THE WEIRD AL SHOW
'''The Weird Al Show''' was a short-lived television show starring "Weird Al" Yankovic. Produced in association with Dick Clark Productions, it aired Saturday mornings on the CBS TV network from September to December 1997.
CBS forced the show to fit its FCC "E/I" requirements for education programming.[1] Though the show appeared to be geared at children, the moralistic messages were interspersed with Yankovic's trademark slapstick parody, and the humor was aimed at older audiences. The show was canceled after one season as part of a series of major changes CBS made to its Saturday morning programming.
The theme song can be found on Yankovic's album ''Running with Scissors'' (1999) as "The Weird Al Show Theme". The show was released on DVD on August 15, 2006.
| Contents |
| Cast |
| Episodes |
| Trivia |
| DVD release |
| Special Features |
| External links |
| References |
Cast
★ Eddie Deezen as The Guy Boarded in the Wall
★ Donavan Freberg as Baby Boolie
★ Stan Freberg as Papa Boolie, J. B. Toppersmith
★ Gary LeRoi Gray as Bobby the Inquisitive Boy
★ Brian Haley as The Hooded Avenger
★ Harvey the Wonder Hamster as himself
★ Ed Marques as Varna the Squirmese Cook
★ Paula Jai Parker as Val Brentwood, Gal Spy
★ Patricia Place as Mrs. Fesenmeyer
★ Jack Plotnick as Uncle Ralphie
★ Judy Tenuta as Madame Judy the Psychic
★ Danielle Weeks as Cousin Corky
★ Mary Yankovic as Mom (herself)
★ Nick Yankovic as Dad (himself)
★ "Weird Al" Yankovic as himself, Fred Huggins, Tony Malone, Fatman, various other characters
★ Billy West as the show's narrator/announcer
Episodes
| # | Title | Guest stars | Original airdate | Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | He Ain't Heavy, He's My Hamster | ★ John Ennis as Dad ★ Loretta Fox as Mom ★ Dale Hallcom as Three Armed Guy ★ Rick Overton as Mr. Molasses ★ Emo Philips as Dr. Philips ★ Dweezil Zappa as himself | November 15, 1997 | 3601 |
| 2 | Mining Accident | ★ Clarence Clemons as Miner ★ David Lander as Miner ★ Michael McKean as Miner ★ Emo Philips (voice) as Slaw Miester ★ Martha Quinn as Woman in Commercial | September 27, 1997 | 3602 |
| 3 | Bad Influence | ★ Patton Oswalt as Seymour ★ Kevin Weisman as Spike ★ Barenaked Ladies as musical guest | September 13, 1997 | 3603 |
| 4 | Promises, Promises | ★ Tony Little as himself ★ Ron Popeil as himself ★ John Tesh as himself | September 20, 1997 | 3604 |
| 5 | Back to School | ★ Alex Trebek as himself ★ Gedde Watanabe as Kuni | October 4, 1997 | 3605 |
| 6 | One for the Record Books | ★ Mark Kineavy as Ebert ★ Ric Sarabia as Bearded Man ★ Scott Streltzoff as Free Thrower ★ Ian Whitcomb as Sir Alec ★ Hanson as musical guest | October 18, 1997 | 3606 |
| 7 | Because I Said So | ★ Mathew McCurley as Huey ★ Tahj Mowry as himself ★ Dick Van Patten as himself | October 25, 1997 | 3607 |
| 8 | The Competition | ★ Drew Carey as himself ★ Fred Willard as Award Show Host ★ Radish as musical guest | November 22, 1997 | 3608 |
| 9 | Time Machine | ★ Victoria Jackson as Crying Woman ★ Steve Jay as musical guest ★ Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz as musical guest ★ Rubén Valtierra as musical guest ★ Jim West as musical guest | October 11, 1997 | 3609 |
| 10 | Al Gets Robbed | ★ Martha Quinn as Woman in Commercial ★ "Macho Man" Randy Savage as himself ★ Dick Van Patten as Burglar ★ All 4 One as musical guest | December 6, 1997 | 3610 |
| 11 | Al Plays Hooky | ★ Daisy Fuentes as herself ★ Kevin McCarthy as Mayor | November 8, 1997 | 3611 |
| 12 | Talent Show | ★ Cathy Ladman as Cindy ★ Jean Vander Pyl as Wilma Flintstone ★ Mary Lynn Rajskub as Weather Woman ★ John Roarke as Clint Eastwood ★ Roger Rose as Talk Show Host ★ Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz as Drummer ★ Matt Weinhold as Game Show Host ★ Immature as musical guest | November 1, 1997 | 3612 |
| 13 | The Obligatory Holiday Episode | ★ ★ The Amazing Johnathan as Uncle Johnathan | November 29, 1997 | 3613 |
Trivia
★ J. B. Toppersmith was initially rejected for inclusion into the show. The network's reasoning was "Insider Hollywood Jokes".
★ In the "Al Gets Robbed" episode, the Hooded Avenger walks over to Al delivering him his tabloid papers. The paper is called "Midnight Star", referring to the same-titled song about the tabloid off ''"Weird Al" Yankovic in 3-D''. The main headline, "Incredible Frog Boy on the Loose", refers to a lyric in the song.
★ Randy Savage almost cancelled his appearance when he found out he was supposed to lose to a hamster. He was eventually coaxed into continuing once he was assured it wasn't a girl hamster.
★ Gedde Watanabe's character, Kuni, also appeared in Yankovic's film, ''UHF''. David Bowe, Victoria Jackson, Kevin McCarthy, and Emo Phillips also starred in the film.
★ CBS sent various notes to the writers of the show after reviewing the scripts, asking the writers to "Yankocize" (i.e. make funny) the commercial-break bumper announcements that the network wrote to reinforce each episode's lesson (or as Al put it, make them suck a little less), as well as remove any "imitatible behavior" from the scripts that children might want to mimic after seeing on TV. The writers were often surprised not at what the censors took out, but what they left in — for example, a sketch (written and submitted as a joke) in which Baby and Papa Boolie commit suicide after listening to one too many of Fred Huggins's songs was being seriously considered by the network for use on the show. (The sketch was later rewritten to have Papa Boolie call a mental hospital to take Fred away.)
★ Before the DVD set release, a compilation of the short music video segments for "Lousy Haircut", "Lasagna", and "Livin' in the Fridge" (as well as the show opening) was released on '' in 2003.
★ In the episode, "Mining Accident," the "Fatman" cartoon contains a villain, The Slawmeister (played by Emo Philips), that looks and sounds identical to the character "Joe Earley" (also played by Emo Philips) from the Weird Al film, ''UHF''. This is most likely an intentional reference.
★ Al's television set is called "Al TV," which shares the name of another Weird Al Show.
★ The "Fatman" cartoons were based on Weird Al's hit song, "Fat."
Sources: Weird Al Show DVD commentaries, ''"Weird Al" Yankovic in 3D'' (CD)
DVD release
'''The Weird Al Show - The Complete Series''' was released on August 15, 2006. It is a 3-DVD set of all 13 episodes of ''The Weird Al Show'', plus bonus features. [1]. The episodes are presented in broadcast order.
It was released in Canada on September 26, 2006, alongside the U.S. release of his new album, Straight Outta Lynwood.
Special Features
★ 13 commentaries with "Weird Al" as well as other cast and crew members
★ "The Evolution of 'Fatman'", a featurette comprised of original concept art
★ Galleries of concept art
★ Animated storyboards
★ Karaoke for the theme song of the show
External links
★
★
References
1. http://www.weirdal.com/faq.htm
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