The Drew Carey Show is an American sitcom that aired on ABC from 1995 to 2004, and was founded in Cleveland, Ohio, and revolves around the retail office and home life of "everyone Drew Carey, a fictional version of the actor.
The event was created by Carey, who has a stand-alone comedy and writing experience, and Bruce Helford, who was once a writer for Roseanne . It was the first television show to have a simulcast episode on the Internet.
Produced by Mohawk Productions in collaboration with Warner Bros. Television, the company debuted on September 13, 1995, and was ranked among the Top 30 programs for four seasons before sliding in popularity. Ratings dropped sharply over the past two seasons, and the last two episodes aired on September 8, 2004.
Video The Drew Carey Show
Premise
Drew Carey is a fictional version of himself, a self-proclaimed "ordinary human being". Drew Carey (actor) has been quoted saying that his character is what will become an actor if he is not an actor. He has a "gang" of friends who start with him in court and everyday misery. Drew's friends include the educated but unambitious Lewis (Ryan Stiles), the scattered Oswald (Diedrich Bader) and his friend (later his surviving girlfriend) Kate (Christa Miller). In the past two seasons, Kate married and moved to Guam, in the same two episodes that introduced and developed Drew's relationship with Kellie (Cynthia Watros), which lasted for the past two seasons.
During his first seven seasons, Drew's workplace was Cleveland's fiction department store, Winfred-Louder, where he has worked for many years and is still working as an Assistant Personnel Director. One of his coworkers is Mimi Bobeck (Kathy Kinney), a big woman in clowns, lots of make-up (including the eye shadow of her typical blue eyes), and an unpleasant hatred for Drew. The two eventually became closer (though still maintaining less heat competition), mainly because Mimi fell in love and married Drew's heterosexual brother, Steve (John Carroll Lynch), a character who often repeated.
In the first season they work for Mr. The invisible bell (Kevin Pollak), only seen in the first season, where he was greeted with applause; in the later seasons, their bosses and sometimes-coworkers are Nigel Wick (Craig Ferguson), an eccentric, sadistic and unlucky Englishman. In the past two seasons, they have worked for peaceful Evans and hippies (Kyle Howard) and Scott (Jonathan Mangum) who are far more professional, smart but naive twenty-two-year-old who owns Neverending Store, an online retailer with offices in the same location.
In addition to his daily work, Drew, along with Oswald, Lewis, and Kate (replaced from around Season 5 onwards by Mimi), run a small business from a garage, sell Buzz Beer, a caffeinated alcoholic beverage. It became popular in the region and was served at a group hangout, The Warsaw Tavern.
Maps The Drew Carey Show
Synopsis
Season 1 (1995-1996)
The opening credits of the first season consisted of caricature caricature - consisting of her face and a yellow tie - singing the song "Moon Over Parma" by Robert McGuire. The song was trimmed for the opening sequence, and a reference to Eastlake in the line "Guide him to Eastlake under your silvery light" was turned into a reference to Cleveland to stay on the theme with the show.
In the first season, Drew and Mimi work under Mr. Bell, who only exists as a voice on Drew's speakerphone, did not include the end of the season (his final episode) where he was fired by new owner Winfred-Louder. Another character that emerged exclusively during this period was his neighbor, Jules and his family. Drew's first girlfriend Lisa was introduced this season, just like Jay, Kate's love interest who used to attend the same high school as Drew and her friends. Both characters lasted until Season 2, where they were quickly written out of the show in the early episodes.
Nine of the episode titles are related to chemistry in several ways, with names such as "Merging Two Elements Not Equally Mixed" and "Isomers Have Different Characteristics". However, this theme was abandoned at the end of the season.
Season 2-7 (1996-2002) "> Seasons 2- 2002)
"Moon Over Parma" was removed during the second season by "The Five O'Clock World" sung by The Vogues. This season introduces openings that pay homage to music videos that include dance players and sing around the various sets of performances. In the third season, another change was made for "Cleveland Rocks", a cover song of Ian Hunter by the President of the United States. This change takes place until the second "wave" of the show ends, with the end of season 7.
The man who took over Mr. Bell's job after his dismissal was Nigel Wick, who served as a foil for Drew and Mimi at work. During this period, Drew and Mr. Wick also periodically takes top management jobs from each other. This will usually result in Drew ending up in his old job as Assistant Personnel Director and Mr. Wick will magically retain his job as manager. At the end of Season 7, they were both Co-Managers before Winfred-Louder was closed (albeit after undergoing drastic changes to stay in business).
