Quite often, I find myself sitting at my desk, looking slightly to the right so I can’t see my wall calendar (which features pictures of people ironing in dangerous locations), and slightly below the vantage point of my computer monitor, and I can’t help but wonder what day it is. Here is where I take note of my options. I can either stick my head out the window and sing “O Solo Mio” until someone shouts “Are you crazy?? It’s 2:30 in the morning on Tuesday, December 9th!” or I can consult my brand new Day-At-A-Time Muppet calendar!
That’s right, for the Muppet fan who can’t stand to see the same picture for more than 24 hours, you can now head out to your local Amazon.com retailer and purchase a year’s worth of calendar.
Right there on the front of the box, the calendar is advertised as having “Full Color on Every Page”. And thankfully, they aren’t guilty of false advertising here. If they were, I’d sue their pants off. Though that’d be pretty easy since many of the Muppets are already sans pants.
Aside from the colors, the pictures themselves are pretty impressive. At first glance, it just looks like a bunch of poser shots we’ve seen 100 times before. But at second and third glance, I didn’t see many repeated images, plus a significant amount that I’d never seen before. Flipping through right now, I see Piggy on a carousel, Kermit as Galileo, and a picture that looks like the Swedish Chef is smoking a joint. Wait, forget I was ever amazed by that last one.
A word of caution from ToughPigs forum member and all-around nice guy Jimmy: “It seems like the variation of the pictures is pretty good, but towards the end they repeat images, sometimes for several days in a row. August 26-September 7 show “A spotlight on Statler and Waldorf,” and the images consist of just two poser pics, alternated for all the days. On November 3-7, there is a list of all Muppet show guest stars, and while the accompanying picture is one I have never seen, it is repeated for all of those days. Despite this, the overall variety is pretty good and the calendar does have quite a few pictures I had never seen before. ” Thanks, Jimmy!
The calendar also claims to have “Everything You Ever Wanted To Know, But Didn’t Know Who to Ask.” First of all, for those of you who actually don’t know where to go for Muppet trivia, may I direct you to the Muppet Wiki? No? Ok, moving right along…
A secret squirrel has informed me that long-time Muppet writer Jim Lewis was tagged to help write up the trivia for the calendar. Although Jim (whoever wrote the text) probably could have entered some Morsel-worthy trivia into the calendar, we’re left with trivia bits like Who-is-Scooter? and “Say, who were the celebrity guests in season 2 of The Muppet Show?” All easily attainable information for anyone with Google at their fingertips.
And speaking of trivia, we should only hope that the trivia in the calendar is all correct. While scanning a few random pages for this article, I found one that asks “Which of these Muppets was created first?”, in which the upside-down answer claims that Rowlf debuted before Kermit. According to the Muppet Wiki, Kermit was built a full seven years before Rowlf. A minor quibble, but another example of how the Muppet Wiki is better than just about everything else in the world.
After having the calendar for almost two weeks now, I’ve gotten over my high expectations for brilliant Muppet trivia and focused more on having a great Muppet picture every single day, and I’m loving it. I look forward to the end of the day when I can tear off that picture of Sam the Eagle and find a new image of Clifford. It’s what they should have been giving us every year for the last 10 years. Daily Muppets.
Highly recommended, for people who like days.
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