Second City Television
Second City Television

Second City Television

1976-09-21 | en
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Seasons & Episodes

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EP1  Maudlin O' the Night
Nov. 22,1983
Maudlin O' the Night

(This is the start of the SCTV Channel, when SCTV moved to Cinemax. Shows are 45 minutes long). Guy Caballero launches the new SCTV cable channel. The Schmenge Brothers try new wave music. Edith Prickly and Edna Boil go double-dating in the film spoof "Prickly Business". Steve Roman makes his own made-for-TV movie about JFK.

EP2  Gimme Jackie / Australia
Dec. 06,1983
Gimme Jackie / Australia

Sid Dithers finds love in "An Officer and a Gentile". Perini Scleroso gets her own sitcom. "The National Midnight Star" is rechristened "Hollywood Dirt Tonight". Australian actor Mel McElroy hosts his own film festival.

EP3  It's a Wonderful Film
Dec. 20,1983
It's a Wonderful Film

Producer, Martin Simmons is making a Christmas movie by classic film director Frank Bailey but decides that profit is more important than a making a quality movie so fires Bailey and hires a teen sex comedy director in his place.

EP4  The Date Debate / Scary Previews
Jan. 03,1984
The Date Debate / Scary Previews

Count Floyd and Woody Tobias Jr co-host a new movie review show, Scary Previews

EP5  You're On / Das Boobs
Jan. 17,1984
You're On / Das Boobs

Das Boobs puts Porky's on the deck of Das Boot. Also features a trio of commercials with Irving Cohen, and the call-in show You're On, hosted by councilman for Melonville East, Max Lansky.

EP6  Stars In One: Bob Hope / Happy Hour
Jan. 31,1984
Stars In One: Bob Hope / Happy Hour

"Happy Hour" was a mock children's show, by bar patron, Happy Marsden, and the bartender, Mike. A mock western filmed in black and white, "Six Gun Justice", with was shown on each episode.

EP7  Stalag SCTV
Feb. 14,1984
Stalag SCTV

Scripts are being stolen from SCTV, and new guy Fred Winston is the likeliest suspect. Highlights include Al Peck's Dinosaur Days and Lewis Does Dylan.

EP8  Diary of a Female Person / Happy Hour
Feb. 28,1984
Diary of a Female Person / Happy Hour

Happy Hour shows another episode of Six Gun Justice, and Brock Linehan features Libby Wolfson's struggles to produce her new film.

EP9  Just For Fun / Black Like Vic
Mar. 13,1984
Just For Fun / Black Like Vic

Rusty Van Reddick does a PSA for nursery schools; tonight on "Just for Fun," Stan Kanter launches a discussion on nuclear proliferation; in a 1962 episode of "Vic Arpeggio," our hero pretends to be a black man in segregation-era Georgia.

EP10  Youth, Do They Give A Damn or What? / Happy Hour
Mar. 27,1984
Youth, Do They Give A Damn or What? / Happy Hour

Soren and Weiss try to figure out what's up with the youth of today, while Don and Cheaplaffs have further adventures on Happy Hour. Also features a trio of commercials with Sophia Loren, who keeps branching out into new businesses.

EP11  Allenscam
Apr. 10,1984
Allenscam

Features several wraparound elements, including an unfolding scandal involving Brad Allen, artist Willem de Kooning never quite being interviewed on three shows, and new character Rita Schubb in three separate short bits. Also includes Harvey, as done by the New York Actor's Studio, Mel's Rock Pile returns to the psychedelic sixties, while Murray Shulman savages Canadian television.

EP12  Oliver Grimley
Apr. 24,1984
Oliver Grimley

Cheryl Kinsey does a live show, while Ed Grimley, does Oliver Twist

EP13  2009, Jupiter and Beyond
May. 08,1984
2009, Jupiter and Beyond

Sci-Fi movie 2009, Jupiter and Beyond

EP14  Half Wits / Save the World Parade
May. 22,1984
Half Wits / Save the World Parade

Melonville's parade to promote world peace might not go as the announcers wish. Meanwhile, Alex Trebel is eager for someone, anyone to score on his game show "Half Wits."

