Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
She starred as Mary McGinnis in the Batman Beyond franchise, and
appeared as Amelia Adams in an episode of Sesame Street; as herself in an
episode of The Weird Al Show; and as Sandy Gordon in an episode of What’s
New, Scooby-Doo?
Best known as Andrew “Squiggy” Squiggman from Laverne & Shirley, he
also had an extensive career in voice acting as well as additional roles on
screen. He starred as Jerry Lewis in Will the Real Jerry Lewis Please Sit
Down; Milo De Venus in Galaxy High School; Arthur in Jungle Cubs;
and Horace Badun in 101 Dalmatians: The Series. He guest-starred as Jud
in the “Gidget Makes a Wrong Connection” episode of The ABC Saturday
Superstar Movie; Nitro in an episode of Batman: The Animated Series;
Da Shrimp in The Little Mermaid: The Animated Series; Filth #1 in an
episode of The Tick (1994); Sqweek in two episodes of Superman: The
Animated Series; a miner on an episode of The Weird Al Show; Leonard
Weems in Recess; and Donnie in an episode of SpongeBob SquarePants. He
also provided additional voices for ProStars, Tom & Jerry Kids Show and
Camp Candy.
Best known for his 36-year stint as the host of Jeopardy!, he also
made appearances as himself om episodes of The Weird Al Show and Pepper
Ann, as well as Alan Quebec in an episode of Rugrats.
He appeared as the Award Show Host in an episode of The Weird Al Show;
Mr. Brown in an episode of City Guys; Cassandra's father Vic in several episodes of Hercules:
The Animated Series; Pa Munchapper in three episodes of Buzz Lightyear of Star
Command; Mr. Paulson in Teamo Supremo; Ross Darren and a speedway
announcer in two different episodes of The Batman; Swindle in Transformers:
Animated; Grandpa Murphy in Milo Murphy’s Law; and Pop-Pop in The
Loud House. He also provided voices for The Emperor’s New School and
appeared with his comedy troupe, Ace Trucking Company, in the 1974 ABC
Funshine Saturday Sneak Peak preview special.
This weekend we continue our 3 year anniversary celebration.
As we celebrate, we figured we'd also take the opportunity to celebrate the various other programs enjoying anniversaries this year (at least at an interval of 5). Some we've covered, some we'll get to covering sooner or later, but all of them represent Saturday morning. For this installment, we recognize those shows turning 20. That's right, they're almost legal here in America, and amongst the final crop of the 20th Century.
Take a walk down memory lane with us, and feel free to share your memories in the comments, or over on our Facebook group or Facebook page, on on Twitter @SatMForever. We'd love to hear from you!
Now, without further ado, join us in celebrating...
Billy West – Narrator, Harvey the
Wonder Hamster (animated)
“Weird Al” Yankovic is probably one
of the most recognizable names in modern comedy; having a decades-spanning
career built on numerous musical and pop culture parodies.
Just a boy and his accordian.
Al started down the path to his
career when he met and gave radio personality Dr. Demento
a tape of his song “Belvedere
Cruisin’” in 1976, which Demento loved and played on the Dr.
Demento Show. Then, while working for his university’s
radio station where he officially adopted the persona of “Weird Al”, Al
recorded “My
Bologna”, a parody of The
Knack’s hit “My Sharona”,
which Demento again played. The Knack lead singer Doug Fieger
loved the parody and helped Al get it released as a single as well as his first
six-month recording contract with Capitol
Records. While touring with Demento’s stage show, Al met his
manager, Jay
Levey, and recruited his band: bassist Steve Jay,
guitarist Jim West,
drummer Jon “Bermuda”
Schwartz, and later in 1991 keyboardist Ruben Valtierra.
Over the next decade, Al and his
band would record several albums full of parodies and original music and
perform as both concert headliners and opening acts. Along the way, Al would
flex his parody muscles with music videos that faithfully recreated the majority
of the actual videos for the songs he parodied. From 1984-2006, Al would host Al
TV; a series of ten specials that aired on MTV and VH1 where he would showcase
his own videos, surreal or unusual videos from other performers, and fake
commercials and celebrity interviews where he would intercut himself asking
strange questions with footage from actual interviews. In 1985, Al and Levey
made the mockumentary The
Compleat Al,
and
in 1989 the cult classic film UHF.
Al in his eyeball chair.
One
project that took a while to come to fruition was a children’s show. Since
1984, Al had been trying to get one produced, but it wouldn’t be until 1997
that it would finally happen. Along with producer Thomas F. Frank,
Al pitched the show first to Dick Clark,
who agreed to produce the show through his Dick Clark Productions.
