Freaks and Geeks
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Freaks and Geeks | |
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Cover of the DVD box set. |
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Genre | Comedy/Teen drama |
Creator(s) | Paul Feig |
Starring | Linda Cardellini John Francis Daley Becky Ann Baker Joe Flaherty James Franco Samm Levine Seth Rogen Jason Segel Martin Starr Busy Phillips |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 18 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Judd Apatow |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 42-44 minutes per episode |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC |
Original run | September 25, 1999 – July 8, 2000 |
Links | |
Official website | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
Freaks and Geeks is an American television series, created by Paul Feig and produced by Judd Apatow, that aired on NBC during the 1999–2000 TV season. Although the show, considered a "dramedy," garnered much critical acclaim and a devoted cult following, repeated preemption and scheduling changes hurt the ratings. It was cancelled after only 12 episodes had aired. A fan-led campaign caused NBC to broadcast three more episodes in July 2000, but three others would not be seen until September of that year when the cable channel Fox Family aired them in syndication. It has since then garnered a cult following leading to the release of the complete series on DVD.
Contents |
[edit] Premise
The show centered on a teenage girl, Lindsay Weir (played by Linda Cardellini), and her brother, Sam (John Francis Daley), both attending McKinley High School during the 1980-1981 school year in the town of Chippewa, Michigan. (The town likely got its name from Chippewa Valley High School located in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan. Paul Feig graduated from the school in 1980.)
Their friends, respectively, constituted the freaks — Daniel Desario, Ken Miller, Nick Andopolis, Kim Kelly — and geeks — Neal Schweiber and Bill Haverchuck — of the title. Parents Harold and Jean Weir were featured and Millie Kentner, Lindsay's geeky, highly religious former best friend, was a recurring character.
The show's starting point was Lindsay's transition from her life as an academically proficient student, star mathlete, and proper young girl, with Millie as her like-minded best friend, to an Army-jacket-wearing teenager who hangs out with troubled slackers. Her relationships with her new friends, and the friction they cause with her parents and with her own self-image, form one central strand of the show; the other follows Sam and his group of geeky friends as they navigate a very different part of the social universe.
[edit] Cast and characters
Weir Family
- Lindsay Weir (played by Linda Cardellini)
- Sam Weir (played by John Francis Daley)
- Harold Weir (played by Joe Flaherty)
- Jean Weir (played by Becky Ann Baker)
Geeks
- Neal Schweiber (played by Samm Levine)
- Bill Haverchuck (played by Martin Starr)
Freaks
- Daniel DeSario (played by James Franco)
- Kim Kelly (played by Busy Phillips)
- Nick Andopolis (played by Jason Segel)
- Ken Miller (played by Seth Rogen)
Other Students
- Cindy Sanders (played by Natasha Melnick)
- Gordon Crisp (played by Jerry Messing)
- Sean (played by Shaun Weiss)
- Harris Trinsky (played by Stephen Lea Sheppard)
- Colin (played by Jarrett Lennon)
- Millie Kentner (played by Sarah Hagan)
- Vicky Appleby (played by Joanna Garcia)
- Todd Schellinger (played by Riley Smith)
- Maureen Sampson (played by Kayla Ewell)
- Alan White (played by Chauncey Leopardi)
- Eli (played by Ben Foster)
- Humphries (played by Michael Beardsley)
- Amy Andrews (played by Jessica Campbell)
- Howie Gelfand (played by Jason Schwartzmann)
- Mark (played by Mark Allan Staubach)
- Stroker (played by Shawn Soong)
- Herbert the mascot (played by Shia LaBeouf)
- Sarah (played by Lizzy Caplan)
- Karen Scarfolli (played by Rashida Jones)
School Staff
- Jeffrey "Jeff" Theodore Rosso (played by Dave "Gruber" Allen)
- Coach Ben Fredericks (played by Thomas F. Wilson)
- Frank Kowchevski (played by Steve Bannos)
- Hector Lacovara (played by Trace Beaulieu)
Other Family Members
- Gloria Haverchuck (played by Claudia Christian)
- Dr. Vic Schweiber (played by Sam McMurray)
- Mrs. Lydia Schweiber (played by Amy Aquino)
- Barry Schweiber (played by David Krumholtz)
- Colonel Andopolis (played by Kevin Tighe)
- Cookie Kelly (played by Ann Dowd)
- Chip Kelly (played by Mike White)
[edit] Guest stars and cameo appearances
Early on, the creators of the show were not open to the idea of having guest stars on the show. A denied suggestion from NBC was to have a pop icon along the likes of Britney Spears to appear as a waitress in one episode. Many of the program's crew, including producer Judd Apatow, thought that such guest star appearances would greatly detract from the show's quality and realism. However, more unknown "guest stars" would make occasional unhyped appearances on the show. As the producers began to fear an imminent cancellation, Apatow's old friend Ben Stiller made an appearance as a Secret Service Agent in the final episode of the program, but the appearance only aired after the series had been cancelled.
