NewsRadio
NewsRadio | |
---|---|
Also known as | The Station |
Created by | Paul Simms |
Starring |
Dave Foley Stephen Root Andy Dick Joe Rogan Maura Tierney Vicki Lewis Khandi Alexander (seasons 1-4) Phil Hartman (seasons 1-4) Jon Lovitz (season 5) |
Theme music composer | Mike Post |
Composer(s) | Ian Dye |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 5 |
No. of episodes | 98 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Brillstein-Grey Entertainment 343 Incorporated Columbia Pictures Television (1995-1996) Columbia TriStar Television (1996-1999) |
Distributor |
Sony Pictures Television The Program Exchange |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | March 21, 1995 – May 4, 1999 |
NewsRadio is an American television sitcom that aired on NBC from 1995 to 1999, focusing on the work lives of the staff of an AM news station. It had an ensemble cast featuring Dave Foley, Stephen Root, Andy Dick, Joe Rogan, Maura Tierney, Vicki Lewis, Khandi Alexander and Phil Hartman in his final regular role before his death.
The series was created by executive producer Paul Simms, and was filmed in front of a studio audience at CBS Studio Center and Sunset Gower Studios. The show's theme tune was composed by Mike Post, who also scored the pilot.
Overview
The series is set at WNYX, a fictional AM news radio station in New York City, populated by an eccentric station owner and staff. The show begins with the arrival of a new news director, level-headed Dave Nelson (Dave Foley). While Dave turns out to be less naive than his youthful appearance suggests, he never fully gains control of his co-workers.
The fast-paced scripts and ensemble cast combined physical humor and sight gags with smart dialogue and absurd storylines. Plots often involved satirical takes on historical events, news stories, and pop culture references. The third- and fourth-season finales took the absurdity to the extreme, setting the characters in outer space and aboard the Titanic.
There are a total of 97 episodes. Reruns continued in syndication for several years before disappearing in most markets, but the show has aired on A&E Network, Nick at Nite, and TBS network in the United States, and TVtropolis and the Comedy Network in Canada. In the United States, the show occasionally airs as a filler on WGN America and runs regularly on Reelz Channel. For some years starting in July 2007, the program was syndicated through The Program Exchange.[1]
Cast
Regular cast
- Dave Nelson (Dave Foley) is WNYX's news director, described as a "Midwesterner out of place in New York and pointedly young for such a responsible job". He was raised in Wisconsin, although he was born in Canada.[2] Dave has a number of talents that he considers embarrassing, including tap dancing, thespian work in high school, participation in an all-male a cappella group, knife throwing, and ventriloquism. He also has a very polite, controlled, and rational personality, which contrasts with the more colorful personalities of the other characters and the absurd situations that occur on the show.[3] He frequently has phone conversations with his mother and keeps a picture of her in his desk. He has an overwhelming coffee addiction, as well as a strong affinity for television and classic sitcoms, particularly Green Acres and Mister Ed. Dave has an inexplicable "obsession", as Lisa calls it, with the America song "A Horse with No Name".
- Jimmy James (Stephen Root) is the station's eccentric, extroverted, playful billionaire owner. His name comes from the eponymous Beastie Boys song.[4] Despite owning a vast corporate empire, he seems to enjoy micromanaging WNYX. He acts as a father figure towards his employees, often helping them learn life lessons. Recurring gags associated with Mr. James include his search for a wife (for which he keeps an extensive list of potential "wife candidates"), his infatuation with Dave's mother, his inability to act, his rivalries with other wealthy entrepreneurs (such as Ted Turner and "Billy" Gates), and his considerable inside knowledge of conspiracies and government cover-ups; he claims to have been Deep Throat and is at one point suspected to have been the infamous skyjacker D. B. Cooper. In the show's series finale, Mr. James "retires" to New Hampshire where he buys a news radio station and newspaper, taking most of the WNYX staff with him.
