Last Comic Standing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Last Comic Standing | |
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Last Comic Standing title sequence |
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Format | Talent, Reality, competition |
Created by | Peter Engel |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 59 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes (including commercials) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Original run | June 1, 2003 – present |
External links | |
Official website | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
Last Comic Standing is an American reality television talent show that premiered in 2003. The objective of the program is to select a comedian from a group, who will receive a development contract with the NBC television network and a special first to air on the cable-TV network Comedy Central and later on the cable network Bravo.
The show is produced by Peter Engel.
Contents |
[edit] Format
In the early rounds of the competition, NBC talent scouts Ross Mark and Bob Read held open casting calls in various locations around the United States. At each casting call, Mark and Read identified comics to participate in callback auditions in front of live audiences. Mark and Read then selected a predetermined number of comics from each callback, who were invited to participate in a semifinal qualifying round.
The comics who advanced to the semifinal qualifying round were divided into two groups. In Season Four, 40 comics were divided into two groups of 20; these comics performed and competed against each other at the Alex Theater in Los Angeles. During the semifinal qualifying rounds, a panel of celebrity judges, and the show's producers, selected the comics who would move forward to the final qualifying round. This determined who among the comics would be "in the house." In season four, ten comics were chosen to live aboard RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach, California.
Once "in the house," the comics participated in some type of comedic challenge each television week. Past challenges included performing stand-up at a local laundromat, working as a tour guide in Los Angeles, participating in a roast at the Friars Club of Beverly Hills and performing comedy on a specific subject with little preparation time on a radio show. The winner of each challenge is usually rewarded with immunity from being eliminated from the competition for that week, while the remaining comics are vulnerable to elimination through a "head-to-head" standup challenge.
As the conclusion of each television week drew near, each comic selected one other comic whom they believed they could defeat in a head-to-head challenge. The comics were sent off individually to a secluded booth, and named the person selected using the phrase "I know I'm funnier than _____." The comic who received the most nominations participated in that evening's head-to-head competition, and selected their opponent from any of the comics who had challenged them.
The head-to-head competition occurred in front of a live studio audience. The comics performed for an equal amount of time, and the studio audience voted electronically for their preferred performer. The winning comic remained "in the house" for at least one more television week, and the losing comic was eliminated from the competition.
When only five comics remained, the format changed again. All remaining comics performed for a large theatre audience as before, but now the decision-making power shifted from the studio audience to the television audience. Viewers cast their votes for their favorite comic by phoning a specific number, by voting online at the network's website, or both. Unlike some other "audience-vote reality" programs, the producers imposed a maximum number of eligible votes per originating phone number and email address. The comic who received the lowest number of votes each week was eliminated from the competition, until there was one "Last Comic Standing".
[edit] Seasons
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[edit] Season 1: Summer 2003
Season one aired in the summer of 2003 and was hosted by Jay Mohr. The winner of the audience-participation final vote in season one was Dat Phan, with 35% of the vote. Other finalists included Ralphie May (28%), Rich Vos (18%), Cory Kahaney (12%), and Tess Drake (7%). Contestants "in the house" who did not make the final five were Geoff Brown, Tere Joyce, Sean Kent, Dave Mordal, and Rob Cantrell.
[edit] Season 2: Summer 2004
Season two aired in the summer of 2004, hosted by Jay Mohr. The winner was John Heffron. Alonzo Bodden was the first runner-up, while third place went to Gary Gulman. The other finalists were Ant, Tammy Pescatelli, Bonnie McFarlane, Jay London, Kathleen Madigan, Todd Glass, and Corey Holcomb.
Buck Star, who became infamous for appearing at each and every LCS audition, first appeared in season two. After being repeatedly rejected by talent scouts Mark and Read, Mark finally acquiesced and allowed Buck to perform in the callback auditions in Tampa (the final audition site of the season). Buck failed to impress the live audience, however, and did not advance further in the competition.
[edit] Season 3: Fall 2004
While Last Comic Standing Season Two was airing, NBC agreed to produce a third season, which would air during the fall of 2004. Season three, dubbed the "Battle of the Best", consisted of a competition between the final ten comedians from seasons one and two. The grand prize awarded this season was a flat $250,000 (unlike previous seasons' prizes, which included a talent contract and a television special). Alonzo Bodden, the runner-up from Season 2, was the winner; Dave Mordal, a contestant from Season 1, was the runner-up.
[edit] Cancellation
Due to lackluster ratings in the third season (falling as low as 74th in the prime-time Nielsen Ratings), NBC cancelled the show before the last episode of the third season had aired. The final episode was later aired on Comedy Central rather than NBC. It has been speculated that the low ratings were due to overexposure, since season three began airing almost immediately after season two had concluded. Others have speculated that NBC freed the time slot occupied by Last Comic Standing in order to air a four-episode block of Father of the Pride, in an effort to boost the latter program's ratings.[citation needed] Father of the Pride was ultimately cancelled as well.
[edit] Season 4: Summer 2006
On May 30, 2006, the show returned to NBC with a two-hour special and a new host, Anthony Clark.