Then, they pitched it to CBS.
They were interested, but due to FCC
tightening the mandate for 3 hours of educational programming per week, they
were only looking at shows with educational value. Al and Frank assured them
the show would be educational in the vein of the network’s prior hit, Pee-wee’s Playhouse,
and CBS greenlit the show. Psychologist Dr. Gordon Berry
was retained as the series’ educational advisor, much as he had been for the
network’s other previous hit, Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids.
Al in his house.
As the series’ intro explained, a
fictional version of Al had taken to living below the Earth’s surface in a
subterranean clubhouse full of bizarre furniture, gadgetry and musical
instruments. Al lived with his best friend, Harvey the Wonder Hamster, who
sometimes communicated with animated thought bubbles as a means to make him
more expressive per the network’s wishes, and a guy who lived inside his wall (initially
silent but later made to talk, played by Eddie Deezen). Al had an eclectic cast
of friends frequently drop in to pay him a visit, including his super-strong
cousin Corky (Danielle Weeks); super hero The Hooded Avenger (Brian Haley, who
wasn’t thrilled with the costume and had a friend come up with an alternate
version); super spy Val Brentwood (Paula Jai Parker, who always had different
colored hair when she appeared); psychic Madame Judy (Judy Tenuta); inquisitive
young man Bobby (Gary LeRoi Gray); and occasionally Al’s parents Mary and Nick
(played by themselves). Julie
Rae Engelsman handed the bulk of the costuming for the
show. Billy West served as the series’ narrator and announcer, which included
annoying (to the producers) voiceovers that led in and out of commercials that
would restate the show’s moral lesson.
Al as Fred Huggins.
The
Weird Al Show debuted on CBS on September 13, 1997 as part of their Think
CBS Kids initiative, which featured a Saturday morning line-up
consisting of only educational live-action programs and news. Each episode
would begin with the episode’s lesson that Al would have to learn as the
episode progressed. There were a number of recurring segments, many recycled
from previous projects. Al would sit on his eyeball chair for Channel Hopping
on Al TV, which would yield parodies of shows, commercials, news and music
videos pre-recorded and inserted into episodes as time allowed (which meant
they rarely tied into the episode’s lesson), as well as licensed stock footage.
To answer one of Bobby’s questions, Al would play him an old black and white
educational film with a newly-dubbed vocal track provided by Bob Scott
(who had actually narrated such films early in his career). Al would check his
fan mail by having it fall on him after he yanked on a cord over his counter
and heard a different sound effect each episode. And Nutrition Break was when
Al would journey to his kitchen area and concoct a bizarre and completely
inedible culinary creation.
Jon Schwartz, Mary Yankovic, Val Brentwood, The Hooded Avenger, Bobby and Madame Judy.
Sometimes
an episode would feature an animated segment called Fatman by Keith
Alcorn, Paul
Claerhout and Tim Hatcher that
was inspired by Al’s video for “Fat”.
It showed Al as a super hero who could become fat to solve a food-related
crime. Initially, the producers wanted to cast Adam West
as the voice of Al’s sidekick (and the real brains of the duo), Harvey.
However, West was only able to do it remotely and the producers couldn’t
accommodate him, letting the role and most others in the shorts to fall to
Billy West. Al would also play several other characters, including a news
anchor, a very flexible fitness instructor, and Fred Huggins: a combined homage
to Mr.
Rogers, Captain
Kangaroo and Doug Henning.
Huggins would often be seen with two puppet partners: Papa Boolie (Stan
Freberg) and Baby Boolie (Donavan Freberg), both named by Al’s friend, Bob Odenkirk,
who helped with the initial brainstorming for the show. The show would be the
last time Al would be seen with his classic trademark appearance as in 1998 he
had corrective Lasik surgery, shaved off his mustache, and grew his hair longer
(the loud shirts still remained).
Al and "miners" David Lander, Michael McKean, David Bowe and Clarence Clemons.
Al also attempted to do something
unique for Saturday morning television: feature live music. He and the other
producers had an extensive wish list for acts they wanted to book on the show,
but a great many of them were turned down by CBS for skewing too “old”.
Instead, musical acts included the likes of Immature, Barenaked Ladies (whom the network
wanted addressed as a child-friendlier “BNL”), Radish and All-4-One. Al was also able to book Hanson, personal friends of his, who were at
the height of their popularity during the show’s production. However, despite
that, the show received a lot of hate mail over their appearance by people who
didn’t like their music or the group. Al’s band also played a few times, although
Al’s “Yoda” (one of many Star Warsreferences
peppered throughout the series as everyone involved were big fans) was
accompanied by the Bad Hair Band.