EP15  Jackie Rogers, Jr. for President / Happy Hour
Jun. 05,1984
Jackie Rogers, Jr. for President / Happy Hour

The wraparound features Jackie Rogers Jr's run for president, while Six Gun Justice's penultimate episode airs on Happy Hour. Jayne Eastwood returns as moderator for Philosophers at work.

EP16  Celebrity Fairie Tayles / Canadian Gaffes and Practical Amusements
Jun. 19,1984
Celebrity Fairie Tayles / Canadian Gaffes and Practical Amusements

Celebrity Fairie Tayles features the unlikely pairing of Alan Alda and Ed Grimley, while Canadian Gaffes features the gang from Headline Challenge in another brutal parody of the CBC that often approaches the moribund tediousness of the real thing

EP17  You're On / Happy Hour
Jul. 03,1984
You're On / Happy Hour

Happy Hour presents the exciting conclusion to Six Gun Justice, and host Happy Marsden makes a surprising confession. The show also features and another episode of the oddly-paced You're On, while over at SCTV News, Earl retires and Floyd shows up in his Count Floyd costume.

EP18  Pledge Week
Jul. 17,1984
Pledge Week

Various SCTV characters host a pledge drive for the network as it goes bankrupt.

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Second City Television is a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from Toronto's Second City troupe that ran between 1976 and 1984.

