Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
Created by Jose Rivera and Karl Schaefer, with Joe Dante as a creative Consultant, Eerie, Indiana was a series about a small town. A bizarre small town. The Teller family had moved to Eerie and Marshall Teller (Omri Katz) befriended one of the few legitimately normal kids in town, Simon Holmes (Justin Shenkarow). Together, they encountered the town’s strange populace, urban legends, and other impossible things.
The show ran on Sundays on NBC during the 1991-92 season. It blended comedy with serious tones, which, along with episodes directed by several feature film directors and numerous references to old films, caught the attention and positive reviews of critics. However, it failed to capture a sustainable audience, even after it was retooled halfway through its run with new characters and replacement actors. It was cancelled after its initial run of 18 episodes, the 19th not seen until reruns and a 20th planned but never made.
Stanley and Mitchell: two kids against the weird.
By 1997, Saturday morning reruns on Fox Kids had given the show a renewed popularity. Seeking to increase their viewership, FOX commissioned a spin-off series of the show called Eerie, Indiana: the Other Dimension. The show also took place in Eerie, Indiana, but, as the title suggested, in another dimension due
to the fact the original series stars were too old for their roles by that
time.
Stanley and Mitchell having a meeting of the minds at the malt shop.
Best friends Mitchell Taylor (Bill Switzer) and Stanley Hope (Daniel Clark)
ended up being contacted by Marshall and Simon via television sets (using stock
footage from the previous show and dubbed voices) and are warned that a crazy
cable man is setting up satellite dishes on rooftops that are allowing the
weirdness from the original Eerie to spill over into the new Eerie. They’re
tasked with fending off the strange occurrences in order to save theirs and
every Eerie in existence with the help of local bartender, Mr. Crawford (Neil
Crone). As broadcast standards had become stricter in the years following the
original show, this series was forced to tone down the creepy elements and put
a greater focus on comedic gags.
Despite the similarities to the previous Eerie, The Other Dimension’s
differences in tonality and castfailed
to attract the original’s audience or find a new one. Like its predecessor, it
was cancelled after its single season, but without the fond regard. The series
was made available to purchase in its entirety or as individual episodes on YouTube
and Amazon
Prime.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“Switching Channels” (2/7/98) – Mitchell and Stanley meet Marshall and Simon who warn them about the weirdness spilling over into their Eerie due to a crazy cable man.
“The Goody-Two Shows People” (2/14/98) – The Eerie Junior Executives Club is replacing its members with robotic clones.
“Standard Deviation” (2/21/98) – A woman from the Mad Bureau of Statistics searching for the aliens who kidnapped her husband cites Maitchell’s family for not being “normal.”
“Time Flies” (2/28/98) – Mr. Crawford’s new coffee machine causes time to speed up.
“The Phantom” (3/7/98) – Mitchell and Stanley investigate a phantom haunting the school.
“The Young and the Twitchy” (3/14/98) – A soap opera star’s behavior transforms everyone into soap opera characters.
“Last Laugh” (3/21/98) – Stanley becomes a master comic thanks to a gag writing genius, but his personality shift causes him to become an outcast.
“The Newsroom” (4/4/98) – A bad news future predicting machine at the newspaper office predicts a disaster at the nuclear power plant where Mrs. Taylor works.
“Little Buddy Beep Beep” (4/11/98) – A new toy fad hides a sinister secret at the local toy factory.
“Perfect” (4/18/98) – A former beauty queen is selling a skin treatment that turns its users into living dolls, including Carrie.
“Nightmare on Eerie Street” (4/25/98) – Unable to sleep, the Sandman takes his frustration out on Eerie by keeping everyone awake with nightmares.
“Mr. Lucky” (5/2/98) – Mitchell’s good fortune from winning a wishbone quickly turns bad.
“Send in the Clones” (5/9/98) – Mitchell accidentally creates a 13-year-old clone of his father from a plant and must stop him from blowing up the school with a potato and electricity.
“I’m Okay, You’re Really Weird” (5/16/98) – A motivational speaker turns the entire town into immature goofballs.
“The Jackalope” (5/30/98) – Mitchell and Stanely try to save the Jackalope from extinction.
No comments:
Post a Comment