Simply put, I keep moving from "I hate it" to "I'm on the fence" to "Let the good times roll!"
I've said everything on every scale a million different times. And it all comes down to OZ. While the project wasn't something projected by Disney, they did have a hand in it. And that hand caused them to rush the project out for the Stock holders, and mainstream audiences. And as a result, it didn't click with audiences or fans. And the schedualling for it couldn't have been worse. Opposite the daytime Emmy's on the night when Star Wars episode III was released? Are you serious?
And as a result, they have been very, very, very cautious about how to bring them back after that disaster. We're down 2 unfinished TV pilots, and we have a movie, that's still just in script stage- yet to be produced let alone filmed.
What we DO have is the new web video site. Now, THEY had the right idea there. A lot of Muppet fans are computer geeks. Plus, if you can't get them on TV (due to the politics of television which I'll get into later), the Web's the next best thing.
But consider this. We just came out of the 2002, 2 DTV movie projects, an action figure line, and more merchandise than you can handle Muppet Blitz. And do you know how long that last period was? Sure, not quite this long, but we had years after MFS where nothing happened.
I am unhappy for the following reasons:
Muppet Babies hasn't had a decent relaunch, and we're at peak time where the fans of the show grew up and have kids of their own to watch it with. I understand that various rights keep Muppet babies DVD box sets in limbo, but why no merchandise? We have Baby Pooh (which makes no sense at all), Baby mickey, and even Baby Princesses. Why not the original, even just on Baby Bottles and Bibs?
We haven't any really exciting mainstream merchandise. Sure, a few stacatto T-shirts and Christmas orniments. But the only big things on the horizon are Muppet Master Replicas, which frankly are the most luxurious of a luxury buy, and a Muppet Star Wars figure set you have to go to Disney World to get. No notible plush lines, PVC's, or anything as grand as we just saw. I can understand that. But at least a Kermit Plush at the Disney Store.
But as for this:
The real problem is that television networks rarely schedule shows like TMS in a good time slot. The last time it aired on free-to-air TV in NZ was back in 1997/98 when it aired at 7am on Weekday mornings.
The other problem is that some of the TV specials are very obscure; few have aired outside of North America and Canada and most of them have dated quite badly.
You know, I have no doubt in my mind that the Muppets aren't as relevant as they ever where. Tune in Family Guy. Every other week Peter syas, "This is worse than wrong sounding Muppets!" We had people on SNL dress as the Mayhem, The Chef, and Rolwf. Kermit and Piggy were on the Simpsons a couple weeks back. They're clearly in everyone's mind, but not quite on TV in full force anymore. It's been lord knows how long Kermit, Piggy, or anyone else popped up on a morning talk show. We haven't seen any commercials with them hocking products (how is that necesarily a bad thing? Was it terrible when Jay Leno ate all he wanted while Lays made more doritos?). If we could get them to regularly pop up somewhere, we'd get some handle.
Personally, I'm disappointed that The Muppet Show, in all these TV rerun centric cable networks, doesn't have a place. Not even ABC family. The box sets are selling gangbusters, sure... but not everyone can get box sets. It's all the politics of television, and how the programming heads just want the highest ratings possible, and don't care about quality. Fringe networks (and I've been talking about this for a while) feel they have to compete with mainstream channels. Cartoon Network doesn't wanna run cartoons anymore, TV Land doesn't want to air classic TV reruns... they either look for original programming that's an inferior clone of something out there that no one wants to watch. Or reruns of current shows at least. There's no variety on TV anymore, since these network guys want the same audience watching everything else to watch them. But the problem is, they are quite happy watching what they were watching before.
So, I'm not surprised it's taking them forever to make a mainstream Muppet TV show, and all the while not rerunning Muppets Tonight, specials, or the original series.