Kate and Oswald became closer and eventually became romantically involved and nearly married during the third season, but Kate stood Oswald at the altar. Kate and Drew are also romantically involved and almost married, but they cancel it when they realize they do not feel the same about the prospect of children. Drew's cross-dressing brother Steve was introduced during this period. She eventually falls in love with Mimi and they have a child together, Gus (whose name is determined through the contest).
Drew also married several times during this part of the show. His first marriage was with Diane, a cocktail waiter in Las Vegas. But this is only temporary, because he needs Drew to defend the custody of his children. Her second marriage was with Mr. Wick, who forced Drew to marry him in a same-sex civil union in Vermont (the only legal place at the time) in the hope that the marriage would calm the Immigration and Naturalization Service. At the start of Season 7, Drew marries Nikki and Kate (who had previously been a recurring character for some time since Season 3, and suffers from weight problems). They know about this and all three marriages end in divorce, and Drew is known as "Impotent Bisexual Bigamist". Nikki finally returns, and the actress, Kate Walsh, wears a fat suit again and moves with Drew.
During this period, the event also often held episode "show". The recurring theme is "What's Wrong With This Episode?", Where the show contains many deliberate sustainability and other errors and invites home viewers to find the most mistakes and win prizes, and live episodes, with loose plots and improvisational scenes featuring a member cast of Carey improvisation comedy Who's It Line? (Brad Sherwood, Wayne Brady, Colin Mochrie, Greg Proops, Esten Chip, Kathy Greenwood, Jeff Davis, Laura Hall, and Linda Taylor) contributed to this episode, with Brad Sherwood hosting.
Season 8-9 (2002-2004) "Season 8-9 (2002-4) 2004)
Beginning in season 8, the show plays through 9 different opening sequences, each containing a new version of one of three theme theme songs. Each theme ("Moon Over Parma", "Five O'Clock World" and "Cleveland Rocks") are seen in three distinct segments, in a completely different new setting. The show finally came back with only five main characters, like the first season, when Kate, Mr. Wick, and Steve were finally written out of the show. Kate's character is married, Mr. Wick disappears after three appearances until the final of Season 8, where he is revealed he became a weather expert (though he keeps appearing on opening credits, unlike Kate, who is omitted altogether, and never mentioned again.) Steve leaves at the start of the ninth season to "find himself".
With Winfred-Louder closed, the location became the Everending Shop online retailer's office. Drew, Mimi, and Mr. Wick was hired as a new company employee. Mimi was first employed in the same role as his old job, and Drew was eventually hired as an "Internal Expansion Analyst", and a recurring joke begins where Drew does not know what his job is. Before it was written, Mr. Wick was originally a janitor, and another joke came in the form of Mr. Wick, who was trying to climb the ladder back into the boss. Before he was written, he went from the janitor to the dessert trolley carrier.
Kate left after the first two episodes of season 8, the same two episodes that introduced Kellie, an old high school friend Drew who has worked as a stripper. He eventually becomes a waitress at The Warsaw Tavern, Drew's girlfriend, and his son's carrier. The plot of the final episode is Drew and Kellie trying to get married before their child is born. Mr. Wick also returned and stayed for the last series.
The show began to feature brilliant acting from reality TV participants in the last two seasons, such as former Road Rules star Timmy Beggy, The Real World Cara Khan's alumna, and The Amazing Race winner Reichen Lehmkuhl. Tony Bus Driver (Bill Cobbs) became a regular, serving as a smart-alecky "bartender" to whom Drew could say his problems. Eighth season put in a timeslot that often clashed with Monday Night Football . It was withdrawn mid-season and the remaining episodes were shown during the summer of 2003. The ninth season did not air until the summer of 2004, with most of the episodes broken.
Last season's tone changed radically from the previous season. The directors began experimenting with the setting of a single camera, showing a fully built set, with four walls in most of the room, and with connecting rooms simultaneously. The authors also started experimenting, including the storyline where Gus burned Mimi's house, forcing him to move with Drew after Steve left him.
Post-series
On March 24, 2009, Kathy Kinney appeared in character as Mimi at the beginning of the The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson . Kinney appeared twice on The Price Is Right as Mimi Bobeck on April Fool. Drew Carey has been the host since 2007. Carey will then revive "What Wrong with This Episode?" format for the April Fool's April day episode of The Price Is Right .
The show finished its first season (1995-1996) barely in the Top 50, placing 48th in the Nielsen rankings, with an average rating of 10.1. The second season was much better, making it into the top 20 list of the second season (1996-1997) in the 18th rank at Nielsen with an average rating of 11.5. The number of spectators increased 13.9% from the first season.
