With their highly-anticipated show premiering soon, it was only a matter of time before Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog would be forced to see each other after their nasty breakup.

The two ex-lovers reunited to promote Sunday's Emmy Awards in a new video, which also features stars like Julie Bowen, Viola Davis and Joel McHale, according to CBS. In the video, the two sit down for lunch as Kermit confirms that the meeting is strictly business.

"Well duh, we're no longer together!" explains Miss Piggy. "Haven't you seen the press?"

The video next shows Miss Piggy jealously asking Kermit all about his new girlfriend Denise, whom she "accidentally" calls Dennis, and then she even goes a little crazy on Bowen after she sends the former couple a bottle of champagne.

Miss Piggy goes on to tell the paparazzi waiting outside the restaurant that she's doing "fantastic" since the breakup, and this morning on "Good Morning America," she really cleared things up, according to Entertainment Weekly.

"First of all, I ended the relationship. Look at me, look at me! Would you throw this away?" she asked before revealing that she's been "playing the field" since they split. "There is someone new almost every night." No matter how jealous she may get over Kermit's new love interest, she still had some surprisingly nice things to say about her ex-lover.

"I mean, he's a looker, that's for sure," she admitted. "Those eyes, that body, and the supreme sense of self-confidence that frog has, just walking down the street completely naked."


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Speaking of naked, ABC is doing an awesome job promoting "The Muppets" by saying it will be the only "network TV show with full-frontal nudity," according to Fox. Promotional posters everywhere show Kermit standing with a towel around his neck in his usual naked state.

"No subject is off limits," a source told the Daily Mail about the show. "Everyone remembers the classic Jim Henson 'Muppet Show' of the 1970s and 1980s, but this new show is aimed firmly at a mature, modern audience, and addresses subjects that would have been taboo in the past."