Comedy Central Snags Defunct "Edgy" Comedies

Written by Eric Olsen
Published October 08, 2002

Cable network buys five former network shows:

    The network has bought "Dilbert" (30 half-hours) from Columbia, "The Ben Stiller Show" (13 half-hours) from Warner Bros., "Clerks" (only six half-hours) from Disney and "Gary & Mike" (13 half-hours) from Paramount. Comedy Central also bought a fifth busted network-primetime series, "Undergrads" (13 half-hours), from Decode Entertainment.

    "Dilbert" is the only series of the five that lasted for more than one season on its original network, UPN. Except for "Stiller," the series are animated programs aimed at young adults.

    "These series all fit our brand. (We're) always on the lookout for edgy, provocative entertainment," said Bill Hilary, exec VP and G.M. of Comedy Central. "We're the anti-network network."

    Such a stance makes most of the mainstream sitcoms on the broadcast networks inappropriate for rerunning on Comedy Central. For example, Comedy Central took a chance on reruns of "Sports Night," the ABC series that drew critical praise but failed to find an audience for two seasons from 1998 to 2000. The reruns also flopped on Comedy Central.

    "Gary & Mike" and "Undergrads" begin their runs on Comedy Central Nov. 3 and play every Sunday at midnight. "Dilbert" and "Clerks" will replace them in the time period starting Feb. 3.

    "Clerks" will also get a one-time-only six-episode marathon, highlighted by four half-hours that never played on ABC. The marathon will take place Sunday, Dec. 22, beginning at 9 a.m.

    The network will schedule "The Ben Stiller Show" initially as part of a "Holiday Relief" stunt, in which it'll run twice a day for five straight days starting Dec. 21.

Cable has been good for giving neglected shows a second chance, some of which may even deserve it.

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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Comedy Central Snags Defunct "Edgy" Comedies
Published: October 08, 2002
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Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: News, Video: Television
Writer: Eric Olsen
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#1 — October 8, 2002 @ 12:57PM — Bill Sherman [URL]

Looks to me like Comedy Central is trying to grab some of the Sunday Night "Adult Swim" audience - not a difficult feat, considering the way that The Cartoon Network keeps rerunning the same limited number of episodes week after week. . .

#2 — October 31, 2002 @ 14:03PM — Robert J. Whiskeh

This is a fine idea. I hope these shows get the shot they didn't get on their original networks. Especially "Undergrads".

#3 — November 4, 2002 @ 14:02PM — m

Hello, I saw Gary and Mike for the first time last night on nov.3, which seemed to be the first episode aswell. Let me tell you that I was in shock. This show is incredible. I can not wait until next sunday so I can watch it again, and I will tell as many people about it as possible. If there is any way to help save this show, let me know. I need to see it succeed. It somewhat reminds me of "family Guy" on fox, also brilliant, but kept getting cancled, and I think it is gone for good now. I don't want to see that happen to this. thanks for your time.

#4 — November 6, 2002 @ 22:59PM — Tish

I love Undergrads, thank you comedy central!

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