Gonzo
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2002
- Messages
- 1,389
- Reaction score
- 26
From Entertainment Weekly:
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/review/dvd/0,6115,1090097_21|109935||0_0_,00.html
The Muppet Show: Season 1
Reviewed by Dalton Ross
(B+)
Muppets: Little. Furry. Prone to blowing things up and spewing out mile-a-minute puns. Everyone loves the Muppets, and everyone has their favorite (for the record, mine's Animal). So it was surprising to go back to The Muppet Show: Season 1 and find the funnies less plentiful than I remembered. There are a few reasons for this. First off, it's essentially a kids' show, and sadly, I outgrew Underoos a long time ago. Also, in 1976 the syndicated variety show was still finding its way. Most of the jokes are so corny they make Laugh-In seem nuanced, and the characters had yet to adopt their now-familiar look and sound (puppeteer Frank Oz uses Miss Piggy's voice on another character!). The notable exception to the hodgepodge of random skits is the Vincent Price episode: With its running (spooky) theme, it offered a bolder, more topical template for future seasons.
Completists, however, will delight in the most sensational, inspirational, celebrational, Muppetational extras. Included are all the U.K. segments, along with a hilarious early sales pitch for CBS — in which a newscaster announces that the show will appeal to ''freaky, longhaired, dirty, cynical hippies who love our freaky, longhaired, dirty, cynical Muppets!'' — and a 1975 ABC special hosted not by Kermit but by Nigel (later demoted to orchestra conductor — hey, them's the showbiz breaks). There's also a pop-up trivia option, where we learn how many points are on Kermit's collar (11), that guest star Ben Vereen once put out an album called Stop Your Half-Steppin' Mama (nice!), and which character most guests wanted to work with (Piggy, of course). Piggy would eventually turn into a riot, but on this set, it's the bonus features that bring home the bacon.
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/review/dvd/0,6115,1090097_21|109935||0_0_,00.html
The Muppet Show: Season 1
Reviewed by Dalton Ross
(B+)
Muppets: Little. Furry. Prone to blowing things up and spewing out mile-a-minute puns. Everyone loves the Muppets, and everyone has their favorite (for the record, mine's Animal). So it was surprising to go back to The Muppet Show: Season 1 and find the funnies less plentiful than I remembered. There are a few reasons for this. First off, it's essentially a kids' show, and sadly, I outgrew Underoos a long time ago. Also, in 1976 the syndicated variety show was still finding its way. Most of the jokes are so corny they make Laugh-In seem nuanced, and the characters had yet to adopt their now-familiar look and sound (puppeteer Frank Oz uses Miss Piggy's voice on another character!). The notable exception to the hodgepodge of random skits is the Vincent Price episode: With its running (spooky) theme, it offered a bolder, more topical template for future seasons.
Completists, however, will delight in the most sensational, inspirational, celebrational, Muppetational extras. Included are all the U.K. segments, along with a hilarious early sales pitch for CBS — in which a newscaster announces that the show will appeal to ''freaky, longhaired, dirty, cynical hippies who love our freaky, longhaired, dirty, cynical Muppets!'' — and a 1975 ABC special hosted not by Kermit but by Nigel (later demoted to orchestra conductor — hey, them's the showbiz breaks). There's also a pop-up trivia option, where we learn how many points are on Kermit's collar (11), that guest star Ben Vereen once put out an album called Stop Your Half-Steppin' Mama (nice!), and which character most guests wanted to work with (Piggy, of course). Piggy would eventually turn into a riot, but on this set, it's the bonus features that bring home the bacon.
Welcome to the Muppet Central Forum!
Sesame Street Classics on YouTube
Sesame Street debuts on Netflix
Back to the Rock Season 2
Sam and Friends Book
Jim Henson Idea Man
Bear arrives on Disney+