Neilsen ratings from Season 4 averaged a 4.4 share (4,848,800 households), making Last Comic Standing the second or third most popular program in its time slot.[clarify]
Josh Blue, a St. Paul, Minnesota native who has cerebral palsy, was the Last Comic Standing on the August 9, 2006, conclusion of the contest. Ty Barnett was the runner-up, while third place went to Chris Porter. Other finalists were (in order of placement) Michele Balan, Roz, Kristin Key, Rebecca Corry, Gabriel Iglesias, Joey Gay, Bil Dwyer, April Macie, and Stella Stolper. Additionally, Theo Von won the separate online contest to be the Last Comic Downloaded.
[edit] Season 5: Summer 2007
Last Comic Standing returned for a fifth season in the summer of 2007. Comedian Bill Bellamy hosted the show. The winner got $250,000 along with an NBC Universal contract and a Bravo special. Unlike previous versions, this season featured comics from around the world competing alongside Americans. Auditions were held in London, Montreal, Sydney, Los Angeles, New York, Minneapolis, San Antonio and Tempe[1]. The fifth season began June 13.[2] This series premiered on British music channel TMF on July 4, 2007.
The final ten comics were Lavell Crawford, Jon Reep, Gerry Dee, Amy Schumer, Ralph Harris, Doug Benson, Matt Kirshen, Debra DiGiovanni, Dante, and Gina Yashere.
The season finale aired on September 19, 2007 in which Jon Reep was revealed as the winner. Lavell Crawford was the season 5 runner-up.
[edit] Season 6: Summer 2008
Auditions for Season 6 of Last Comic Standing are already underway and are taking place in the USA and Toronto, Canada. Bill Bellamy will once again host, with British television host Fearne Cotton joining him as co-host.
Season 6 semi-final rounds will be held and filmed in Las Vegas at the Paris Hotel & Casino. The season finale will also be aired from Las Vegas. The season premiered on May 22, 2008.
[edit] Controversy
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (September 2006) |
During season two, a panel of four celebrity judges was used to shrink the field of 40 semifinalists to ten finalists. The celebrity judges rated each of the semifinalists as they performed, and cast votes for the 10 top comedians. When the ten finalists were announced they did not seem to correspond with the judges' votes. In this way it was unintentionally revealed that their votes did not necessarily determine the final contestants. Two of the celebrity judges, comedians Drew Carey and Brett Butler, responded in outrage and stormed away from the judge's table after the finalists were announced.
The two were shown backstage arguing with producers. Carey and Butler did not understand how the finalists who were announced could be correct, since it did not match their votes. It was revealed that a panel of four producers were also casting votes in the process, assuring that unless all four celebrity judges cast the exact same ten votes, their voting power could be usurped by the four unanimously agreeing producer votes. If for some reason all four celebrity judges did cast the exact same votes, the worst the producers would be faced with is a tie.
Carey became further outraged upon learning this information. He was upset that he had been led to believe he had a vote in the outcome of the show. He reportedly responded, "All you wanted was our faces."[citation needed] It was also revealed that some of the finalists who advanced were clients of the producers or directors of the show.
Allegedly, some of the competitors in opening rounds were plants hired by the producers to liven up the auditions on television[2]. For example, Buck Star, a comedian who followed talent executives Bob Read and Ross Mark to auditions across the country, is rumored to be a production assistant for NBC.[3]
[edit] Appearances by comics
- Arj Barker (Marijuana Logues, Comedy Central Presents, Flight of the Conchords (TV series))
- Bil Dwyer (Battlebots, I've Got a Secret and Comedy Central Presents)
- Chuck Roy
- Dan Cummins (Comedy Central Presents)
- Dan Levy (The Reality Show and Your Face or Mine?)
- Doug Benson (Best Week Ever, Comedy Central Presents, Marijuana Logues)
- Gabriel Iglesias (All That and Comedy Central Presents)
- Gary Gulman (Comedy Central Presents and Tourgasm)
- Gerry Dee (Trailer Park Boys: The Movie)
- Gina Yashere
- Harland Williams (RocketMan, Half Baked, Premium Blend, Comedy Central Presents)
- James Cunningham (Comedy Central Presents)
- Jim Norton (Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn, Opie and Anthony, Lucky Louie)
- Jimmy Pardo
- Joe DeVito (Comedy Central's "Live at Gotham, FOX News Channel's "The Red Eye")
- John Heffron (season two's winner)
- Jon Reep (Premium Blend, Comedy Central Presents, Bandits vs. Smokies, Dodge Ram Hemi commercials, Rodney (TV Series))
- Josh Blue (Mind of Mencia)
- Kathleen Madigan (Comedy Central Presents)
- Larry Reeb (Bob & Tom Show)
- Lavell Crawford (Comedy Central Presents)
- Marc Price (Family Ties)
- Nikki Payne (Muchmusic's Video On Trial, CTV's Comedy INC, Comedy Network's Buzz)
- Pablo Francisco (Comedy Central Presents, MadTV)
- Ralph Harris (On Our Own, Bob & Tom Show)
- Rich Vos (Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn,Comedy Central Presents, Opie and Anthony)
- Seán Cullen (CBC's The Seán Cullen Show, The Late Show with Jay Leno, Comedy Central Presents)
- Thea Vidale (Thea)
- Theo Von (Road Rules)
- Ryan Belleville (Comedy Central Presents)
- Ryan Hamilton (Comedy Central Live at Gotham)
- Todd Glass (Comedy Central Presents)
- Tom Cotter (Comedy Central Presents)
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ NBC's "Last Comic Standing" Live Tour. North Shore Music Theatre. Retrieved on 2007-05-15.
- ^ [1]a
- ^ CrinbeHumor.com