Posts with tag sctv
Posted Jun 17th 2008 10:23AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Programming, Pickups and Renewals, Reality-Free
It looks like a new generation of television viewers may be introduced to Bob and Doug MacKenzie. The creations of SCTV alumni Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas have a new, animated life that will be broadcast on the Fox network.
Bob and Doug are two beer-swilling, touque-wearing Canadians who hosted their own show (a show-within-a-show on SCTV) called "The Great White North" (and originally called "Kanadian Korner"). They were created in 1980 as a result of a network request for more Canadian content on SCTV. The characters proved so successful that they subsequently released two albums based on the characters and the movie Strange Brew.
Continue reading Bob and Doug MacKenzie cartoon will be on Fox
Posted May 5th 2008 1:25PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Saturday Night Live, Video, Commercials, Web, Reality-Free
TV commercials are fairly easy to satirize. If you think about it, advertising is sort of ridiculous in the first place (a TV show is interrupted to ask you to buy toilet paper and gum?), so they're a natural for parody. There have been a lot of great parodies over the years, from shows such as Saturday Night Live and SCTV, and now Nerve has picked the 50 that they consider to be the best.
There are a lot of great choices, from SNL's "Colon Blow," "Schmitt's Gay Beer," and "Compulsion by Calvin Klein" to the Zoloft ad from Mad TV. One of my favorites is SNL's "Happy Fun Ball" spot, which was written by Jack Handey and included in his new book of essays What I'd Say To The Martians. It's a good list all around, though it's also one that I feel is missing a bunch of good ones, only I can't put my finger on which ones are missing at the moment.
The one they pick as number one is undoubtedly a classic, though I think it's overrated. I've always loved the one after the jump.
Continue reading Nerve picks the best TV commercial parodies - VIDEO
Posted May 2nd 2008 1:01PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Casting, Reality-Free

This sounds like a stroke of genius. Make that two geniuses when it comes to comedy. Catherine O'Hara and Rob Thomas working together.
O'Hara has been cast as the lead in Good Behavior, one of three Rob Thomas projects in the works for next season (although he has stepped back from
Beverly Hills 90210 to concentrate on
Good Behavior and
Cupid). If the ABC dramedy manages to get picked up and O'Hara is heading up the project, they can count on me to tune in. Yeah, I said it. I'm committed if the
SCTV-vet is committed.
Catherine, who might be best known as Kevin's mother in
Home Alone and
Home Alone 2, is better known to comedy devotees for her brilliant work on
SCTV -- Lola "I want to have your baby" Heatherton, and the Christopher Guest mockumentaries like
Best in Show (she was Cookie Guggleman Fleck, the trampy wife of Eugene Levy, both of whom adored their terrier).
Good Behavior is based on
Outrageous Fortune, a New Zealand series about a criminal family. Catherine is Jackie West, the matriarch of the clan, and when her spouse is caught and thrown in jail for five years, she decides that it's time for the rest of the family to go straight.
Posted Apr 14th 2008 6:00AM by Paul Goebel
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Ask TV Squad, Reality-Free
I was driving around town today with the top down and my iPod blaring and a song came on that brought back some memories and I was really bothered.
The song was "I Don't Like Mondays" by The Boomtown Rats. I'm sure many of you are familiar with the song and recognize it as a classic. More importantly, I'm sure most of you know that the song was inspired by a particularly horrific event (feel free to Google it). However, that wasn't what bothered me. The bothersome part was that the memories it brought back were those of one of my favorite shows.
Continue reading Stump the King - SCTV
Posted Oct 6th 2007 10:26AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Industry, Programming, Web, Celebrities
What's happening on other blogs via the interweb.
Posted Oct 24th 2006 8:43AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: TV on DVD
The Addams Family - Vol. 1
- Batman Beyond - Season 2
- Beavis and Butthead - Gift Set
- Bewitched - Season 4 (color)
- Degrassi: TNG - Season 4
- The Facts of Life - Season 3
- Greg the Bunny - Best of Film Parodies
- Hannah Montana - Vol. 1 Livin' The Rock Star Life
- Justice League - Unlimited Season 1
- The L Word - Season 3
- Little House on the Prairie - The Movies
- MacGyver - Season 7
- Monarch of the Glen - Series 5
- Nightmares and Dreamscapes - Complete Series
- The O.C. - Season 3
- Sabrina and the Groovy Ghoulies - Saturday Mourning Collection
- Saturday Night Live - Best of TV Funhouse
- SCTV - Best of the Early Years
- Sesame Street - Old School: Vol. 1, 1969-74
- Slings and Arrows - Season 2
- The Swan - Complete Series
- That's My Bush - That's My Bush
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea - Season 2, Vol. 1
- Wings - Season 3
Posted May 29th 2006 1:37PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Talent, TV on DVD, Music and Variety, Celebrities

In the 1970s, all the hip kids were watching David Steinberg. You had your mainstays like Merv Griffin and Mike Douglas, but Steinberg was an intelligent talk show host who also used to be one of the newer voices in standup comedy. And now you'll be able to see the best of his 1972 CBS talk show on a
special DVD set that's coming out on July 11.
As a bonus, the six episodes include many familiar faces from
SCTV (the show was produced in Canada), including Martin Short, Joe Flaherty, Andrea Martin, and John Candy. And the set is only $9.99 if you get it from Amazon. Sweeeeeet!
Posted Feb 2nd 2006 11:46AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: NBC, OpEd, Animation, Short-Lived Shows

Sometimes cartoons that are better suited to an older audience find themselves lost in the oblivion of Saturday
morning children's fare. The most recent example of this I can think of is
Freakazoid! which packed far too
many pop cultural references into a single episode for any young person to really comprehend it. Before that, however,
there was
The Completely Mental Misadventures of Ed Grimley, based on the spastic, stiff-haired character
created by Martin Short.
If I may be so bold, the cartoon was in some ways better than the live-action version of Short's character. The
surreal world Short created around Grimley was given a more vibrant life when animated, and other touches such as a
singing pet mouse gave the show an oddball quality that would portend the absurd humor of Adult Swim and other recent
animated fare.
The show featured Short as the voice of Ed, as well as many of his friends from SCTV such as Joe Flaherty (who
played children's show host Count Floyd in a live-action segment) and Catherine O'Hara. Jonathan Winters and Andrea
Martin also worked on the show. The series began in 1988 and was off the air in 1989. The combination of being shown on
Saturday mornings, and an attempt at humor that wouldn't gain wide acceptance until a few years later pretty much
spelled doom for the series from the very beginning. Those of us who were lucky enough to catch it, however, got to at
least spend a few moments with one of the strangest, most inexplicable animated shows of the late 1980s.