If that's the case, then screw it. You realize this is the same general public that didn't go see MMW and barely saw TM. Doesn't matter if they try anything new or anything the same, the public likes the Muppets in tiny little viral video sized portions, buys a T-shirt or a Christmas ornament, and then forgets about them. They'll watch one episode of the show, resign themselves to find fault with it because it doesn't fit in with the hazy memory of something they watched when they were 10. Thing is, the general public cares about the Muppets as much as 1990's girls who wore Tweety Bird shirts care about Looney Tunes shorts. They don't want to watch the show, fine. There's perfectly awful options that are of far lower quality that share the time slot to spite the fact they aren't completely satisfied.
As for the fanbase, that's the rub. Most of us want this to be successful because if they keep up a consistent level of popularity, maybe Disney will recognize them for a change. As it stands, Disney's essentially Frozen, Star Wars, and Planes (because they can't take the freaking hint that Planes wasn't nearly successful as they think it is). We don't want the Muppets to be on the Disney Afternoon/any movie that isn't in an anniversary year or getting a TV show or sequel (or worse, Saban owned cartoons that they can't profit off of yet they don't want the rights to revert back to), to barely get recognition other than a passing piece of merchandise. However, there will always be the unsatisfied bunch because every lousy fanbase has one. It doesn't matter what they say and how they say it, at this point it's just noise.
It's all "we want more Muppet movies, but not like this!" or "We want the Muppets on TV, but not like this!" And yet, if this show didn't happen and they just chucked the Muppets aside because said general public would rather watch "Hunger Games Lite," we'd be whining that Disney isn't doing anything with them. And then we get the whole "why do we have outside writers on these things" debate that falls flat because the same people who "get" the Muppets actually didn't because everything they wrote somehow manages to fall on the "worst Muppet Projects" list. The people who truly "got" the characters are either dead or no longer involved. Why must we expect that when what we'll get is the weaker episodes of MT? At best. Face it, outside of merchandising, legacy characters are fragile. The public pretends to care, and tunes out after one episode, the fandom can't decide if they like it or not, and those on the fanbase who do want nothing to convince everyone else they're right. Hence, why I can't stand fanbases. You can't keep them happy no matter what the heck you do, and if he owning company gets up, throws their hands in the air and moves on to something else, it's the company's fault for not caring enough about the project. And frankly, those kinds of fanbases are all welcome to their franchise's failure.
So yeah. If you don't like the show, go watch some YT uploads of the Muppet Show Disney didn't release. Just make sure to be quick to see them all before Disney pulls them down out of copyright spite.