That breaks down the professionalism and regularity of the show, and opens up a whole plethora of issues, from staff control over an official FT project to the quality of the hosts, and the final product being worth the time and effort that goes into producing it.
Edit: I dont mean to keep shooting it down, I'm all for FTR, but if we want to avoid another failed reboot, these issues have to be addressed and taken seriousely without compromising the integrity of the final show. What is needed is a controlled, planed and structured aproac to this project, and a lot of that may well be experimenting with format and procedure- but what has been suggested so far only diverges very slightly from what was attempted before, and we know that that doesn't work. Time and effort spent carefully planning a reboot will save the show in the long run, keeping in mind that FTR would need to be professionally created and presented to stand any chance of becoming as succesful as certaily I, and I'm sure everyone else, wants to see. So that means structure and regular, familiar content despite the issues mentioned in this thread. And, unfortunately, solving one usually compromises the other.
As of right now, there are no official plans to reboot FTR, but interest in the project can help change that. Kep the ideas flowing, but don't hope for miracles, is what I'm trying to say. FurryTeens has a mission statement to help wherever it can, and the show must comply with that first and foremost. An unproffessional and messy show that is destined to inevitably fail cannot fit that mission. Neither can a rigid, unchanging show that cant be bent easily to fit the international nature of our member base, even if it is successful.