[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Crank Yankers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Anthonythecameraguy (talk | contribs) at 08:47, 18 May 2010 (→‎Minor characters). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Crank Yankers
Created byAdam Carolla
Daniel Kellison
Jimmy Kimmel
Esmarida Fitsmonster
StarringJim Florentine
Jimmy Kimmel
Theme music composerAdam Schlesinger
Steven Gold[1]
Opening themeAdam Schlesinger, Steven Gold
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes70
Production
Running time21-22 minutes
Original release
NetworkComedy Central (2002-2005)
MTV2 (2007)
ReleaseJune 3, 2002 (2002-06-03) –
March 30, 2007 (2007-03-30)

Crank Yankers is an American TV show produced by Adam Carolla, Jimmy Kimmel and Daniel Kellison that featured actual prank calls made by show regulars and celebrity guests which are re-enacted onscreen by puppets for a visual aid to show you what's happening in the call. The show premiered in 2002 on Comedy Central and returned to MTV2 on February 9, 2007, running again until March 30, 2007. The show screened in Australia on SBS Television and The Comedy Channel between 2003 and 2008.

Behind the scenes

The performers are given a basic outline of a premise by the writers, and call telephone numbers from a list of selected targets (known as "marks"). Using the basic premises, the performers improvise most of their lines, playing off of the responses of their marks, with the intention to keep them on the phone as long as possible.

With the exception of a few outside sources (including previous material from Jim Florentine and the Touch-Tone Terrorists), all the calls are made from Nevada. The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 makes it illegal in most states to record telephone calls without both parties' consent. Under Nevada law, only one of the parties has to give consent (i.e., the caller), so prank calls can be recorded without the consent of the prank victims. One result of this was the series' schedule of creating and airing new episodes was fairly sporadic due to most of the celebrities living in Los Angeles, having Los Angeles-based jobs, and so were only periodically able to go to Las Vegas to make calls. Adam Carolla, for example, took his radio program to Las Vegas once or twice a year, and while there would record new calls for the program.

The puppets are then constructed based on the various marks' voices, and, along with a series of stock characters (such as "Niles Standish", "Bobby Fletcher", and "Special Ed") based on the performers' character voices, the calls are re-enacted for the skits.

Main characters

  • Bobby Fletcher (Jim Florentine) – An under-achieving drug user, who is extremely rude and insulting. He repeatedly burps into the phone. Bobby is also Special Ed's older cousin.
  • Elmer Higgins (Jimmy Kimmel) – A crabby, long-winded stereotype of an elderly man, often calling people to complain about things. He frequently goes off on unrelated and long-winded tangents about his younger days and various irrelevant subjects. He also frequently blames or relates the situations with his gay grandson.
  • Helen Higgins (Susie Essman) – Elmer's wife, she is an elderly Jewish woman who likes to proposition young men. She also has a pet parrot who is well-versed in curse words. She would die later in the series, mentioned in a sketch where Elmer wants to take driving lessons.
  • Hadassah Guberman (Sarah Silverman) – A Jewish female college student who works various part-time jobs, including conducting surveys for O magazine. She frequently asks intrusive questions and makes veiled passive-aggressive insults. Her sexuality, as well as her sanity, seem questionable at times.
  • Niles Standish (Tony Barbieri) – A British Earl, he is a rich and eccentric middle-aged pervert with homosexual tendencies. He frequently calls various services and asks for their price, then orders them to "double it". The character is an eponym of Myles Standish.
  • Special Ed (Jim Florentine) – A mentally retarded and disabled teenager, who constantly repeats himself, makes random comments. Ed's catchphrase is "Yay!" (he keeps shouting it until the other caller gets frustrated and annoyed). He is also the younger cousin of Bobby Fletcher.
  • Mr. Birchum (Adam Carolla) – A 62-year-old psychotic Christian, Vietnam War veteran, and American, whose hobbies include carpentry, Shotokan karate, spying on women in their beds or bathrooms by drilling holes or a hidden camera and gun ownership. He has a 600-pound wife, conjoined twin daughters and is missing part of his right leg (which he lost in the war) and three fingers on his right hand (a carpentry accident). He frequently refers to his time spent in Vietnam and "smoking hash out of a human skull".
  • Gladys Murphy (Wanda Sykes) – A boisterous African American woman who makes embarrassing announcements, generally of a scatological or sexual nature. Her many children are very mischievous, going so far as to glue her butt to the toilet and stealing money from a malfunctioning bank machine.

