Maybe not
I was thinking about this, and maybe it's not bad.
One of the things that has plagued the Muppets over the past decade (in my opinion) is a distinct lack of character.
I was watching "Of Muppets and Men: The Making of the Muppet Show" the other day, and Frank Oz made a good point. He said the dynamic of the show comes from the fact that Piggy loves Kermit but hates that creep, Gonzo; that Floyd hates Ms. Piggy, Fozzie just wants to be funny and Statler and Waldorf love heckling him... Muppets Tonight had nothing more than the sense of Panic going for it - no good interpersonal relationships.
Anyhow, the problem also comes from having too many Muppets - the more you have, the less you can concentrate on the characters of them. One of the things I enjoyed about MFS was that while there were all the various Muppets dancing in the house or in the background, they took time to pull Kermit, Piggy, Fozzie, Rizzo and Pepe from the crowd to give them more screentime. And the Christmas Movie was the first time I felt that I had really seen Kermit being himself since, well, 1989...
Wow, that's a lot of thinking to be pulling out of a commercial! But I do think that in order to keep the Muppets living and breathing it's necessary to focus on the more interesting characters (unless you're doing a series). Anyone notice that all the Star Trek TNG movies are basically about Picard and Data? They're the interesting ones. So while it was great to have entire episodes about Geordi, the movies need the good characters...
- Derek