It's called "Hey! A Movie."
It's called "Hey! A Movie."
I loved the Popeye spinach gum. It didn't make me any stronger, though.
Considering they did a show set in a vaudeville theater in the 1970s, I'd say this is par for the course.
Yes. The Muppet Movie includes a scene where Kermit and Fozzie give The Electric Mayhem the script so they can catch up, and The Great Muppet Caper starts with Kermit, Gonzo and Fozzie commenting on the opening credits.
They're saying there's some kind of audio problem with the trailer.
I enjoyed the show. Unlike other TGIF shows, the cast was all adults, so at the time I assumed I was watching a sophisticated, adult television program.
I always assumed that the producers didn't want to marry off Danny because that would shake up the premise too much. A single dad needs help raising his daughters, but a married couple can do just fine on their own.
He was probably the most important figure in the Muppets' success who most people have never heard of. And he was the head writer for Fraggle Rock!
Ugh, the baby pee fight. Yeah, that was the one thing that I really thought the original Stooges wouldn't have gone for. Honking sound effects when a guy steps on Sofia Vergara's boobs? Sure, why not. Baby pee fight? Now they've gone too far.
I'm no great fan of the Farrellys, and I'm always very skeptical about this kind of thing, but I actually thought the movie was a funny and respectful homage. The Jersey Shore thing was a regrettable choice, though.
Bill Prady was hired to write by Jim Henson himself, and also wrote for The Jim Henson Hour and the Muppet-Vision 3-D movie at Disney World. So there is some hope.
Keep fighting the good fight!
I love that he never quite sang his hoedowns so much as shouted them.
My girlfriend had me watch a bunch of Vampire Diaries episodes a while back in an attempt to get me to like the show. It didn't take, but one thing I was consistently struck by was the fact that Caroline was much more interesting than any of the three leads.
It literally is.
They've shared the same scene several times. When that happens, another puppeteer will lip-sync the other puppet to a prerecorded track. It's a trick they've been doing for most of Muppet history. (See: Jim Henson characters Kermit and Rowlf singing a duet and chatting in The Muppet Movie.)
The Q&A was a good one, and it's always delightful to see him bring Oscar out. I also liked when he said he's not supposed to talk about politics, then immediately declared he's a liberal Democrat.
You're Kermit the Gorf, right?
Exactly. Successful YouTube channels are not too far removed from being the modern equivalent of variety shows, so this is just the Muppets doing what they do.
Did that actually happen in the movie? I could have sworn that was either a deleted scene, or something that was scripted but never filmed.