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Muppets

Awesome! This is awesome!!

Henson Family to Buy Back Muppets
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FRANKFURT, Germany (Reuters) – Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy and their Muppet friends are back home.
Ailing German media group EM.TV & Merchandising AG said on Wednesday it agreed to sell Jim Henson Company, the maker of the Muppets, to the children of their inventor, the late Jim Henson.
Putting an end to a protracted auction that has been going on for years, EM.TV said it would sell its wholly owned subsidiary completely for $89 million. It bought Henson for $680 million at the peak of the stock market bubble in 2000.
EM.TV said the Henson family would pay $78 million in cash for the group, and that EM.TV would receive Henson Company’s current liquid assets of $11 million. The group said it would use the proceeds to pay back a $14.3 million loan and to bolster its liquidity.
Shares in EM.TV jumped over 20 percent on the news.
Taking more turns than Miss Piggy’s mood, the auction had attracted interest from several media firms, including giant Walt Disney Corp., media investor Haim Saban and a group around investor Dean Valentine.

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Muppets

Plus, Bert is evil!

Grover Is Bitter!
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To millions of children throughout the world in the seventies and eighties, that name was synonymous with a funny, cuddly and ultimately loveable fuzzy blue monster from Sesame Street. For many of us, Grover was hands-down the best character on the show: bringing laughter, intelligence and a certain irreverence not seen in other 2-dimensional children’s programming of the day. And he was cute, too.
But what many of us didn’t see behind that brave exterior was a monster cowering in the face of his own insecurities, a monster so unsure of himself he wouldn’t even watch his own performances, and a monster who ultimately allowed his own weaknesses to overcome him and nearly ruin his career. A genius, a tyrant, a womanizer or just a washed-up drunk?
It’s time to expose Grover- the monster behind the myth!

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Muppets

Seriously, will you lend me the money?!?!?!

Disney Bid Seen for Muppet-Maker Henson
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NEW YORK (Reuters) – Mickey Mouse and Kermit the Frog could soon be new best friends.
Walt Disney Co. is preparing to offer about $135 million for Jim Henson Co., a bid that likely would position it to win the assets of the renowned Muppet maker more than a decade after it walked away from the chance, according to people familiar with the situation.
Although Disney’s bid would be a steep discount from the $680 million German children’s programming giant EM.TV paid for Henson in March 2000, it is still far too rich a price, people familiar with Henson’s assets said. They put the value at no more than $80 million.
Four other suitors also are considering bids for the creators of such famed puppet characters as Miss Piggy and Big Bird, but none is likely to pay as much as Burbank, California-based Disney, sources say.
They said the other parties mulling bids are London-based Entertainment Rights Plc ; privately held Classic Media; billionaire investor Haim Saban; and Dean Valentine, the former chief executive of United Paramount Network.
“EM.TV is in parallel talks with several parties and this means more than two,” said an EM.TV spokesman in Munich who declined to comment about specific bidders. A Henson spokesman in New York also declined to comment.
A Disney spokesman said that as a matter of policy the company does not comment on speculation regarding acquisitions, while a spokesman for Entertainment Rights, which develops and licenses children’s programming, declined to comment. None of the other potential bidders could be reached.
Disney shares fell 33 cents, or 2 percent, to close at $16.20 on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday.
MUPPETS, SPECIAL EFFECTS, PROGRAMMING
Henson’s business includes the rights to its world renowned Muppets characters, the Creature Shop that creates special effects for movies, and about 650 hours of programming.
Under EM.TV’s ownership Henson divested its stake in Crown Media Holdings Inc. for $100 million and sold the Sesame Street Muppets characters to the Sesame Workshop for $180 million.
Sesame Workshop still owes about $70 million on the deal, which is to be paid over time, giving Henson a steady cash flow stream, people familiar with that agreement said. However, some of the licensing arrangements at Henson are messy, the company’s staff is bloated and it needs an infusion of capital to restore the brand to its former glory, sources said.
Critics say Disney pays too high a premium on its acquisitions. While that idea can be debated, the company is widely seen by analysts to have overpaid for Fox Family Worldwide last year, on which it spent $5.2 billion, including $2.2 billion of debt. Earlier this year, Disney cut about half the work force at renamed ABC Family.
Disney, which already has some partnership arrangements with Henson, was set to buy the company in 1990, but when namesake Jim Henson died suddenly, it pulled out of the deal. Henson’s son, Brian, took over the empire founded in 1958.
EM.TV, which has been shopping Henson for more than a year, had been looking to close a deal soon to cover a 64 million euro ($66 million) loan due at year’s end.
The company could, however, get an extension from its lenders, who are being apprised of the Henson auction, and push the sale into the first quarter of 2003, sources said.
Privately owned Classic Media, which holds the rights to children’s characters including Casper the Friendly Ghost, only wants to buy a half stake in Henson’s character licenses and programming, sources said.
Saban, who made his fortune selling his stake in Fox Family to Disney, bid about $128 million for Henson with Evercore Partners Inc. in October. His partner dropped out, but Saban remains interested, these people said.
Valentine is seeking partners, they added, but his financial backing remains unclear at this point.

