The Muppet Show: 40 Years Later – Alice Cooper
Muppets consider selling their souls, Alice Cooper makes for a surprisingly perfect guest star.
Muppets consider selling their souls, Alice Cooper makes for a surprisingly perfect guest star.
The show gets moved to a train station, and Kermit is *not* into it.
Liberace’s episode of The Muppet Show is full of glam, birds, and a great celebration of what makes us different and unique!
The Henson Company’s new baking/crafting show is exquisite to look at, but who is it made for?
This week, the guest star forces some Broadway razzle-dazzle on the Muppets, and Animal gets chased by an unexpected sea creature.
Jean Stapleton and Annie Sue Pig share the spotlight in this classic Muppet Show episode!
What could go wrong? The stage is set, the star has arrived, the audience is happy, the theater’s on fire. THE THEATER’S ON FIRE??
Reddy or not, our Muppet Show reviews are back! Starting with a dancing camel, French pigs, and the introduction of Beauregard!
The latest two issues answer questions about the Labyrinth film that we didn’t even know to ask.
The amazingly talented Katie Cook writes and illustrates a perfect Fraggle Rock story.
The Jim Henson Company’s latest puppet film isn’t just crude, it’s a boring dud of a movie.
In the latest issue of the Fraggle Rock comic by Art Baltazar, Gobo is searching for… something!
The latest Fraggle Rock comic book (by Jay Fosgitt) is a great example of how the comics can perfectly encapsulate the original show.
Checking in on the Labyrinth prequel comic: Is the tale of Jareth’s mom Maria a worthy addition to the world of Labyrinth?
The Tough Pigs staff looks back on the entire second season of The Muppet Show!
The pigs take over the theater, and it’s one of the most delightful things ever to happen on the show.
The guest star sings a duet with the Swedish Chef, while Fozzie tries to impress his mom and ruins the whole episode.
The first issue of the new Fraggle Rock comic is in stores today! And we’ve got a review for ya!
Kermit gets unreasonably mad at a moose and the guest star gets intimate with a big monster in this particularly inexplicable episode.
Does the Goblin King really need an origin story?