- Evelyn William "Bill" McNeal (Phil Hartman) is a news co-anchor for WNYX. Bombastic, egocentric, and insubordinate, Bill is frequently a thorn in the news director's side. His relationships are often unorthodox or contentious. He often displays jarring gaps in knowledge. Another running joke in the show has Bill describing painful stories with an air of nostalgia, often wistfully saying, "good times, good times". Bill occasionally shows flashes of concern and wisdom for his co-workers, whom he perceives as friends. Hartman's death during the production hiatus after the fourth season is addressed in the first episode of the fifth season, where his character is revealed to have died of a sudden heart attack. Radio Ink magazine honored Phil Hartman on its cover following the actor's death, and the magazine cover was subsequently displayed in Dave's office as a tribute to Hartman.
- Matthew Brock (Andy Dick) is a news reporter. Superficially clumsy, awkward, and maladroit, he is the butt of many physical jokes on the show; he is often seen tripping, falling, flying over furniture, or handling electronics that explode or catch fire. Matthew idolizes Bill, who torments him in return. Later in the series, he displays an affinity for science-fiction and fantasy media. Matthew holds a degree in dentistry, but prefers radio journalism. He has a crush on Lisa. He at first dislikes Max, seeing him as an interloper who is trying to take Bill's place, and believes himself to be Bill's rightful successor, but eventually grows to like him.
- Lisa Miller (Maura Tierney), with whom Dave has an intermittent relationship, serves as reporter, on-air personality, producer, and news director at different times in the series. An obsessive overachiever, Lisa can instantly perform complex mathematical calculations and keeps a detailed life-plan. She frequently brags about her SAT scores and retakes the exam well out of college. Also, she gets turned on if she yells too much. Lisa was born in Boston, Massachusetts, living there until the age of seven when her family moved to Connecticut. She represses a working class Boston accent, which results in her having a sibilant "S" while speaking. During the first two seasons of the show, she is in regular contact with her ex-boyfriend Stuart, with the suggestion that they might still be in love. In season five, she marries Jimmy's archenemy Johnny Johnson (played by Patrick Warburton).
- Beth (Vicki Lewis) is Dave's quirky secretary. She wears ridiculous, often midriff-baring outfits, has bright red hair, and chews gum. Her salary is often the subject of jokes; characters frequently point out that she "earns next to nothing". Her first name comes from the Kiss song "Beth",[4] and she claims that she does not have a last name. In the third season DVD commentary, the writers revealed they had planned to have Jimmy adopt Beth as his daughter, but felt there was never a right time for it.
- Joe Garrelli (Joe Rogan) is the station's street-smart electrician and handyman. He is notorious for his seemingly cavalier approach to his profession. Believing that consumer products are "rip-offs", he is known to personally craft his own supplies (such as homemade duct tape) and gadgets for others around the office (among many a stun-gun, a white noise machine, and a two-way radio). He also espouses various conspiracy theories, particularly with regard to the government's suppression of information about extraterrestrials. Throughout the series, he displays an infatuation with Catherine Duke. On several occasions, the other employees at the station speculate that Joe might have been the Unabomber. The character of Joe was originally named Rick, and was played by Greg Lee in the pilot episode. Ray Romano was originally cast to play Joe, but was replaced because his style of verbal comedy did not mesh well with the fast-paced repartee of the rest of the cast.[5][6]
- Catherine Duke (Khandi Alexander) is the second of WNYX's news anchors. She is often bitter rivals with co-anchor Bill McNeal; according to Bill, this is partly due to an office affair they had years earlier. When she was younger she worked with her uncle and learned how to perform and identify numerous scams, such as Three-card Monte. Catherine leaves the station to take a job in London during the fourth season. She makes a brief appearance in the fifth season premiere for Bill's funeral. The role of Catherine was played by Ella Joyce in the pilot episode.
