The following is an episode list for the MTVanimated television seriesBeavis and Butt-Head. The series has its roots in 1992 when Mike Judge created two animated shorts, Frog Baseball and Peace, Love and Understanding, which were aired on Liquid Television.
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- 3Episodes
Series overview[edit]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
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First aired | Last aired | |||
Shorts | 2 | September 22, 1992 | November 17, 1992 | |
1 | 3 | March 8, 1993 | March 25, 1993 | |
2 | 26 | May 17, 1993 | July 15, 1993 | |
3 | 31 | September 6, 1993 | March 5, 1994 | |
4 | 32 | March 14, 1994 | July 15, 1994 | |
5 | 50 | October 31, 1994 | October 12, 1995 | |
6 | 20 | October 31, 1995 | March 7, 1996 | |
7 | 41 | January 26, 1997 | November 28, 1997 | |
8 | 22 | October 27, 2011 | December 29, 2011 |
Shorts (1992)[edit]
Both shorts originally aired as part of Liquid Television and did not include music videos.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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1 | 1 | Frog Baseball | LiquidTv: September 22, 1992; BnB: March 11, 1993[2] | |
Beavis and Butt-head play baseball with an unsuspecting frog, leading to the utter demise of the smashed amphibian. Featured videos:The original Liquid Television airings of Frog Baseball do not feature music videos. These were only added when the series moved to MTV.
This airing of Frog Baseball added a new end title card featuring a still from the episode where Butt-Head hits Beavis with a baseball bat. A disclaimer states that no animals were harmed in the making of the episode, except Beavis. MTV Europe --VERSION A--[1]
MTV Europe --VERSION B--[1]
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2 | 2 | Peace, Love and Understanding | LiquidTv: November 17, 1992; BnB: March 10, 1993[2] | |
Beavis and Butt-head go to a monster truck rally, and end up buried in feces when a truck crashes through some port-a-potties which were the temple of Sterculius, the Roman God of feces. The episode marks the first appearance of Mr. Van Driessen. Featured videos:The original Liquid Television airings of Peace, Love and Understanding do not feature music videos. These were only added when the series moved to MTV.
MTV Europe[1]
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Episodes[edit]
Season 1 (1993)[edit]
Mike Judge himself is highly critical of the animation and quality of these episodes, in particular the first two – 'Door to Door' and 'Blood Drive'/'Give Blood' – which he described as 'awful, I don't know why anybody liked it... I was burying my head in the sand.'[3]
J. J. Sedelmaier Productions, Inc. (Season 1)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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3 | 1 | 'Door-to-Door' | Mike Judge | Glenn Eichler, David Felton, Mike Judge | March 8, 1993 | |
Mr. Van Driessen gives the class the assignment to go door-to-door to collect for charity, and while collecting Beavis and Butt-head run into a scary donor: Mistress Cora Anthrax. This was the first episode of the series to air [4] Featured videos:
Alt. Set
MTV Europe[1]
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4 | 2 | 'Give Blood' | Mike Judge | Glenn Eichler, David Felton, Mike Judge | March 8, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head donate blood in hopes of raking in the cash, giving a little more than they planned to.The episode is sometimes entitled 'Blood Drive'. Featured videos:
Alt. Set
Alt. Set 2This airing deleted the 'Give Blood' title card and an alt. version of 'Frog Baseball' was added after the Concrete Blonde video. (There was a banner across the top of the video that announced 'Frog Baseball'). This alt. version featured a new title card and moved the opening TV watching scene to the end of the episode.
