So much could have been done with Baby Looney Tunes

. I watch it sometimes for its cutest but it really is tame, even next to MBs. IMHO, MBs is ten times smarter as a show than BLT overall,
Well, that's due in part to writing. Muppet babies had that in spades. They were designed for a preschool audience, but they treated them like an audience on the whole. The babies were, imagined or not, constantly in perilous situations. Mild ones, though, but they still had an adventure quality to them. At no point in Baby looney Tunes did Baby Bugs have to dress up as a woman so that Baby Taz wouldn't eat him (Though, I doubt even Taz would be ready for solids at that point). They didn't even pretend to be in any danger of any kind. it was all moral, and no fun.
Morals work in cartoons ONLY if they're fun. That's why so many people loved Fat Albert. MB had morals, and the occassional science, history, and "How they do it" lessons. But in no way does it come across preachy, or like they're forcing you to laern something. Baby Kermit will always be a pop culture loving satire, be it Indiana Frog (quite a bit, actually), Captain Kirkmet, or the like. Bably Looney Tunes felt like it was nothing more than a marketing ploy they had to turn into a TV E/I series. Even my love of June Foray couldn't get me to watch it on a regular basis. Yuck.
What a lot of copycats don't get out of it is that Muppet Babies appeal wasn't that they were Baby versions of the characters, but the stories, songs, concepts... writing once again. I especially love how the MB writers took the characters' personalities and subtly worked off that (Jeff Scott did this the best). Pup named Scooby Doo made Fred a little dumber (since when is being the straightman, in other words unable to crack jokes a hundred times, a case of stupidity) and Daphne was turned into a vain version of herself. I could almost expect that the Scooby movies were based off this series. There were throw backs to Pup in the Scooby Films, if you want to look for them. But I'm deviating.
I think, as far as child versions of the characters, Tiny Toons did a much better job. As I said, some characters were based off their predicessors and some had slight variations on the same idea. It had nods to Looney Tunes cartoons in every episode, but managed to keep its originality. Enter Babs Bunny, the most underrated female role in cartoon history. There were no recurring young women in LT cartoons, and yet she would fit right in with that group. Similar to Skeeter in Muppet babies. She wasn't with the Muppets, but you could really see her belong up there with them.