- Max Louis (Jon Lovitz) is Bill McNeal's replacement in season five. He is eccentric, socially inept, very insecure and completely unprofessional. Max has a penchant for redheads, and Beth in particular, but she quickly ends up disliking him. He says that Max Louis is not his true identity, because he uses a different persona every time he gets a new job. Max gets the job at WNYX because he is an old colleague of Bill's, a plot point that reflects the real-life fact that Jon Lovitz took the role in NewsRadio out of friendship with Phil Hartman. When asked why he joined NewsRadio, Lovitz said that he's "doing this for Phil. There's nothing more to say."[7] Lovitz first appeared on "Our Fiftieth Episode" when Bill meets him in a mental ward going by the name Fred. Fred later admits he is really an air traffic controller who periodically and voluntarily "flips out" and goes into the mental ward for a vacation from making decisions. Lovitz returned a second time in the fourth season opener "Jumper". Lovitz played Mike Johnson, a disgruntled former employee that had been fired and was threatening to commit suicide by jumping from the ledge outside Dave's office.
Recurring characters
The only recurring character to appear in more than one production season was Jimmy's lawyer, Roger, played initially by Norm Macdonald, and later by NewsRadio writer Drake Sather, who did a vocal impersonation of Norm Macdonald.
During the last season, Patrick Warburton had a recurring role as Johnny Johnson, Jimmy's arch-nemesis and Lisa's love interest (and eventual husband).
Several other actors appeared in multiple seasons playing different characters, notably Lovitz, David Cross, Toby Huss, Brian Posehn, David Anthony Higgins, Dave "Gruber" Allen, Wallace Langham, and Bob Odenkirk.
Tone Lōc and Toby Huss played security guards Lorenzo and Junior in two Season 2 episodes. The characters were based on the security guards at the studio where NewsRadio was shot.[8]
Lauren Graham had a four-episode run as Andrea, an efficiency expert who shakes up the office (firing Matthew, demoting Dave, and promoting Lisa). She is sometimes referred to as "Planbee" after Matthew misunderstands her being Jimmy's "Plan B" for the office. She was intended as a possible replacement for the departing Alexander, but focus groups immensely disliked the character. She is in desperate need of a friend and so she tries to make one of Lisa—-but Lisa and everyone else in the office wants nothing to do with her. In a season 4 episode commentary track, Tierney gives the hiring of Graham as a possible explanation for Alexander's departure, which contradicts the idea that Alexander intended to leave before Graham appeared on the show. (In Dave Foley's appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast, they talked about Alexander leaving because she was not given enough lines.) All of the changes introduced during Graham's time on the show would be restored by mid-season to the way things were before her arrival.
Brad Rowe had a four-episode run as Walt the intern, Jimmy's nephew who has a crush on Lisa, which causes more worry for Dave. He was originally intended as a regular for season five, but the character made no appearances after "Sinking Ship".
Steve Susskind had a recurring role as Milos the janitor, appearing in three episodes in the second season.
When Khandi Alexander, who had left the series during the fourth season, appeared again in the fifth season opener (the actress and the character returning to pay respects to the deceased Phil Hartman/Bill McNeal), she was credited as a recurring character.
Nielsen ratings
Though the series received critical acclaim, ratings were inconsistent, and the show never placed higher than 26th. During its run, Newsradio's time slot changed 11 times.
