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Saturday Morning All Star Hits!

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Saturday Morning All Star Hits!
GenreLive-action/Animation
Comedy/Parody
Variety/Sketch comedy
Surreal humour
Created byBen Jones
Kyle Mooney
Based onSaturday-morning cartoons of the 1980s–90s
Directed byBen Jones (animated segments)
Dave McCary (live-action segments)
StarringKyle Mooney
Geraldine Viswanathan
Dylan Sprouse
Rae Dawn Chong
Nathan Fielder
Voices ofKyle Mooney
Pamela Adlon
Fred Armisen
Eric Bauza
Maurice LaMarche
Kevin Michael Richardson
Beck Bennett
Kate Lyn Sheil
Cree Summer
Frank Welker
Chris Redd
Paul Rudd
Emma Stone
Ben Jones
ComposerTimothy Cleary
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producersScott Gairdner
Scott Greenberg
Craig Hartin
Katy Jenson
Ben Jones
Joel Kuwahara
Dave McCary
Lorne Michaels
Kyle Mooney
Andrew Singer
ProducersAubrey Danielson
Carl Fieler
Simon Gibney
Andrew Grissom
James Merrill
Max Minor
EditorsAndrew Lainhart
Zach Zdbzeibko
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time19–28 minutes
Production companiesAnimated portions:
Bento Box Entertainment
Ben Jones Studio, inc.
Live-action portions:
Broadway Video
Universal Television
Original release
NetworkNetflix
ReleaseDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)

Saturday Morning All Star Hits! (S.M.A.S.H.!) is an American adult animated television series created by Kyle Mooney and Ben Jones. Produced by Universal Television, the show is a parody of Saturday-morning cartoon programming blocks from the 1980s and early 1990s, including a mix of live-action and animation segments. It was released on Netflix on December 10, 2021.

Plot

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The show parodies various programming blocks and cartoons from the 1980s and early 1990s, such as Chip and Pepper's Cartoon Madness, Fox Kids, and The Disney Afternoon, framed by an eponymous show called S.M.A.S.H.! for short.[1] It is hosted by twin brothers Skip and Treybor (parodies of Chip and Pepper), both played by Mooney.[2] They introduce various cartoon shows and have brief conversations between shows. The cartoons include:

  • Randy, a show about a dinosaur that befriends a group of teenagers. Randy falls into depression and alcoholism following a breakup with his firefighter girlfriend, before heading to music college. Randy is a spoof of Denver, the Last Dinosaur.[3]
  • The Create-A-Crittles, a show about four magical creatures secretly living in the backyard shed of a yuppie graphic designer and his wife. Crittle Glitter, a euphemism for cocaine, is prominently featured throughout the show. Create-A-Crittles parodies such shows as Care Bears, Alvin and the Chipmunks, and Popples.[4]
  • Strongimals, a show loosely parodying Thundercats, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and other action cartoons of the era. The show is later retitled as Skip and the Strongimals, radically shifting its focus to Skip and his "uh... subs?" catchphrase as a result of Skip's rise to greater fame (which in itself is a reference to show The Real Ghostbusters and its eventual focus on the popular character Slimer).[4]
  • Pro Bros, a show created by Ethan Rash who is known as the less prominent brother of controversial movie star/singer Johnny Rash, parodying ProStars[5] and other series where pro athletes play themselves (albeit the pilot premiering in prime time as opposed to Saturday morning). The show's antagonist, "Ronnie $elfish," and his drug habit are an allegory for Ethan's brother Johnny.
  • Lil' Bruce, an animated comedy about comedian Bruce Chandling's "crazy childhood" similar to Howie Mandel's Bobby's World. The series ends up a failed pilot due to live-action Bruce's excessive narration and a too-heavy plotline about Bruce's father leaving him and his mother when he was young.[4]
  • All Cartoon Stars Say Don't Say Shut Up, a public service announcement in the format of Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue warning against the consequences of saying "shut up" to one's elders. Guest stars include "President of the Country" Barbara Barone (loosely based on Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore, particularly their advocacy campaigns for media censorship) and famous pop singer Nuance (based on Paula Abdul).
  • Slingers, a toy-based show parodying the animated pilot The Legend of the Hawaiian Slammers.
  • Others include brief clips from The Meeps (satirizing The Smurfs), Crittle Littles (satirizing Muppet Babies and Kingdom Chums), the character Puppy the Dog (satirizing classic cartoons), Dr. Von Duck (satirizing DuckTales and The Simpsons), Egyptian Jazz Cats (satirizing music-band cartoons such as Josie and the Pussycats), Lottie (a live-action teen sitcom satirizing Blossom) and Intimate Compromise: Casino Nights Seductions an R-rated live-action film parodying such films as Basic Instinct, True Lies and L.A. Confidential and its animated counterpart Intimate Compromise: Casino Nights Seductions: The Animated Series (which satirizes the process of turning R-rated movies into cartoons such as Robocop, Rambo: The Force of Freedom, Toxic Crusaders, Police Academy and Conan the Adventurer) as seen with numerous clips from home movies, news shows and commercials promoting Nextronico's Mega Mitten (spoofing Nintendo's infamous Power Glove), Rude Cubes (Madballs), Sonic Yum gum (spoofing Bubble Yum and "For You, Not Them" Bubble Tape ads), diet sodas, sneakers and submarine sandwiches.