Secondary characters

  • Jimmy (Jimmy Kimmel) – A grown man who lives with his mother, who is after Jimmy Kimmel himself. He also has two young children (voiced by Kimmel's own kids) who make juvenile pranks and use foul language.
  • Landalious "The Truth" Truefeld (David Alan Grier) – A former football player who likes to rap.
  • Spoonie Luv (Tracy Morgan) – A smooth-talking, African american hip hop-type character who makes lewd and suggestive comments. He often refers to himself as "Spoonie Luv from up above".
  • Terrence Catheter (Jimmy Kimmel) – An effeminate, red-headed man who acts as spokesperson for various celebrities, such as Tom Cruise, Bill Cosby, J.K. Rowling, Mr. T, and the Olsen twins. He calls various places of business to book appearances and asks them to comply with the celebrities' ridiculous demands. Terrence is Elmer's grandson.
  • Tony Deloge (Super Dave Osborne) – A loud-mouthed, fast-paced politician who calls people at random to pander for votes as "district selectman". He also occasionally tries to use his political power to get things for free.
  • Cammie Smith (Lisa Kushell) – An oversexed, conceited and condescending 22-year-old exotic dancer.
  • Boomer and the Nudge (Jimmy Kimmel and Patton Oswalt) – Two obnoxious morning radio disc jockeys who call people to make "on-air dares".
  • Junkyard Willie (Touch-Tone Terrorists) – An obstructionist in the form of a gravely-voiced black man who is actually an import from the Touch-Tone Terrorists where he is a regular character. He appears in two sketches where he is a supervisor at YPS ("Yankerville Package Service").
  • Sav Macauley (Dane Cook) – He is the overly enthusiastic host of a phone game show called "The Phone Zone" where he calls people and asks ridiculous random trivia questions for cash prizes and interjects his own sound effects.
  • OCD Ken (Kevin Nealon) – An accountant with obsessive-compulsive disorder who prefers cleanliness and even numbers. He often requests people to press the pound key as a part of his disorder.

Minor characters

  • Danny (David Alan Grier) – A man who repeatedly gets nervous or disgusted causing him to vomit over the phone. The vomit is depicted as an Exorcist-like liquid shooting out of the puppet's throat.
  • Chip Douglas (Fred Armisen) – A Mexican immigrant who is perpetually building a house with minimal supplies and poor[clarification needed] command of the English language.
  • Katie Kimmel (herself) – Jimmy Kimmel's daughter made occasional appearances from 2003, initially with only a few short lines but later making entire crank calls herself (notably pretending to be drunken 9-year-old trying to order alcohol over the phone).
  • Kevin Kimmel (himself) – Jimmy Kimmel's son made occasional appearances from 2003, including as Elmer Higgins' grandson.
  • Foreign Guy (Dane Cook) – A nameless immigrant who calls various places looking for assistance or to purchase something. To confuse the person he calls, he frequently switches between speaking in extremely broken English in a very hard to comprehend accent to speaking the language fluently, without any accent.
  • Gene Winterbuck (Dane Cook) – A young man who uses a wheelchair and calls libraries requesting books with titles referring to disabilities, such as "Johnny NoodleLegs".

Performers

Jimmy Kimmel
Adam Carolla
Drew Carey
Dave Chappelle
Dane Cook
David Cross
Eminem
Tracy Morgan
Sarah Silverman
Tony Barbieri
Jeff Goldblum
Jamie Kennedy
Jack Black
Tom Kenny
Kyle Gass
Susie Essman
Jim Florentine
Touch-Tone Terrorists
Fred Armisen
Nicole Sullivan
Kevin Nealon
Super Dave Osborne
David Alan Grier
Rick Rosner
Wanda Sykes
Snoop Dogg
Ludacris
Jack Osbourne
Sharon Osbourne
Billy West
Lisa Kushell
Stephen Colbert
Patton Oswalt
Denis Leary
Biz Markie
Chamillionaire
Seth MacFarlane
Mitch Hedberg
Dr. Drew Pinsky
Wu-Tang Clan
Seth Green
Lil' Jon
Andy Milonakis
Steve-O
Ryan Dunn
Nick Cannon
Kenan Thompson
Robert Smigel
Josh Gardner
Good Charlotte
Jonathan Kimmel

Chief artists working for the show include:

Xavier Corby
Chris Davis
Todd Hulin
Shane Klein
David Kolodny-Nagy
Dutch Merrick
Kristie Moore
Brook Shafer
Jason Tyne
Mark Walbaum

DVD releases

DVD Name Release Date Ep # Additional Information
Season 1 Uncensored September 28, 2004 10 "Dial 'T' for Torment: Mini-Documentary, Two Unaired Calls.
Season 2 Volume 1 Uncensored April 26, 2005 15 Unaired Calls.
Season 2 Volume 2 Uncensored November 29, 2005 15 4 exclusive audio calls from Fred Armisen, Eminem, Jim Florentine, and Jimmy Kimmel.
The Best of Crank Yankers December 4, 2007 N/A Includes 60 favorite calls.

CD releases

  • The Best Uncensored Crank Calls, Volume 1 (2002)
  • The Best Uncensored Crank Calls, Volume 2 (2002)
  • The Best Uncensored Crank Calls, Volume 3 (2003)

References

  1. ^ [1] "Crank Yankers" at IMDB