On its first two broadcasts the show received a 20 share, improving on its lead-in (Wings) by a percentage point, and beating its competitors (Under One Roof and Thunder Alley) in its share of the 18- to 49-year-old audience.[3]
Season ratings
Season | TV Season | Ratings Rank | Viewers (in millions) |
1 | 1994–1995 | #39[9] | 11.4[9] |
2 | 1995–1996 | #39[10] | 10.6[10] |
3 | 1996–1997 | #92[11] | 7.0[11] |
4 | 1997–1998 | #62[12] | 8.0[12] |
5 | 1998–1999 | #77[13] | 9.6[13] |
Relationship with network
NBC had pushed for a "Sam and Diane"-type relationship between Dave and Lisa, but Paul Simms opted to have the characters sleep together in the second episode and have tension come from the aftermath.[14] Later, NBC ordered a wedding to be incorporated into the show to boost ratings, and in response, the show "Our Fiftieth Episode" featured a B-story in which Jimmy tries to force Joe and Lisa into a fake on-air marriage, which Lisa outright refuses. The show's producers would later relent in its final season, and Lisa married Johnny Johnson in an episode that became NBC's "Spotlight of the Week". Another instance of network interference was an October 10, 1995 promotional gimmick NBC planned in order to capitalize on the success of the 1994 film Four Weddings and a Funeral. As a twist on the title of the film, NBC planned for three of its Tuesday night sitcoms to have funerals as the central plot and the fourth to feature a wedding; NewsRadio was given one of the funeral episodes (which were also given to Wings and Frasier, while The Pursuit of Happiness got the wedding episode). Rather than fulfilling NBC's directive in a straightforward manner, the writing staff wrote "Rat Funeral", an episode in which the WNYX staff befriend a rat, then mourn its death. The show also tweaked NBC later by having a previously unmentioned worker named Ted die offscreen, leaving Dave (who didn't know the guy but is wrongly assumed by everyone to have been his best friend) to handle the eulogy, only to learn that Ted was a veteran member of the Ku Klux Klan.
Another major point of contention between NBC and the show was NBC's insistence that the show include story arcs, while the producers strongly preferred shows that were self-contained. Story arcs often concluded hastily. One example is a late third season arc in which Lisa decides she wants to have a baby with Dave but doesn't want to get married; after being introduced, the idea was dropped in the episode "Mistake" with barely a mention. NBC would also on occasion display displeasure with the content of episodes. For instance, many episodes in the second season feature a comedic cold open ending with Matthew injuring himself or knocking something over before the title sequence. According to DVD commentary, NBC ordered a halt to this because they found it tiresome. Don Ohlmeyer was mentioned by name as an executive who took particular exception to the gags. One episode, "Injury", was produced early in the second season, but did not air until the summer following the third season, due to excessive use of the word "penis". The writers later admitted that they were trying to see how many times they could use the word on-air in response to NBC's relaxing of standards for other shows. The episode remained in the censorship offices for nearly two years, with the number of instances cut down in the footage by three. "Injury" appears on both the Season 2 and 3 DVD releases, but only in the later, edited down form. Paul Simms eventually went public with his frustration that NBC never gave his show a chance to run on Thursday nights, as they had with many poorly-reviewed series that earned large ratings thanks to powerhouse lead-ins like Friends, Seinfeld and ER.
NBC briefly canceled NewsRadio in May 1998, after its fourth season, but the decision was reversed two weeks later, with an order of 22 episodes placed for a fifth season. Ten days after its renewal, Phil Hartman was killed by his wife, and his absence cast a pall over the fifth season. NBC left the series "on the bubble" until the day the final episode of the fifth season aired, months after production had wrapped. The fifth season ending storyline where Jimmy James buys a radio station in a small New Hampshire town was intended to provide a new setting for a potential sixth season, but NBC later decided to officially cancel the series after poor ratings.
Episodes
Home releases
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released all 5 seasons of NewsRadio on DVD in Region 1 between 2005–2007. Each set includes multiple audio commentaries with creator Paul Simms, the writers and actors. The DVD sets also include special features such as gag reels and other featurettes. As of 2014, these releases have been discontinued and are out of print.
