Montreal Gazette

EARNEST FUN

The latest version of the Muppets is made for today’s Youtube generation

- CAROLINE FRAMKE

Unto most every Tv-watching generation, a new Muppets show is born. The original Muppet Show, which ran from 1976 to 1981, had Jim Henson’s felt puppets take over a vaudeville theatre to perform songs, slapstick sketches and more unabashedl­y cheesy puns than its bewildered guests could count. The Muppets Tonight reboot, which ran a single season from 1997 to 1998, swapped the theatre for a television studio, where the Muppets franticall­y threw together a variety show while letting the audience in on all the drama happening in the control booth. A sour 2015 followup (The Muppets.) tried for a 30 Rock meets The Office vibe, imagining a world in which Miss Piggy had a late-night show and the rest had mid-life crises. Whether tap dancing with rat puppets, trading quips with celebritie­s or exploring TV’S most enduring on-and-off relationsh­ip between Miss Piggy and Kermit, every iteration of The Muppet Show tries to mix timeliness with nostalgia for maximum effect.

Which brings us to Muppets Now, Disney’s newest entrant into the Muppets TV canon. Whereas its predecesso­rs were made for prime time, Muppets Now is made with an obvious eye toward airing on a streaming service, where many of its kid viewers will probably watch it on a tablet while their parents try desperatel­y to get five minutes to themselves. At a brisk six episodes, the series doesn’t waste time with its setup, keeping the meta “backstage” chatter (a Muppets staple) to a minimum. As becomes clear in its cold opens, in which a harried Scooter tries to get the final cut locked despite Kermit and everyone giving him dozens of last minute notes, Muppets Now isn’t a variety show in the traditiona­l Muppet sense. Instead, it’s a series of sketches and unscripted demonstrat­ions delivered in the style of Youtube channels, the better to appeal to the generation it’s now targeting via Disney+.

Each of the series’ recurring segments is anchored by both the most familiar Muppets and some furry faces that only diehards would know. Miss Piggy’s “lifestyle” show focuses on beauty and wellness — more specifical­ly, her own.

Beaker and Professor Honeydew have a science-experiment show featuring alarmingly sentient AI sidekicks, while Kermit attempts a “Mup Close and Personal” interview series that inevitably falls apart as more and more Muppets keep interrupti­ng to ask their own. Pepe the Prawn has a delightful­ly unhinged game show that, despite Scooter’s pleas to stay on task, quickly devolves into whatever he feels like doing, which is usually asking his enthusiast­ic contestant­s rapid-fire, nonsensica­l questions. In between, Kermit checks in with “Joe from Legal,” an uptight little weasel whose bass deadpan and love of rules makes him a perfect counterpar­t to the other Muppets’ constant flights of fancy.

The most versatile segment is the one that, fittingly, slots the neatest into the Youtube genre from whence it came: cooking demos.

Okey Dokey has Beverly Plume, a new turkey Muppet, learning how to cook a dish from a guest while the Swedish Chef throws together his own pot of chaos. (It’s technicall­y billed as a competitio­n, but as anyone who’s encountere­d the Swedish Chef knows, there’s little controllin­g anything once his “cooking ” gets going.) With guests such as actor Danny Trejo and chefs Carlina Will and Roy Choi, Okey Dokey introduces its audience to a wide range of cuisines while having a perfectly ridiculous time along the way.

Which makes the fact that Disney+ has precious little Muppets content even more disappoint­ing. If someone watches Muppets Now and wants to check out more, the only other shows they can access on Disney+ are The Muppets. (which isn’t entirely appropriat­e for younger children) and the recent uncanny-valley update of 1985’s Muppet Babies cartoon.

The Muppet Show, Muppets Tonight and the original Muppet Babies run are nowhere to be found unless you do a deep dive into the archival wilds of Youtube and Dailymotio­n, which is a confusing shame. For now, at least, the earnest fun of Muppets Now will have to do.

 ?? PHOTOS: DISNEY+ ?? Fozzie Bear is among the familiar faces returning to TV in Muppets Now. Below: Uncle Deadly, left, and Pepe the King Prawn are also back.
PHOTOS: DISNEY+ Fozzie Bear is among the familiar faces returning to TV in Muppets Now. Below: Uncle Deadly, left, and Pepe the King Prawn are also back.
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