dwayne1115
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More like piggys fuzz
Heh heh. But just think, a lot of fans got upset over the disclaimer on the Old School Sesame Street DVDs. However, on a show that had nearly as many explosions, characters getting eaten, (ahem) innuendo and adult jokes as Looney Tunes, there is no such warning on any of The Muppet Show sets.How weird would it have been if they'd stuck a parental advisory on these sets like they did with the Looney Tunes DVDs, though?
I dunno. I think there might be some people who would be offended by the fact that the Japenese Muppet characters sing, "Oh, we know we berong to the rand. And the rand we berong to is gland." Or the fact that all of the French in that episode are represented by Muppet frogs. I think you're right in that you can't really consider them racial slurs here, but there are likely those who would be offended by this today. It's pretty much all very playful, though.I think people are having some difficulty in distinguishing the difference between caricature and unintentional racial slurs.
Bear in mind that a lot of those Looney Tunes cartoons showed characters with blacked-up faces and speaking in mock asian accents. Placing those cartoons in their context, you realize that such things were common and deemed okay; today we think otherwise.
TMS, however, did proper caricatures by playing up to the conventions that we associate with certain nationalities.
That happened alot. Frank (maybe Jim and maybe some of the other Muppeteers) would perform one of Louise's characters during the big numbers while she was still learning. If you look at "Cottleston Pie," that looks alot like Jim's movements.I noticed in the "Aquarius" number (from the Danny Keye episode) that the female whatnot had the singing voice of Louise Gold but her movements looked liked Frank Oz performed her.
I wonder if Frank Oz performed the female whatnot while Louise Gold did the singing voice.