Other notable guest appearances were made by Joel Hodgson (in the recurring role of a salesman who loves disco), David Koechner (as a waiter), Kevin Corrigan (as Millie's delinquent cousin), Jason Schwartzmann (as a student dealing in fake IDs), and Ben Foster (who appeared as the mentally handicapped student Eli, and often hyped the show while promoting the film Liberty Heights).
Many of the writers appeared on the show at one point or another. Mike White, for instance, played Kim Kelly's oft-discussed injured brother. Paul Feig and Gabe Sachs appear uncredited as members of the fictional band "Dimension" in "I'm With the Band". Michael Andrews, the original score composer for the series, plays the role of Dimension's lead singer.
[edit] Episodes
[edit] DVD, CD and Book Releases
In early 2004, a six-DVD Freaks and Geeks box set was released through Shout! Factory. A limited "yearbook edition" set including two additional discs is also available through the official website for the show. Fans who had signed an online petition to get the show on DVD got priority in purchasing the special set. A CD soundtrack was also released in 2004.
Later in 2004, two Freaks and Geeks books were released, titled Freaks and Geeks: The Complete Scripts, Volume 1 and Freaks and Geeks: The Complete Scripts, Volume 2. Both published by Newmarket Press, each book covers nine scripts from the series as compiled by Paul Feig and Judd Apatow themselves. Extra content includes behind-the-scenes memos and notes, photos, additional plotlines and excerpts from the Freaks and Geeks series bibles.
[edit] Soundtrack
One of the distinguishing characteristics that separated Freaks and Geeks from similar television series at the time was its authentic soundtrack. The creators made it a priority to feature genuine, period-specific music that would help to create the tone of the show. Clearing such names as The Who, the Grateful Dead, and Billy Joel would prove to require much of the show's budget. Eventually, this would become an obstacle in releasing the show on DVD considering that no publisher wanted to go through the trouble of clearing all of the music for the series. Many television shows (such as Dawson's Creek) cheaply and quickly released their respective DVDs by changing most of the music cues. The creators of Freaks and Geeks, however, chose to wait to release the DVD until they could find a publisher up to the challenge of gaining clearance for the music of the series, as not to upset the fans of the show. Shout! Factory eventually became the publisher to bring Freaks and Geeks to DVD with all of its music intact.
The opening credits of each episode were accompanied by the song "Bad Reputation" performed by Joan Jett & The Blackhearts.
[edit] Awards
The show was nominated for two Emmy Awards in 2000; one for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series (Paul Feig, "Pilot") and one for Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series (Allison Jones, Coreen Mayrs and Jill Greenberg). The show won the Emmy for Outstanding Casting.
The show was nominated for an Emmy once again in 2001 for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series (Paul Feig, "Discos and Dragons").
In addition to the Emmys, the show has been nominated and won numerous awards for writing, directing and acting.
[edit] Detroit/Michigan references
There are many references to the Metro Detroit area in the show (as Paul Feig grew up there). Some of these include Faygo pop, Cobo Arena, Pontiac Silverdome, Farmer Jack, Party Store, General Motors, and the North American International Auto Show.
Millie makes reference to playing against the Mount Clemen High School. Its actually Mount Clemens and its the city right next door to Clinton Township. They also talk about 16 Mile Road.
The freaks successfully sneak into "the Rusty Nail", a bar in Clinton Township, Michigan on Groesbeck Ave., where they ultimately are found to be underage by their guidance counselor who was performing with his band on stage.
In Episode 4 Kim Kelly tells her mother that she went water skiing with Lindsay at Lindsay's (imaginary) house in Benton Harbor, Michigan.
[edit] Undeclared
In 2001, several of the actors featured in Freaks and Geeks appeared in a new Judd Apatow college "dramedy" called Undeclared, airing on the FOX Network. Despite garnering a cult following, that show was also canceled abruptly during its first season.
[edit] External links
- Official site
- Freaks and Geeks at MySpace
- Freaks and Geeks at Shout! Factory
- Overview w/ rare photos
- Episode guide
- The Best Short-Lived Show of All Time: "Freaks and Geeks"
- "The New Freaks & Geeks Message Board"
- Another message board dedicated to the fans of "Freaks & Geeks"
Categories: 1999 television program debuts | 2000 television program series endings | 1990s American television series | 2000s American television series | Comedy-drama television series | Cult television shows | NBC network shows | Period piece TV series | Television series by CBS Paramount Television | Teen dramas | Television shows set in Michigan