Second City Television Audience Reviews

Baseshment I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
Bessie Smyth Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.
Yash Wade Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Ortiz Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Cleavant Derricks This show is an all time classic for comedy. Canada's SCTV put so many big name comedians on the map, from John Candy to Joe Flaherty, Eugene Levy, Rick Moranis, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin, Dave Thomas and so many more. This show is still funny today and what a concept it was. A small local TV station somewhere in Canada that makes all these awful shows. It's not like SNL or sketch shows today, they had running characters from week to week and shows that would come and go, nice long sketches with funny characters that are actually well written. One of the all time great comedies. Up there with Monty Python in my opinion.
John T. Ryan FROM a most humble beginning in a storefront converted into a "Cabaret" in Chicago's Old Town Neighborhood on North Wells Street, THE SECOND CITY Theater has long been known for its Avant-Garde spirit and irreverent satire of just about everything. The group became a hot bed for outrageous comedy and a fertile spawning ground for a seemingly endless array of acting talent.OWING its title of THE SECOND CITY to the sort of collective feelings of inadequacy felt by Chicago's being the second largest city, next to New York. The urban inferiority complex continues with the application of the old nicknames. Whereas NYC has long been "Bagdad on the Trolley" (from O. Henry) to the modern moniker of "the Big Apple", all names seemed to imply power, class and the place to be. Chicago's reputations on the other hand seem to have reflected the negative. Gangster Land, Hog-Butcher to the World and (my personal favourite) the Stacker of Wheat all cover the urban atmosphere that is thriving on the Southwest shoreline of Lake Michigan.RESORTING to a sort of "Mental Jiu-Jitsu", the founders of the off-beat theatre group used the otherwise diminutive term to give a figurative "finger" to the World and just be themselves. The lack of superlatives gave notice that there would certainly be neither pretensions nor any pseudo-intellectual attitudes. Basically, what you see is what you get.ABOUT twenty years after the founding of the Chicago Group, an international movement led to exportation of the Theatre North, to Canada. The targeted City was Toronto, Ontario; which sits on the same huge grouping of inland fresh water lakes as does Chicago; Toronto being on Lake Ontario, Chicago situated on Lake Michigan. There are many other similarities between the two; so the choice seemed perfect and tuned out pretty well.AFTER a shaky start (including a bankruptcy and a padlocked cabaret), the Northern Campaign was a success. Infusion of new capital and management allowed the talents of the likes of Harold Ramis, Joe Flaherty, Gene Levy, Andrea Martin, Catherine O'Hare, Rick Romanis, John Candy, Tony Rosado and Dave Thomas (as the 'Beaver') to create some of the best and most original comic routines and reviews imaginable. Making use of the existence of both the Chicago and Toronto groups, personnel were sometimes shuttled back and forth for stays in the other facility.SOMRTIME around 1975, the idea of branching out to the TV tube was hatched and the genesis for SECOND CITY TV was successful in bringing the group and the name to Television and familiarity to millions of North American households.PERHAPS the movement toward the electronic medium was boosted by the success of NBC's Saturday NIGHT, which premièred in the Fall Season in 1975. The show was designed as a 90 minute, weekly comedy review type show, featuring rotating Guest Hosts and Special Appearances by popular Musical Acts. Furthermore, the cast of the show was made up of writer-performers Michael O'Donahue (from The National Lampoon) and a highly talented group of improvisational performers such as: Chevy Chase, John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Dan Akroyd, Lorraine Newman, Garrett Morris and Jane Curtain. All but O'Donahue, Chase and Morris were SECOND CITY Vets and the show naturally took on the same sort of look as a SC Review; although sans any of the "Social Relevance" or Satire that characterized the live stage performances always flaunted.SO, on a shoe-string budget and using the central theme of spoofing what may well go on behind the scenes of a local Television Station, SECOND CITY TV burst on the scene in September of 1977. At first, it was done in a syndicated manner; although it appears that many of the stations owned and affiliated with the NBC Television Network picked it up.WE well remember how it snuck up on our household that fateful Saturday night. It was directly following Saturday NIGHT LIVE on NBC in our market in Chicago; as our local, wholly-owned NBC affiliate & subsidiary, WMAQ TV Channel 5 had signed it on-board as a late nite Saturday feature. Being slated locally to follow SNL, it would seem that SCTV would be put at a disadvantage.NOTHING could be further from the truth as the obviously frivolously budgeted Canadian Product shined and stood out by comparison with the slickly done New York Production of SNL. SCTV took just a 30 minute slot and managed to make use of every on air minute sandwiched in between the late night commercials, with a plethora of fresh and genuinely funny material; all performed by a whole "New" and unheralded curfew of top notch, soon to be "Stars" cast.CONTRARY to what our original expectations had dictated, SECOND CITY TV trumped NBC's Saturday NIGHT LIVE. Instead of being a sort of Late Night afterthought, it proved to be Saturday Night's Main Event, at least in our town.ALL of that changed when the 30 minute, small budget show morphed into the hour and a half SCTV 90; but that's another story (and review) for another day. .POODLE SCHNITZ!!
Raymond Valinoti, Jr. Like SATURDAY NIGHT, SECOND CITY TV was a sketch comedy show with a repertory cast. But there, the resemblance ended. Instead of a bunch of disconnected sketches with musical interludes, SECOND CITY TV was a concept show about the programs and behind-the-scenes shenanigans of a cheesy, low-budget TV station. Therefore, unlike SNL, which took potshots at anything from current events to whatever celebrity was guesting, SECOND CITY TV concentrated on the television industry.The results were some of the most incisive and skillful parodies in TV history, from commercials for useless products to self-congratulatory talk shows to pompous "cultural" programming. The talented cast members skewered such icons as Bob Hope and Barbra Streisand and created such memorable characters like Joe Flaherty's sleazy station owner Guy Caballero and Andrea Martin's vulgar station manager Edith Prickley. Unlike SNL, SECOND CITY TELEVISION never pandered to the lowest common denominator; it always respected its audience with intelligent humor that satirized the foibles of both the television industry and the people in it. The syndicated show's success would result in a 90-minute network version.
Coxer99 Off the wall comedy show that greatly surpasses Saturday Night Live a thousand times over, with a better assortment of performers, skits and writing. Stars such as John Candy, Catherine O'Hara, Rick Moranis and Eugene Levy went on to bigger, deservedly, and better things after the success of SCTV.