The Idiot Box (TV series)

The Idiot Box
The opening credits of The Idiot Box
Created byAlex Winter
Tom Stern
Tim Burns
StarringAlex Winter
Tom Stern
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes6
Production
Running time30 minutes
Original release
NetworkMTV
Release1991 (1991)
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview)

The Idiot Box is an American sketch comedy television series created by Alex Winter, Tom Stern and Tim Burns that ran on MTV in 1991.[1]

After the success of Bill & Ted, MTV hired Winter, Stern, and Burns to develop a half-hour sketch comedy show for the network.[2] As the channel was still strictly music-oriented at the time, The Idiot Box was mainly a showcase for popular music videos, but with a series of sketches, fake commercials, and parodies shown in between. Therefore, although an episode ran 30 minutes, there were only 7 to 11 minutes' worth of sketches.

Inspired heavily by the likes of Mad magazine and Monty Python's Flying Circus, the humor in The Idiot Box was rooted in absurdity and violent slapstick, often in the form of television and movie parodies and commercials for fake television shows (such as "Mumford the Yodeling Mutt" and "Who's A Total Idiot? with Tony Danza"). Each episode would end with a recap by the Max Headroom-esque VOTAR, "the future of television announcing", as he would criticize each of the sketches in the episode and occasionally quote lines from new wave songs.

Winter, Stern, and Burns chose to cease production after six episodes and instead accepted a high-paying deal with 20th Century Fox to write and direct their own feature film.[3] The result was 1993's Freaked, which featured the same brand of humor as The Idiot Box.

  1. ^ Willman, Chris (23 March 1991). "TV REVIEW: Hey, What's Wrong With a Little Idiotic Stealing Among Friends?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  2. ^ The Idiot Box: A show by Alex Winter and Tom Stern
  3. ^ Chronogram.com Conversation