Jim Henson-related stories
Posted Sep 14th 2009 11:30AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Industry, OpEd, Reality-Free

Disneyland hosted
its own Disney Convention, called D23, in the style of Comic Con this past weekend. The name comes from the year Walt Disney moved to Hollywood and the event was held at the Anaheim Convention Center across the street from Disneyland . Among other announcements was that of a new Muppet movie called
The Cheapest Muppet Movie Ever Made (hopefully it's a working title). There was also a live performance by Miley Cyrus, whom Disney owns the soul of.
Admittedly, it's a pretty good idea which caters to the real Disney enthusiasts out there (having met a few, I know they certainly exist). Disney is one of the few companies that is large enough to have its own version of Comic Con. While the convention had announcements for most of its franchises, I noted the absence of any mention of the
recently-acquired Marvel Comics.
On the other hand, the company already has a Disney convention open all year round. It's called Disneyland (or Disneyworld for the East Coast). What do you think of this development?
Posted Jun 19th 2009 9:02AM by Danny Gallagher
Filed under: Commercials, Reality-Free

Everybody in television has to start at the bottom, even the Muppets.
Jim Henson's Muppets got their big break in the 1950s as two spokesmuppets for the Wilkins Coffee Company in a series of eight-second commercials featuring the most ballsy commercial concept of all time: buy Wilkins Coffee or we will shoot you in the face.
I'd like to see Billy Mays take on that concept.
Continue reading Buy Wilkins Coffee or we'll shoot this Muppet
Posted May 14th 2009 6:11PM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Programming, OpEd, Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free

The Henson Company, along with some other entertainment companies including Singapore's BIG Communications, is teaming with PBS
to create a new show called Dinosaur Train, which is intended to spark an interest from the kiddies in science and paleontology. Considering that this is the same team-up that brought us
Sesame Street, hopes are high.
The series has one or two major detriments from the start. To begin, Jim Henson is long gone and it seemed that a lot of the magic died with him. All the efforts by the company since then have been a shadow of its former self. Second, the new series is CGI and not puppets. While I'm sure the kiddies pay more attention to CGI nowadays, it's still a little disappointing.
On the other hand, the Henson Company
has worked with dinosaurs before. Plus, anything that gets the kids' attention that isn't owned and monopolized by Disney or Nickelodeon is fine by me.
Posted Sep 8th 2008 11:03AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free

It looks like the Muppets
will be back again for Christmas. The NBC television special will star Whoopi Goldberg, "The Sopranos" alums Tony Sirico and Steve Schirripa, "Harry Potter" regular Richard Griffiths and Madison Pettis as well as your favorite cast of colorful characters created by Jim Henson.
I'm a huge fan of the Muppets, but the passing of Jim Henson did somehow lessen the franchise. The stuff they've produced since has been hit-and-miss. I liked
Muppets Tonight and
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie, but most of the other stuff (especially the theatrical films) have fallen flat.
I do hope that
Jason Segal and Nicholas Stoller will be able to breathe new life into the franchise. I did enjoy
Forgetting Sarah Marshall (particularly the puppet musical), but I'm not sure how well that translates to the Muppets. My fingers are crossed.
How dare Jim Henson leave us all like this! I'm sorry. I still haven't gotten over it.
Posted Aug 29th 2008 8:04AM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV on the Bigscreen, Reality-Free

Are Kermit, Fozzie and Miss Piggy poised for a comeback?
Jason wrote about it in June, and now there's more news if you believe this item from the UK Telegraph. Citing an unnamed source, the newspaper reported that
How I Met Your Mother's star
Jason Segel has written a script that brings Jim Henson's Muppets to the big screen, setting up a return to television. It sounds like a great idea, but without confirmed sources, I'd take the whole thing with a grain of salt.
Disney owns the rights to the Muppets and they would produce the picture. Segel's story picks up with the Muppets reuniting long after their TV show has ended. They agree to put on one big variety show to save the studio. Should this come off as planned and the film is a hit, the Muppets would then come back to series TV.
Continue reading Could The Muppet Show really return to TV?
Posted Jul 15th 2008 8:01AM by Jane Boursaw
Filed under: TV Royalty, OpEd, Children, Reality-Free

