Second City Television
Second City Television or SCTV was a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from Second City that presented predominately television and film parodies as part of its premise and ran in various forms and TV networks from 1976 to 1984. The players included John Candy, Joe Flaherty, Andrea Martin, Martin Short, Catherine O'Hara, Eugene Levy, Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas.The basic premise of SCTV is that it is the television station for the city of Melonville. Rather than broadcast the usual TV rerun fare, the business, run by the greedy Guy Caballero (Joe Flaherty) who sits in a wheelchair only for effect, puts on a bizarre and humourously incompetent range of cheap local programming. This can range from a soap opera called "The Days of The Week", to game shows like "Shoot The Stars" where celebrities are literally shot at like targets in a shooting gallery to full blown movie spoofs like "Play it Again, Bob" where Woody Allen tries to get Bob Hope to star in his next film. Other popular sketches and characters included the "Farm Film Report," where two hicks interviewed celebrities and finally encouraged them to "blow up" (creating the catchphrase "get blow'd up real good"), "The Sammy Maudlin Show," whose sleazy showbiz guests and hosts usually did noting but sit around and praise eachother, and Martin Short's "Jackie Rogers, Jr." (a sort of albino Sammy Davis, Jr.) and Ed Grimely (later featured on Saturday Night Live). These programs were punctuated by newscasts hosted by Floyd Robertson (who, it was revealed in one episode, was the same person as Count Floyd, host of the station's cheap late-night horror films) and Earl Camembert, modelled after Canadian news anchors Lloyd Robertson and Earl Cameron and played by Joe Flaherty and Eugene Levy respectively.
Ironically, the most popular sketch was intended as throwaway filler. When the show was broadcast on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) TV network, the network heads insisted on at least two minutes of identifably Canadian content. Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas thought that this was a senseless demand for a Canadian TV show with a Canadian cast and crew. However, they thought they would send it up in a parody that would fill up the two minutes extra content time available on the show since CBC ran fewer commercials in its broadcast than the show's US network, NBC. What Moranis and Thomas created was "The Great White North", a parody panel show that played upon every conceivable Canadian stereotype. Two dumb beer-swilling brothers, Bob and Doug McKenzie, would give their comments about various elements of Canada as they saw it. To their shock, the comedians learned that this filler material had become the most popular part of the show and they rode the crest of a bizarre fad of popularity that produced two comedy albums and a movie, Strange Brew. The popularity soon faded, but the act is still fondly remembered by Canadians and still readily recognizable there as a beloved affectionate parody of themselves. The duo revived the act for television commercials for the Molson Brewing Company and played a variant of the act for the Walt Disney Pictures animated feature film, Brother Bear, with their characters being a pair of goofy elks named Tuke and Rutt.