Honestly, I don't have the Hub either, but Al would be lucky to land a special on a fourth-tier cable network. He has a faithful following, but he's a niche performer whose time has come and gone. That's how it goes. However, if there's ever a televised Muppet Show with 22 episodes a year, I hope he gets a call. As a footnote, I can never really enjoy UHF the same way again after hearing Victoria Jackson's bigoted rants. It just makes me terribly sad.
Al has found a nice little side career as a voice actor appearing in everything from Transformers Animated to Adventure Time to Word Girl. That's a nice fit for him, as they always give him the weirdest characters to play, aside from himself. I just wish they'd make at least one more Word Girl with The Learnerer (his character). But I'll give him this... he may be a niche performer, but his career lasted
much longer than most of the artists he parodied. That's not saying much, but especially the 1980's albums... you'd think he wrote those songs he was parodying. Only time I ever heard "Who's Johnny" was an episode of Reading Rainbow.
Yeah, I'm really wishing that Ellen DeGeneres would have played the love interest. Jackson wasn't so bad until she went politically frag nuts. Then again, she seems to be one of those "I found religion, so I can be a complete d-bag to everyone" types. And it is always sad to see someone before they became so polarizing.
I'm gonna stick up for Glee. They still explore some groundbreaking territory, with a unique irreverence, that other shows are afraid to touch. It is still a trailblazer. As for the stories, they have been treading water for quite some time. They'll get one more season after this before calling it quits. I'd rather this be its last year so they could just go wild with everything without any more dilution. Oh, and the puppets look great.
I'm still reading it.
The problem with these instantly popular shows is trying to maintain what made them popular in the first place. They come off as is off the bat, and unfortunately devolve instead of evolve. You look at Seinfeld, The Simpsons, stuff like that... they have weird first seasons where they don't know what they're doing and slowly gain ground. Can't say I was ever huge into Glee... when the story was good, the music got in the way, when the music was good, the story got in the way...but it seems that it had a strong opening, but just doesn't know where its at now. Also, I tend to notice that some of these shows with teenage characters who graduate, they desperately
want them to fail college and bring them back into the cast. Modern Family did it and it looks like The Middle wants to do it. But that's wildly off topic.