I knew they'd end up there sooner or later. On Saturday, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington unveiled its latest exhibit:
"Jim Henson's Fantastic World." The exhibit features 14 of
Henson's Muppet creations, including Bert and Ernie, Kermit the Frog, and others from the long-running
Sesame Street. The exhibit is scheduled to remain at the Smithsonian until October, then leaves on a three-year tour to seven other cities.
Continue reading The Muppets take the Smithsonian
Posted Jun 17th 2008 11:58AM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Other Comedy Shows, Celebrities, Children, TV Squad Lists, Reality-Free
I didn't know Tim Russert on a personal level. I rarely even saw him in his own element as host of NBC's Meet the Press. However, when he suddenly died last Friday, it hit me like a ton of bricks. It was the fact that he was a huge presence on television, particularly during this year's Presidential election. It made Russert feel like he was a part of the family.
So it has been with many television personalities that have left this earth before their time. It's the intimacy of the industry and the fact that this person has come into our homes night after night, week after week, that the unexpected death of these personalities hits us much harder than, say, movie stars. Unfortunately, there have been a number of these surprising deaths over the last few decades. Here are 12 such deaths that affected millions of television viewers.
Continue reading 12 unexpected deaths of TV personalities
Posted Apr 16th 2008 11:26AM by Paul Goebel
Filed under: OpEd, Reality-Free
In my line of work (whatever that is), I am often put in the position of defending the medium of television. There is a large section of the population who is convinced that television is inferior to film and all types of print media. These people love to use a host of specious arguments to prove their point. Some choose advertising, others go with reality TV, I once argued with a guy who said, "Two words...Jerry Springer" and walked away.
I'm not going to use this blog as a way to refute these arguments, instead I'd like to give specific examples to defend the medium that I have come to love.
Television is great because it is directly responsible for the creation of the Muppets.
Continue reading Why television is great - The Muppets
Posted Mar 4th 2008 1:40PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming
It's always intriguing when a cable network has two or three original shows they're working on. But TNT has gone project crazy this year, with a whopping 14 shows in development.
It's an interesting mix of shows too. You have your dramas, including a mystery series set in Boston, based on the novels of Tess Gerritsen; a drama about a family in 1950s Indiana; an espionage drama titled Leverage; a drama from Robert Redford titled Generations, which focuses on several families who have lived in the same house over the decades; and Truth In Advertising, which sounds a lot like a modern-day Mad Men (not that I'm complaining) and stars Eric McCormack, Tom Cavanagh, and Monica Potter. Comedies include a show about a single, middle-aged woman, from Betty Thomas and Elaine Pope.
Continue reading TNT has 14 new shows in the works
Posted Aug 25th 2007 6:01PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: TV on DVD, Celebrities
Sheesh, I guess I haven't checked out Muppet News Flash in awhile, and wound up missing out on some cool Muppet news.
First, a Fraggle Rock album will hit stores in October. There's pretty much zero information on Fraggle Rockin', except that it will contain music from the series. Amazon doesn't even have an album image. Did I mention it's a three-disc set? That's all kinds of awesome.
Continue reading Muppet stuff: Fraggle music and vintage Henson
Posted Aug 4th 2007 12:01PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Video, Web, Celebrities
You'll note that I didn't call it a "Muppet short film," because there are no Muppets to be found in the eight-minute short below. It does, however, feature a young Jim Henson. The short, called Time Piece, was nominated for an Oscar in 1966.
Something tells me I would have appreciated this short more when I was in college. Back then I lived for surreal, nonsensical stuff like this: tearing it apart, trying to figure out what it all means. I'd borrow films like this and Un Chien Andalou from the college media center and revel in how different it all was.
Continue reading A Jim Henson short film - VIDEO
Posted Jun 14th 2007 10:24AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: TV on DVD

As the ranking #2 fan of
The Muppets here at TV Squad (
Adam definitely has me beat), I'm happy to announce that season two of
The Muppet Show will be available on DVD
on August 7th. It's been about 2 years since season one came out on DVD and fans have been not-so-patiently waiting for more.
Season two is a 24-episode set with classic guest appearances by Bob Hope, George Burns, John Cleese, Milton Berle, Elton John, Bernadette Peters and Julie Andrews, just to name a few. The bonus material includes
The Muppets Valentine Day Special, a pilot which aired two years before
The Muppet Show came on air. It features Kermit and Mia Farrow, and is hosted by little-known Muppet 'Wally'.
Posted Apr 15th 2007 10:03AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, OpEd, Podcasts, Children
The MuppetCast is not a podcast created by the Jim Henson company like the one I mentioned back in August, but rather a simple love letter to the Muppets from Steve Swanson, a longtime fan. In many ways, that makes it better than the other, "official" podcast because it's not simply a plug for upcoming projects from Jim Henson Studios. There's nothing wrong with updates on what's happening, but it's cool for a Muppet fanatic like myself to sit back and listen to someone who loves them as much as I do.
Continue reading A Muppet podcast worth checking out
Posted Mar 31st 2007 2:20PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: TV Royalty, Video, Web
Here's a rather disturbing video (after the jump) of Sesame Street veteran Kermit The Frog singing about all of the people who have left him, the horrible life he's had, and Miss Piggy. This isn't "The Rainbow Connection," folks. This is Kermit doing an acoustic version of the Nine Inch Nails song "Hurt" (also covered by Johnny Cash). Kermit has hit rock bottom. This episode has been brought to you by the letter D, which stands for depressing.
I never really noticed this before, but if you close your eyes and listen closely, Kermit sounds a lot like Neil Young.
(Warning: NSFW...especially if your W is touchy about felt puppets masturbating and taking drugs.)
Continue reading Kermit gets all depressed and sings - VIDEO
Posted Mar 9th 2007 3:03PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Cable, Web
You can watch clips of the Jim Henson Company's Puppet Up! Uncensored improv shows on TBS' Laugh Lab site. New sketches will be added every Wednesday.
Puppet Up! Uncensored is an improved stage show from the Jim Henson Company that's essentially Who's Line Is It Anyway?, but with puppets. A Puppet Up! special was shown on TBS not long ago, and I found myself enjoying it, albeit intermittently.
Continue reading Puppet Up clips on TBS site
Next Page >