Of course marvel and star wars aren't close to the Muppets. The point is they are willing to flush $230mil down the toilet on something that was absolutely terrible. But muppets mayhem somehow broke the Camels back? I guess we don't know the budget. But if was crazy, once again Disneys fault, not the ip.
Again the idea here is leveraging IPs that sell, not about budgets. If Disney thought that Muppets sold anywhere even in the same sports league as either Star Wars or Marvel they'd be pushed all over the place in terms of offerings.
Of course I'm looking at it through a fans eye too. But from a business perspective, would another person come in as ceo and look at a property and assess why said ip didn't do well? Maybe the muppets are dead, and they will never be anything more than spokesman for booking.com. But I can't confidently say that when the majority of what they've done is bad.
For all we say about Iger and his "creative" decisions, we can say that he is a fairly good business person. He wouldn't sit on a property that has earning potential. So that is why I'm fairly confident that another CEO isn't going to all of a sudden do an about face on pumping out Muppet content.
You didn't or maybe I missed it in what you said which is why I'm asking. The common thing in your posts is "they produce bad content so how do we know", but that isn't proof of some pent up demand that would gobble up the next good thing to the tune of several hundred Million. That is hope that there is an audience, not proof.
So again I ask, where is your proof that there is actually pent up earning potential? Where is the data? A number one record on the kids chart and some positive reviews but no views to back that up? That isn't proof, that is a single piece of data. We have lots of other content from Disney that has similar stories that don't get picked up for more content. So why is Muppets any different, it doesn't have the numbers, so why should it be given more chances where the chances previously given haven't produced any different results?
Bluey for example has the views and sales to back it up, which is why Bluey will start being put into the Parks. An argument you had I believe in that they should have done it long ago and that Disney was stupid to pass on it originally, which I told you just wait maybe they are in the process of securing the theme park right and they were.
So Disney isn't above putting money and resources into properties that are producing, which brings us back to Muppets. If a property like Bluey which has the views and sales to back it up, you can see why its moving forward with more things coming out from Disney including a movie. If Muppets really had pent up earning potential, like a Bluey, then we know Disney wouldn't just sit on it, they'd do something about it and expand not contract in terms of Muppet offerings.
Right here, that's what you're missing. I've not once said they should swing for the fences. Everything I'm saying revolves around them making content that's fun and NOT swing for the fence budget wise. Remember "rounding error"? I absolutely understand that muppets aren't/won't be a massive ip. The point is they can make profit with the right people in charge. And if they're not losing money, why not try and, I don't know, nurture the brand? It might not get billions of dollars in profit. But for a platform that releases garbage on top of garbage with D+, it could use some good content that isn't supposed to be a blockbuster.
I'll end with this. The Muppets are an extremely low risk property. Even if they aren't banking billions they have proven they can make some money. Or at least be a positive light in a company that has a lot of negativity surrounding it's content quality.
You've argued a lot in these forums about, it's not always about making billions, there's a bigger picture... But now it's, well the The Muppets only doubled it's budget in profit and won a best song oscar and Mayhem reviewed very well and spawned a #1 album... I see why they're done. You say you're a fan but yet can't see why the quality of the product might be factor in the results. If you don't think the Muppets can add value to Disney if they produce quality content, ok, that's fine. I just don't see it that way. Until I see some consistent quality effort that loses them money. Just like I won't say star wars is dead because Disney has crapped the bed it. It's a all a Disney problem not an Ip problem, plain and simple.
You've got me all wrong here, when I said swing for the fences I didn't mean budget wise I meant creatively. Which from what I've gotten from your posts is exactly what you want them to do when you say "make good content". You want content that has no restrictions put on them creatively to see what it can do.
Also I'm a fan, but not a hardcore fan, I'm more a casual fan. Which is probably why I can look at this by taking off the fan hat since I'm not deep in it and just keeping on my business hat. And yes maybe Disney should do more with them. But with a company that has so much IP under its roof, so why should Muppets be near the top of the pile in terms of company focus when other properties that are just as good don't get near the representation or focus as them. The earning potential might be there, but I just don't see it.