On August 27, 2013, it was announced that Mill Creek Entertainment had acquired the rights to various television series from the Sony Pictures library including Newsradio.[15] They subsequently re-released the first two seasons on DVD on April 1, 2014.[16]
On May 19, 2015, Mill Creek Entertainment re-released Newsradio- The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1.[17]
DVD Name | Ep# | Release Date |
---|---|---|
The Complete First and Second Seasons | 28 | May 24, 2005 April 1, 2014 (re-release) |
The Complete Third Season | 25 | February 28, 2006 |
The Complete Fourth Season | 22 | June 20, 2006 |
The Complete Fifth Season | 22 | March 20, 2007 |
The Complete Series | 97 | October 28, 2008 May 19, 2015 (re-release) |
Syndication
The show entered off-network syndication three months after the 4th season finale. In October, 2000, A&E picked up the rights to the show and eventually moved to The Biography Channel in 2003. In 2006, the show began airing on Nick at Nite and TBS for a short period of time. In July 2010, the show began airing on the ReelzChannel cable network. In July 2011, Antenna TV picked up the rights to the show to begin airing in October 2011.[18] The majority of NewsRadio episodes were available to users in the United States via the video on demand site Hulu but as of March 2012 they are no longer available. A number of episodes from the first three seasons are currently available on the free video on demand site Crackle.
In Canada, the show aired on The Comedy Network from 2011 to 2013. In October 2013, the show began airing on the Canadian TV channel M3. In the UK, the show aired on Paramount Comedy in the late 1990s, and has aired on Sony TV since April 2011.
In Australia, Newsradio was broadcast on Network Ten since 1997. Sister channel Eleven has been showing reruns of the series. It was also shown in New Zealand on TVNZ.
References
- ↑ NewsRadio from The Program Exchange
- ↑ "Advertisement". Variety. Retrieved October 2, 2014.
- 1 2 A Precocious Sitcom Freshman, an April 9, 1995 article from The New York Times
- 1 2 NewsRadio (an Episode Guide)
- ↑ "Suddenly, The Fast Lane Life Was Very Leisurely For Ray Romano. He Pumped Gas; He Delivered Futons - And Liked It. Then He Got A Sitcom With A Sappy Name, And Things Went Kaflooey.". Philly.com. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
- ↑ "An Everyman With a New York Accent : 'Everybody Loves Raymond' Draws on Ray Romano's Family Life for Laughs". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 2, 2014.
- ↑ "It's official: Jon Lovitz to join 'NewsRadio' cast". CNN. July 6, 1998. Retrieved 2007-11-24.
- ↑ Commentary track for episode "Friends"
- 1 2 "Complete TV Ratings 1994-1995". Fbibler.chez.com. July 26, 2002. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
- 1 2 "Complete TV Ratings 1995-1996". Fbibler.chez.com. July 26, 2002. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
- 1 2 "Complete TV Ratings 1996-1997". Fbibler.chez.com. July 26, 2002. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
- 1 2 "Final Ratings for '97-'98 TV Season". The San Francisco Chronicle. May 25, 1998.
- 1 2 "Final ratings for the 1998-1999 TV season". Web.archive.org. Archived from the original on October 29, 2009. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
- ↑ "The awkward charm of NBC's NewsRadio.". Slate Magazine. December 23, 2008. Retrieved October 2, 2014.
- ↑ "Mill Creek Entertainment Signs Deals With Sony Pictures Home Entertainment To Expand Their Distribution Partnership". Retrieved October 2, 2014.
- ↑ "'Seasons 1 & 2' DVD Re-Release is Scheduled by Mill Creek". Retrieved October 2, 2014.
- ↑ Mill Creek to Re-Release 'The Complete Series' on DVD
- ↑ Pavan -- SitcomsOnline.com (July 25, 2011). "Antenna TV Fall 2011 Schedule; OWN and TLC Acquires Undercover Boss Repeats for Fall 2012 - SitcomsOnline.com News Blog". Blog.sitcomsonline.com. Retrieved 2013-02-08.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: NewsRadio |
- NewsRadio at the Internet Movie Database
- NewsRadio at TV.com
- NewsRadio and the Comedic Art
- An Oral History of News Radio