America's Funniest People

America's Funniest People
Created by Vin Di Bona
Presented by Dave Coulier
Arleen Sorkin
(19901992)
Tawny Kitaen
(19921994)
Narrated by Ernie Anderson
Theme music composer Dan Slider
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes 89
Production
Running time 2224 minutes
Production company(s) Vin Di Bona Productions
ABC Productions
DLT Entertainment, Ltd.
Distributor Disney-ABC Domestic Television
Release
Original network ABC
Original release May 1, 1990 (1990-05-01) – August 28, 1994 (1994-08-28)

America's Funniest People is an American reality series on ABC that debuted on May 1, 1990 as an hour-long special, and later as a weekly half-hour prime time series from September 8, 1990 to August 28, 1994. It was hosted by Dave Coulier and Arleen Sorkin from 1990 to 1992. Tawny Kitaen replaced Sorkin in 1992. The announcer was Ernie Anderson. Dan Slider composed the theme song, which was performed by Peter Hix.

Format

The format was similar to America's Funniest Home Videos, with the main difference that while America's Funniest Home Videos spent the majority of its time with accidental follies captured on tape, America's Funniest People focused on people intentionally trying to be funny, doing things such as telling jokes, doing impressions, singing, dancing, performing scripted material, attempting wacky stunts, pulling pranks, etc.

Like America's Funniest Home Videos, America's Funniest People featured a contest for funniest video, with the first prize winner receiving $10,000 and the 2nd and 3rd prize winners receiving $3,000 and $2,000 respectively. However, unlike Funniest Home Videos, which relied on studio audience voting to determine the winner, Funniest People originally selected its winners via telephone vote,[1] with the winners announced at the beginning of the next show.

Jackalope vignettes

Originally known as "Tiny the Jackalope", or simply "The Jackalope", Jackalope sketches involved a creature attacking people by playing mean tricks on them (usually as punishment for people who had been mean themselves). The character's catchphrase was, "Fast as fast can be, you'll never catch me!" Host Dave Coulier did the voices for all characters in the Jackalope skits. The Jackalope was later renamed "Jack Ching Bada-Bing" in a "Name the Jackalope" contest.

Comedy Mini-Movies by Dennis M. Miller and Jason Cardwell

Dennis and Jason first produced an Indiana Jones spoof for America's Funniest Home Videos called "Pasadena Jones and the Satire of Doom". They then moved over to America's Funniest People for its initial season and produced a dozen videos which aired every other week. Although there were several videos with original characters, there were also spoofs of Rambo, James Bond, and Dirty Harry.

In the Dirty Harry spoof, Harry was downgraded to a video store detective. After chasing a suspect all over San Francisco, Harry finally cornered him in an alley. He reaches into his jacket, and slowly pulls out a VHS movie, asking the suspect "What I have here is a VHS video cassette, the most popular format in the world, and the question is, punk... did you rewind it?"

"Dunk Your Parents"

Later in the show's run, a segment called "Dunk Your Parents" was added, in which a kid contestant could drop one of their parents into a pool of water, similar to a dunk tank. The kid chose the parent (Mom or Dad) that he wanted to dunk. That parent then sat on a chair over the water. The parent was then asked a trivia question, usually involving a list — for example, "Name the seven dwarfs in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs". If the parent answered the question correctly, the other parent had to take their place. If not, that parent remained in the chair. The climax of the segment was when the child pushed a button to release the seat out from underneath the parent, dropping them into the water below.

On some occasions, instead of a question, the parent would have to complete a Beat the Clock-esque stunt (but these were often nearly impossible to complete).

"Prank Patrol"

When the show changed format and became The New America's Funniest People, a new segment was added called the Prank Patrol. 5 kids would run around various parks and locations near Los Angeles, performing pranks on unsuspecting visitors. The Prank Patrol consisted of Brady Bluhm, Elena Epps, Raushan Hammond, Lindsay Ridgeway, and Lance Robinson. Pranks consisted of exploding ice cream cones, a man in a gorilla suit, a squirting drinking fountain, a remote control rat, an exploding trash can, and a hand in a jar of candy.

Production

The pilot was called America's Funniest... Part II (though the opening titlecard actually said America's Funniest People).

The host of the show, Dave Coulier, like Funniest Home Videos host Bob Saget, was also one of the stars of the popular sitcom Full House which was airing at the same time as the series. The original logo (from the pilot episode) was a slight revamp of the AFHV logo. This was later changed when the series premiered.

Full House's Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen made guest appearances, as they also did on America's Funniest Home Videos. The bulk of their visits to People took place once their collective popularity with kids and pre-teens took off. Their most notable appearance was in the fall of 1992, when they plugged their first single, "Brother for Sale", from the release of Mary-Kate and Ashley: Our First Video.

It was produced by Vin Di Bona Productions, even though at the end of the show's closing credits, it credited the company as Gina Communications, Inc. The show was originally taped at The Prospect Studios, on the same soundstage used for America's Funniest Home Videos at the time. The show traveled to Universal Studios Florida in 1992, taping five shows at the Animal Actors Stage.[2]

In 1992, Sorkin was dismissed by Vin Di Bona. In response, Sorkin filed a lawsuit against Di Bona, claiming that she was dismissed from the show due to her race, after ABC Chairman Dan Burke had suggested to Di Bona that Sorkin be replaced by an African-American or a person of another ethnic minority. Sorkin sought $450,000 for lost earnings, and an additional unspecified amount for harm to her professional reputation and emotional injury. Sorkin additionally claimed that after she denounced the move as unfair, Di Bona changed plans and hired new cohost Tawny Kitaen, who is white.[3]

For the show's third season in 1992, production moved to Universal Studios Florida for the entire 18-episode season.[4][5] The start of the 1993-94 season modified the show's title to The New America's Funniest People, with an updated logo, and production moved back to Los Angeles, originating from Hollywood Center Studios. This reflected the addition of new themed segments and the new practice of having a guest co-host (usually a star from another ABC series) join Coulier and Kitaen each week. However, these changes did not improve the show's falling ratings, and it was cancelled at the end of that season.

During the latter half of the show's run, and for at most until a year after it was canceled, short 30-second segments from America's Funniest People ran in commercial breaks during ABC's Saturday morning lineup. These would usually consist of excerpts from longer segments, usually featuring young kids telling jokes or engaging in stunts.

The show's premise would later integrate to AFV.

Syndication

Repeats of America's Funniest People aired on TBS from 1998 to 2003.

References

  1. Bickelhaupt, Susan (1990-09-22). "Look Silly! Get On TV! That's A New Show's Premise - And Bostonians Go For It". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  2. "'America's Funniest People' To Produce Five Shows At Universal Studios Florida" (Press release). PR Newswire. 1992-01-22. Retrieved 2010-10-31.
  3. "Former TV Co-Host Suing Producer". Buffalo News. 1993-04-18. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  4. "'America's Funniest People' Tapes Third Season At Universal Studios Florida" (Press release). PR Newswire. 1992-08-27. Retrieved 2010-10-31.
  5. "Universal Studios Florida Prepared For A Full-Slate Of Production" (Press release). PR Newswire. 1992-08-27. Retrieved 2010-10-31.

External links

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