News

The Muppets deserve a glorious return to the limelight, and a weekly Muppet Show revival series could be the perfect place to do it. The characters and show were widely popular from the late '70s ...
If you care about American art and culture, then you’ll surely agree that Muppet*Vision 3D in Disney World should be protected on the National Register of Historic Places. Jim Henson was a great ...
Apparently, times are tough even on Sesame Street. A post that was seemingly from Elmo went viral when the Muppet let people know he was “open to work” on LinkedIn. Now, people are wondering ...
Eric Clingersmith showed up early on the last day Muppet*Vision was open to the public to be among the first to experience the film. He watched it multiple times and waited in line for 40 minutes ...
Not since The Muppets Take Manhattan have we been this excited about a puppetorial release! On Saturday June 21, the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria will reveal newly restored puppets from the ...
To mark its last day the show will stay open an extra hour, until the park closes at 10 p.m, so as many fans as possible can say goodbye. Disney cast members will get to see the very last performance.
Jim Henson's beloved Muppet*Vision 3D Is set to close ... which will see the arrival of a “Monsters, Inc.”-themed coaster and a new theater show in the former Muppets ... it did open, almost ...
The curtain has closed on Muppet•Vision 3D at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Take a photographic look back and see what’s replacing it ...
In “World of Color Happiness!,” the Muppets open up a show that capitalizes mainly on the characters and concepts from Inside Out and Inside Out 2.
Longtime Disney fans have expressed sadness over losing this iconic piece of Magic Kingdom, but new details reveal similar experiences are planned.
The Muppets are moving to make way for a new Monsters, Inc. land, which will include a suspended coaster emulating the movie's door vault scene and a brand-new theater show. Muppet*Vision 3D first ...
The first guest invited to ring the bell to open trading at the New York Stock Exchange in 1956 wasn’t a company executive, a politician or a celebrity. It was a 10-year-old boy, Leonard Ross ...