You can see right through him.
While
Al pitched the show as being like Pee-wee’s
Playhouse, he and the other producers wanted to avoid comparisons the shows.
That proved difficult, however, being that they hired Playhouse setdesigner Wayne White
to design their set and logo, and CBS promoted the show initially with the
comparison. Al served as the series’
head writer, along with a staff that included Susan Amerikaner,
Tracy Berna,
Zeke Kamm,
Steve Lookner,
Mark O’Keefe
and Ron
Weiner. Seth
MacFarlane applied to be a writer on the program, showing them
his concept for Family Guy, but they were
forced to pass on it knowing that the network would never go for it. Had they
been able to incorporate it, The Weird Al
Show could have been to Family Guy what
The Tracy Ullman Showwas to The
Simpsons.
The network had Al all twisted in knots.
The
network was very involved with the show, striving to ensure it was maintaining
a certain level of educational content that was appropriate for their desired
demographic. This often brought the producers in conflict with the network as the
network had notes for almost every single thing they did. As the writers had already
finished their work two weeks before filming, many of the script rewrites had
to be done by Al, Frank and series director Peyton Reed
typically overnight or on the fly as they were shooting an episode. They had
gotten wise to the level of interference and often would load scripts up with
content they were sure would get rejected in order to keep the content they
really wanted; however, the network constantly surprised them with what they
allowed and denied.
Al hangs out at the eyeball table with the Hooded Avenger, Cousin Corky and Val Brentwood.
Al’s
humor was severely hampered by CBS’ interference; many of his jokes losing
their punch and timing due to the extensive rewrites. Instead of talking to his
audience like he envisioned, CBS forced him to talk down to them; the moral and
the jokes had to be constantly repeated and explained, and they had to be
careful not to include “imitable behavior” that kids could easily duplicate at
home and injure themselves. To keep viewers from being “confused” when Al
watched TV, a TV border was placed around the “shows” instead of being shown in
full screen as Al had done in UHF. CBS
wanted Al to include parody videos as much as possible. As a result, several of
Al’s previous videos were played often during the end credits, although the
rights to use most of them were surprisingly difficult to get. He also made a
quick video for his previous song “Lasagna”,
a parody of Ritchie
Valens’ “La
Bamba”, and a new 30-second snippet that parodied The Prodigy’s
“Firestarter”
called “Lousy
Haircut”. Although “HE Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Hamster” was
intended to be the first episode by the production, CBS made “Bad Influence”
the first broadcast, feeling it had a better message from the outset.
Nothing like writing a short nap into the script.
The
creative interference created an intense and stressful working environment. Al,
Frank and Reed would often work on addressing the network’s notes all night
before going into filming two episodes in a row the next day. The Weird Al Show was aired at different
times in different markets, making it hard to promote. When the network did advertise for the show it was
usually on the morning of broadcast, which often went unseen as the ratings for
Think CBS Kids were abysmal. The fact that the lead-in was the news program CBS
This Morningalso
didn’t help draw in the desired viewers. Within
four months, most of the shows in the line-up were cancelled and replaced with
reruns of Beakman’s World, CBS
Storybreakand Tales from the Cryptkeeper;
The Weird Al Show amongst them with
the conclusion of its sole season. Despite the grueling conditions and the
short run, many of the people involved both in front of and behind the cameras
went on to have successful careers—especially Al.
"You want viewers? Macho Man will getcha viewers!"
Had
the series been successful, Surge
Licensing was in place to produce merchandise related to the
show. However, the only merchandise to ever see the light of day was when Shout! Factory
acquired the rights to release the complete
series to DVD in 2006. While the set featured commentary on
every episode by Al, Frank, Reed and several of the guest-stars, as well as Fatman and other concept art, it was
light on content as CBS kept nothing from the show beyond the master tapes.
Dick Clark also had much of the set and props in storage until he needed to
make room for new shows, allowing Al and Frank to snatch up whatever they
wanted before they wound up in the trash. The theme was included as a track on
Al’s 1999 album Running with Scissors.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“He
Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Hamster” (11/15/97) – Al has to apologize to Harvey after
bullying him for a death-defying stunt.
“Mining
Accident” (9/27/97) – Al has to learn to be friendly to the miners that dug
into his house.
“Bad
Influence” (9/13/97) – Al’s new friend Spike gets Al to perform goofy tasks in
order to join his club.