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Muppets

Woo hoo!

I HOPE ALF IS NEXT?
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Muppet mainstay Kermit the Frog got his star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame Thursday. Congrats, buddy!

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Muppets

These are great busts! I can’t decide which ones to buy!

It’s Time To Play The Music, It’s Time To Break Out The Wallet
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There are great new collectibles to be had in the world of The Muppets.
And now you know what to get me for Christmas!

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Muppets

If I only had the money…

Billionaire Saban in Talks to Buy Muppet-Makers
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Billionaire investor Haim Saban is in talks to buy Muppet-maker Jim Henson Co., at a steep discount to what Germany’s EM.TV & Merchandising AG paid for it, people close to the situation said on Tuesday.
The two sides are still haggling over the price, but it is broadly in the vicinity of about $100 million, these people added. EM.TV paid $680 million for Henson in February 2000.
There may be other suitors for the makers of Miss Piggy, Cookie Monster and Big Bird, the sources said, but the EM.TV unit has been on the block for more than a year.
Representatives for Munich-based EM.TV and Saban declined to comment.
Saban, who made his fortune with children’s figures the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, has savvy bargaining power on his side. Nancy Schultz, who served as Henson’s chief financial officer for a short time, and who also advised Henson when she was with PricewaterhouseCoopers, now works for Saban Capital Group Inc.
Jim Henson produces movies, such as “Muppets in Space,” and its world-famous creature shop makes well-known puppets and creates special effects. It won an Oscar for the special effects in the film “Babe.”
When the company’s namesake, the beloved Jim Henson, died suddenly 12 years ago, Disney pulled out of a deal to buy the company, believing Henson embodied the empire he founded in 1958. Henson’s son, Brian, ran the business until he and the family sold it to EM.TV.
EM.TV, which has been trying to raise money by unloading non-core assets, last year sold Henson’s stake in Crown Media Holdings for about $100 million. Sesame Workshop also bought the Sesame Street Muppets characters from Henson last year.
Disney and Viacom both were interested in buying Henson over the past year, but discussions with both fell apart, according to media reports.
Saban, who is also bidding for insolvent German media group KirchMedia, made about $1.5 billion last year when he and partner News Corp. sold cable network Fox Family Worldwide to Disney for $3 billion.

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Muppets

Can’t wait to see it!

Snoop Dogg Gets Excited for Muppets
Apparently Snoop Dogg, whose stage name partially derives from his resemblance to the Peanuts character Snoopy, isn’t only fond of four-legged hounds, he also likes frogs. Well, at least, Kermit The Frog, the lead puppet for the popular Muppets series.
Snoop Dogg will make a cameo in A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie scheduled to air during the holiday season on NBC.
“Naw, I seen the script. It’s tight. It’s just kids’ stuff, ya know. You know that I’m saying, just something for the kids. And I got three kids. So I think I’m going to take my kids with me out there so they can meet him too, you know. And do something special. Yeah, me and Kermit The Frog. Imagine that,” he said.
In addition to Kermit The Frog, the show also stars Miss Piggy, Whoopi Goldberg, Joan Cusack, and David Arquette, in the first-ever made-for-television Muppet movie.

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Muppets

It’s time to celebrate!

Celebrate Along With Them
Though silver and gold are the colors most often associated with big anniversaries, the entertainment industry is seeing green as it embraces the 25th anniversary of “The Muppet Show.” In addition to a host of video releases, Rhino has compiled the album “The Muppets 25th Anniversary Celebration — Who Let the Frogs Out,” for a Sept. 17 release. The 27-song disc contains original songs from “The Muppet Show” and Muppets feature films, some of which have never been released on CD and/or have been out of print for almost a decade.
Columbia, which picked up rights to the Jim Henson Co. home entertainment library in 1997, will bring two “Best of the Muppet Show” collections on VHS/DVD to retail for the first time Sept. 3. Until now, the titles — which contain three classic episodes each — have been sold only via direct response as part of a TV campaign orchestrated by Time-Life. Featured episodes include appearances by Julie Andrews, Elton John, Mark Hamill, and Paul Simon.
“The direct-response campaign was a really successful one for Time-Life, and the videos have had so much exposure on television. So we thought it was the right time to bring them to retail,” Columbia director of marketing Suzanne White says. “They really remind consumers of the great nostalgia of the show, and they have a variety of appeal to several markets.”