The CollegeHumor Show explained

Camera:Film, Single camera
Runtime:approx. 21 minutes
Creator:Ricky Van Veen
Sam Reich
Scott Tomlinson
Starring:Amir Blumenfeld
Patrick Cassels
Dan Gurewitch
Jake Hurwitz
Sam Reich
Jeff Rubin
Sarah Schneider
Streeter Seidell
Ricky Van Veen
Executive Producer:Ricky Van Veen
Sam Reich
Scott Tomlinson
Josh Abramson
Country:United States
Network:MTV (2009)
Num Seasons:1
Num Episodes:6
List Episodes:
  1. Episodes
Related:Pranked

The CollegeHumor Show is an American television sitcom that premiered on MTV on February 8, 2009 and also aired on MuchMusic.[1] The show was a scripted sitcom with sketch comedy elements written by, and starring, nine CollegeHumor editorial staff members, who play fictionalized versions of themselves. The show was an adaptation of the style of the long-running Hardly Working short film series created for the CollegeHumor site, made more suitable for the longer, televised format.[2]

After the conclusion of the six episode season, the series was cancelled.

The series also spawned the spin-off show Pranked, hosted by Streeter Seidell and Amir Blumenfeld and airing on MTV.[3]

Cast

Main characters

In the show, the actual CollegeHumor (and CollegeHumor Show) writers play fictionalized versions of themselves. There is no single "star" of the show; rather, the nine main characters function as an ensemble. For the most part, the characters are self-centered, operating according to their immediate desires rather than making rational or sensitive decisions.

Supporting cast

Production

The CollegeHumor Show was filmed inside the actual offices of Connected Ventures, which owned CollegeHumor at the time. The production crew was the same team responsible for the original comedy videos that CollegeHumor produced.

Main crew

The nine main actors on the show also comprised the show's writing staff.

Reception

The show has seen mixed responses from critics. Time Magazine's TV critic James Poniewozik hailed the show as "really funny," noting that CollegeHumor is "doing comedy that specifically works on television, as opposed to simply porting over viral videos to a slightly bigger screen."[4] Conversely, Liz Shannon Miller of GigaOM described it as "deeply disappointing, given how many of CollegeHumor's web shorts rank as fantastic examples of fresh and creative online content".[5] The show was renewed for a second season, however CollegeHumor declined due to contract disagreements.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Promotional video from MTV. https://web.archive.org/web/20090123105615/http://www.mtv.com/videos/misc/332832/see-you-sunday.jhtml#id=1602953. dead. January 23, 2009. .
  2. Web site: Just One of The Guys. Danan. Shira. March 23, 2009. 2009-04-02. Gelf Magazine.
  3. Web site: MTV Pranked. MTV Canada.
  4. News: CollegeHumor Graduates (Time Magazine) . February 9, 2009 . May 25, 2010.
  5. Web site: Miller. Liz. MTV's CollegeHumor Show Stumbles With Sitcom Cliches. GigaOM. GigaOmniMedia. February 9, 2009. October 5, 2013. September 27, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130927185631/http://gigaom.com/2009/02/09/mtvs-collegehumor-show-stumbles-with-sitcom-cliches/. dead.
  6. Web site: Reich . Sam . The Ongoing History of College Humor / Dropout .