The Assistant (TV series)

The Assistant
Genre Reality Comedy
Directed by Kasey Barrett
Jeff Fisher
Presented by Andy Dick
Country of origin  United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 8
Production
Running time 25 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel MTV
Original run 12 July 2004 – 30 August 2004
External links
Website

The Assistant is a reality television show that parodied other reality shows such as The Apprentice, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, Survivor, American Idol, and Fear Factor. Its eight episodes originally aired on MTV. It featured comedian Andy Dick's search for a new personal assistant. The beginning of the first episode parodied The Bachelor, with the twelve contestants arriving in limousines, and Dick waiting outside to greet them with his maid and butler. A "rose ceremony" immediately followed, and one contestant was eliminated.

Dick assigned the Hollywood hopefuls to some absurd tasks such as pretending to be him in an interview with a Japanese television station, bringing him coffee by traversing on a beam over a swimming pool, breaking up with his girlfriend, and attempting to get him a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Contestants were usually "clipped" in elimination ceremonies parodying those on other reality series.[1] Like some other programs, The Assistant also included double elimination episodes and brought back fired candidates. Driving home Dick's message that they were starting from the bottom, candidates slept in Dick's garage. He also woke them with a flashing, siren-generating alarm, was prone to tantrums, and griped that, "This reality show is ruining my life!"[2]

Andy Dick actually had a relationship with one of the contestants on the show. Andy and Sarah Beckworth dated for a while after the show's end. The end of the relationship led to a breach of contract lawsuit with MTV which prohibited relationships with the contestants.

Though the show was satire, the twelve contestants were real and the winner, Melissa Ordway, was awarded several prizes including a job at MTV.[3] The runner-up was Mark, who had been fired, but was brought back in the seventh episode. The show was not renewed after its first season.

Contestants eliminated and reality show parodied

(in reverse order of elimination)

References

  1. ^ Roberts, Anthony (6 November 2004). "Reality check". The Australian: p. B36. 
  2. ^ Janes, Thoden; Fasbach, Laura; Ervolino, Bill; Schwarz, Marc; Advocate, Stamford (26 July 2004). "reality bites". The Record: p. F02. 
  3. ^ Bentley, Rosalind (19 September 2004). "Q&A / MELISSA ORDWAY: Reality TV gig bites, but she loves it". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: p. JJ5. 

External links