve as Waldorf and Statler there. I thought it sounded like them. I thought Pepe sounded a little different, but I guess it was still Bill. I guess only the Muppateers would know for sure.
How different is the Nelson-voiced Snuffy from the Marty Robinson Snuffy of today anyway? He didn't sound that different on Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (though I don't think that was Jerry), yet I have heard a Nelson Snuffy on MC Radio and he didn't sound much like Snuffy, so I'm sort of...
Yeah. I was sort of wondering about that too. I have the Juliet Prowse and Rita Moreno eps where Richard plays Piggy most of the time, but I do wonder about other episodes when she's included in the show's plot. (Ex: Candice Bergen, Lena Horne.) Sometimes when I read her quotes I don't know...
Wait a minute. Judy Collins was with Snuffy and this was in the 70s before he was revealed to the adults on the show? Does this mean celebrities could see Snuffy but not the regulars on the show? If that's the case why didn't the celebrities just tell everybody that Big Bird was telling the...
What I don't understand is why all the Sesame Street characters were on the bride's side. They would know Kermit better than they know Piggy, so you'd think they'd be on his side.
Yeah, I remembered Herry doing it to Ernie, but I forgot about the part with Bert. Kind of strange how Bert turned the tables on Ernie in that one, considering it's usually Ernie who has the last laugh. About the year, I don't remember. I've seen it some time in the 80s, but I'm not sure...
Actually, I think it would have been a better idea if Timelife kept making them. I mean I am anxious for the season by season box sets, but I'm still wondering what to do with the one's I have once the DVDs come out. After all, there is one tape with three season 2 eps. I wouldn't need that...
That's interesting. I know the Holiday on Ice full-body versions of Bert, Ernie, Cookie Monster and the Count on 'Christmas Eve on Sesame Street.' I didn't think they were used anywhere else.
1997? That's interesting. I was thinking that it was one of Steve's first performances as Ernie and it was sort of used as a Henson tribute. I didn't know it was that recent.
I've noticed that happens a lot in early episodes of TV shows. (Ex. Urkel on the second ep of "Step by Step," Michelle Tanner on the second ep. of "Hanging with Mr. Cooper.") I think a lot of shows have crossovers in their earlier episodes to get people interested.
Well, we still see Gordon regularly on the show and in the Trash Gordon segments. Maria, Luis, Gabby and Miles show up on the show quite a bit as well. Bob and Susan are still on the show, maybe not quite as often as before but they're still there. After all, they are the only two original...
Actually, that one I vaguely remember. Not very well though. I guess they talked about how they were different and how they were alike and at the end she did Ernie's famous 'Kee hee hee' laugh.
In response to that (sorry for getting off subject again), I do remember a sketch where Fat Blue couldn't make up his mind whether to have the soup or the sandwich first so Grover has to keep running back and forth and bringing him what he wants until finally he brings them both out at the same...
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