The event finished the third season (1997-1998) in a place higher in the rankings, placing 16th with an average rating of 11.1 during the season; however, the ratings fell 3.5% from the second season. During the fourth season (1998-1999), the season-ending series in Nielsen's higher ranks in the Top 20 put him to 14th place but with an average rating of 9.9, a 10.8% drop from the third season.
The show finished the fifth season (1999-2000) the 24th in the Nielsen rankings, the first time since the first season that the show was not in the Top 20, with an average rating of 9.5, a 4% drop from the fourth season. This is a smaller decrease than many other experienced series, given the erosion of network audiences. This is also a smaller decrease than the previous season. The sixth season of the event (2000-2001) finished 41th with an average rating of 8.23, a 13.4 percent drop from the fifth season.
ABC signed a new contract to keep the show going until the ninth season, although the show had not entered its seventh season (2001-2002) at that time. This season saw one of the biggest drops in the rankings, ending in 57th place with an average rating of 5.9, a significant 28.3% drop from the sixth season. The show finished the eighth season (2002-2003) season 119 with an average rating of 3.29, down 44.23 percent from the seventh season. This caused ABC to put the series on hiatus, airing the rest of the season in the summer of 2003. Unable to quit the contract, ABC was forced to let the show to film the ninth season, paying three million dollars per episode. Not doing well enough to receive a time slot on ABC's crash schedule in 2003, this event has been the ninth and final season burned during the summer of 2004. The final series is seen by over 5 million viewers.
Viva Las Vegas
The "Drew Gomes Married" episode is part of a crossover with Grace Under Fire , Coach and Ellen in Las Vegas. It features Brett Butler as Grace Kelly, Jerry Van Dyke as Luther Van Damme, Joely Fisher as Paige Clark and Jeremy Piven as Spence Kovak.
Syndication
The Drew Carey Show entered the off-network syndication in September 1999 and continued until September 5, 2008, for example, The WB Philadelphia WPHL-TV station replayed nightly events 7:30 pm EST and 11:30 pm EST, Chicago WGN-TV WB Station at 6:30 pm & amp; 10:30 CST, local Cleveland FOX station (Drew's hometown) night 7 nights EST & amp; 11 pm EST well after local news on WJW-TV and New York City & amp; Washington UPN Station, D.C. WWOR-TV and WDCA-TV replayed nightly events 11:30 pm EST.
The Drew Carey Show aired on TBS cable network from 2002 to 2007. ION Television aired reruns of the show from 2007 to 2009, premiered on New Year's Eve 2007, with the station promoting it as "The Drew of the Year. " ION Television does not broadcast all episodes because it only airs episodes aired from seasons 1-5; the channel also removes references to male genitals from a particular episode, episode 5 of the season "Do Drew and Kate Have Sex?" become one in particular.
The CW television network also aired episodes during the 2008-09 television season. Two back-to-back episodes aired on Sunday at 6pm to replace the Sunday Night Block canceled by Media Rights Capital.
The event runs in syndication in "TVtropolis" Canada until June 2013, when the channel was renamed "DTour".
LAFF began performing as part of its inaugural ranks when it was launched in April 2015.
Merchandise
During the peak of the show's popularity, Barbie-esque dolls Drew and Mimi were released, with accessories and currently in rare inventory and collection items being considered. Matchbox also released a Drew car, a Volkswagen Beetle with fire on the side owned by Drew from third season until the eighth. Cleveland Rocks soundtrack album! Music from The Drew Carey Show was released in May 1998.
DVD release
On February 28, 2006, the release of six sitcom episodes was released on DVD titled "The Drew Carey Show: Favorite TV". Originally, DVDs were exclusively sold at Best Buy, but later sold at other national retailers as well. DVD featuring "Pilot" episodes, "Play on Integrated Field", "We Will Always Remember, Evaluation Day", "Drew Blows His Promotion", "My Best Friend's Wedding" and "DrugCo." However, this DVD has since been out of print.
On April 24, 2007, Warner Home Video released the first full season of The Drew Carey Show on DVD in Region 1. The WB has released a statement saying that the reason why both seasons, and one of the next season not yet released in 2016 is due to copyright issues regarding the music used on the show. For the same reason, it looks like it will never stream to online services.
The first season was released in Australia (Region 4) on September 10, 2008. Small distribution company Madman Entertainment, usually known for releasing anime and manga, has taken the rights to the series.
References
External links
- The Drew Carey Show on IMDb
- The Drew Carey Show on TV.com
- The Drew Carey Show ABC homepage
- DVD information season 1
Source of the article : Wikipedia