Throughout the episodes, Treybor, who grows jealous of Skip, eventually quits S.M.A.S.H.! because he feels overshadowed by Skip. In the season finale, Treybor confronts Skip during a live broadcast to vent his frustrations, before their mother shows up and urges them to reconcile while introducing them to their long-lost triplet brother, Corbee (Nathan Fielder). Skip leaves S.M.A.S.H.!, after which all three triplets become VJs on Monday Early Afternoon Rock Song Hits, which shows sludge rock (grunge rock) music videos geared towards older teenagers and young adults.

Starting in episode 4, breaking news interruptions chronicle the disappearance of Lottie co-stars Lottie Wolfe and Sean Benjamin and the subsequent police investigation; Wolfe's boyfriend and fellow teen sensation Johnny Rash is initially arrested and tried for their presumed deaths (in a nationally televised trial a la O. J. Simpson), during which Benjamin's body is found, but a jury acquits Rash due to matching left-and-right shoe prints being found at the scene, contradicting Rash's fashion statement of always wearing mismatched shoes (reminiscent of the backward clothes worn by Kris Kross). Though it proved futile in court, evidence against Rash was found by a 9-year-old S.M.A.S.H.! superfan named Katherine Logan (implied to be the one who is switching tapes of S.M.A.S.H.! off-screen), who spotted a blooper in the Skip and the Strongimals Movie in which an unidentified figure (thought to be Johnny Rash himself) threw an athletic shoe matching the crime scene into the D'ahai Sea.

Running gags include the names of animation studios GIK (a play on DIC Entertainment), Herb Whibley (Walt Disney), and Polystar (a spoof of Carolco), numerous appearances of sub sandwiches and catchphrases like "zuzzy zazz" and "uh... subs?".

Cast

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Episodes

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No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
1"Tape 1: SCHOOL"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)101
Twin hosts Skip and Treybor develop a sibling rivalry. Teenage dinosaur Randy gets dumped. David hides his friendship with the cute Create-A-Crittles.
2"Tape 2: LOST"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)102
Randy applies to Music College. David's pals colorize his logo. "The Strongimals" visit Earth and meet Skip, whose cameo role is mocked by Treybor.
3"Tape 3: ZOO"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)103
Skip's fame grows, along with Treybor's jealousy. Randy makes a friend at Music College. The Create-A-Crittles join David's corporate creative team.
4"Tape 4: SMASH!"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)104
The show gets a new studio. Skip now stars in "The Strongimals." A comedian presents "Lil' Bruce." The Crittles — and David's marriage — split up.
5"Tape 5: NEWS"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)105
An episode of "Primeline" profiles rising star Skip and tracks a startling disappearance. The "Pro Bros" live in the shadows of their famous brothers.
6"Tape 6: MOVIE"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)106
Treybor pays a humiliating visit to the set of Skip's new film. The Pro Bros mount a rescue mission. A disappearance becomes a homicide investigation.
7"Tape 7: DANGER"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)107
The stars of the Saturday-morning lineup join the president and pop star Nuance to address a serious social issue: the disrespectful phrase, "Shut up!"
8"Tape 8: LIVE!"Ben Jones & Dave McCaryKyle Mooney, Ben Jones, Dave McCary, Scott GairdnerDecember 10, 2021 (2021-12-10)108
The live premiere of "Skip and the Strongimals" is interrupted by dysfunctional family dynamics and the pending results of a TV star's murder trial.

Production

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The show was co-created by Mooney (who plays both Skip and Treybor), director Dave McCary (directing the live action segments), and animator Ben Jones, best known for his work on the Cartoon Network series The Problem Solverz and the FXX animated series Stone Quackers, and the Emmy Award-winning sitcom Bob's Burgers.[6][7][8] It is executive produced by Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels under Broadway Video.[9]

Reception

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Saturday Morning All Star Hits! has received mostly positive reviews from critics for its "hilariously sharp edge" on 90s nostalgia.[2][6][7][10][11] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Saturday Morning All Star Hits! has an approval rating of 89% based on 9 reviews, with an average rating of 8.2/10.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ How Much Watching Time Do You Have This Weekend? – The New York Times
  2. ^ a b Keller, Joel (December 10, 2021). "Stream It Or Skip It: 'Saturday Morning All-Star Hits!' On Netflix, Kyle Mooney's Twisted Tribute To Kids Show Lineups Of The '80s And '90s". Decider. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  3. ^ Saturday Morning All Star Hits! review: Kyle Mooney brings his weird to Netflix – Polygon
  4. ^ a b c Kyle Mooney's Saturday Morning All Star Hits! grows weirdly compelling the further you get into it – PRIMETIMER
  5. ^ The Obsessive Brilliance of Saturday Morning All Star Hits! – Nathan Rabin's Happy Place
  6. ^ a b Bell, Josh (December 10, 2021). "Kyle Mooney Creatively Parodies Kids TV in Saturday Morning All Star Hits!". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  7. ^ a b Allen, Nick (December 10, 2021). "Netflix's Saturday Morning All-Star Hits is a Gift for Kyle Mooney Fans". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  8. ^ SNL star Kyle Mooney spoofs Saturday morning cartoons in new Netflix show|EW.com
  9. ^ ‘Saturday Morning All Star Hits!’: First Look At ‘SNL’s Kyle Mooney In Netflix Series From Lorne Michaels – Update – Deadline
  10. ^ Fienberg, Daniel (December 10, 2021). "Netflix's 'Saturday Morning All Star Hits!': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 12, 2021.
  11. ^ Greene, Steve (December 15, 2021). "'Saturday Morning All Star Hits!' Has '90s Nostalgia with a Hilariously Sharp Edge". IndieWire. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
  12. ^ "Saturday Morning All Star Hits!: Season 1". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved November 26, 2024.
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