MTV Europe[1]
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5 | 3 | 'Balloon' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | March 25, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head visit an aquarium in hopes of plugging some dolphin holes with balloons. Featured videos:
Alt. Set
MTV Europe --Version A--[1]
MTV Europe --Version B--[1]
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Season 2 (1993)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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6 | 1 | 'Scientific Stuff' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 17, 1993 | |
Daria is forced to work with Beavis and Butt-head on a class project, and she sets out to prove that the duo's stupidity can be scientifically explained. Featured videos:
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7 | 2 | 'Good Credit' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 17, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head acquire and use Mr. Anderson's credit card at the local pet shop. This episode marks the first appearance of Mr. Anderson. Featured videos:
At least one early airing of this episode had Jane's Addiction – 'Been Caught Stealing' in place of the Loverboy and Bangles videos[5] | ||||||
8 | 3 | 'Burger World' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 18, 1993 | |
Mr. Anderson waits 20 minutes at the drive-thru (Beavis and Butt-head's place of occupation) for large fries, a pie and a large coffee. They end up giving him a fried mouse and bugs. Featured videos:
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9 | 4 | 'Baby Makes Uh, Three' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 18, 1993 | |
Coach Buzzcut attempts to teach family skills to Beavis and Butt-head's class by giving boy-girl pairs sacks of sugar to 'raise'. Because no one else will work with them, Buzzcut has Beavis and Butt-head play a non-traditional couple – much to the sugar's detriment. This episode marks the first appearance of Coach Buzzcut. Featured videos:
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10 | 5 | 'Beware of the Butt' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 19, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head take an embarrassing picture of a large woman at the drive-in and she seeks revenge. Censorship: This episode was first shown with Butt-head at bringing the letter 'F' very close to 'UCKER' on the sign at the drive-in entrance. In subsequent airings this scene was cut short before they could get close.[5] Featured videos:
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11 | 6 | 'At the Sideshow' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 19, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head attend a freak show and try to score with the Rubber Band Lady. Featured videos:
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12 | 7 | 'Customers Suck' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 20, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head tangle with the burden of the customers who actually want service. Featured videos:
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13 | 8 | 'Sick' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 20, 1993 | |
The duo get a nasty cold, and they try to get a hold of some cough syrup in a futile attempt to get wasted. Featured videos:
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14 | 9 | 'Home Improvement' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 24, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head are hired to paint the trim of Mr. Anderson's house, but severely sniffingpaint thinner causes them to take a more creative – and destructive – approach. Featured videos:
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15 | 10 | 'Way Down Mexico Way' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 26, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head head to Mexico with their friend, Dave, in an effort to obtain illegal fireworks, but instead make a run for the bathroom after a taco stand owner gets revenge on the duo for feeding his dog hot sauce by putting even hotter sauce in their tacos. Featured videos:
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16 | 11 | 'Way Down Mexico Way (Part 2)' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 26, 1993 | |
During the ride back to the U.S., Dave forces Beavis and Butthead to smuggle pills by swallowing condoms full of them – but the duo forget to tie them up and the three of them are getting pulled over by border patrol while B&B are severely intoxicated. This episode part has never been released on home video because of Beavis & Butt-head swallowing condoms full of drugs. Featured videos:
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17 | 12 | 'At the Movies' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | May 31, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go to a drive-in theater, and blow up the bathrooms, raid the concession stand, and mock an incompetent security guard who shoots himself in the foot. Featured videos:
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18 | 13 | 'No Laughing' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 2, 1993 | |
Principal McVicker attempts a radical solution to Beavis and Butt-head's stupidity and continuous laughing in class: they can't laugh at anything they hear for a week. Featured videos:
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19 | 14 | 'No Laughing, Part II' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 2, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head struggle to avoid laughing during sexual education class. Problem is, Buzzcut's teaching sex education, and he's not going to make this task easy for them... | ||||||
20 | 15 | 'The Butt-head Experience' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 7, 1993 | |
During a boring day at Burger World, Butt-head falls asleep and dreams about being in a rock band with Beavis. Featured videos:
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21 | 16 | 'Lawn and Garden' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 9, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head are ordered to prune the top of Mr. Anderson's tree, but take a disastrous shortcut on their job by sawing through the trunk. The tree falls on his house and power lines, which fells utility poles onto parked cars. Featured videos:
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22 | 17 | 'Stewart's House' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 14, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go to Stewart's house to watch a pay-per-view special, but get bored with it and cause chaos inside there. This episode was banned from MTV runs because of the scene where Beavis & Butt-head inhale stove gas and blow up Stewart's kitchen. Featured videos:
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23 | 18 | 'For Better or Verse' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 17, 1993 | |
Mr. Van Driessen makes Beavis and Butt-Head write haikus in class. Featured videos:
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24 | 19 | 'Bedpans & Broomsticks' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 21, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head torment post-heart surgery Billy Bob by making off with his scooter and crashing it. Featured videos:
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25 | 20 | 'Babes R Us' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge, Bo Weinberg | June 23, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head try out for a mud wrestling act at the local strip club, but legal age issues rear their ugly heads once again. Featured videos:
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26 | 21 | 'Yogurt's Cool' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 28, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head buy frozen yogurt, but when refused a refund, they take a messy revenge on the mall. Featured videos:
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27 | 22 | 'Heroes' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | June 30, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go shooting skeet, but end up with something bigger than they originally thought. This episode was banned from MTV reruns because of Butt-Head shooting down an airplane. It has never been released on home video. Featured videos:
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28 | 23 | 'Sign Here' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge | July 6, 1993[2] | |
Mr. Van Driessen gives the class the assignment to petition against a fur shop opening in town. Beavis and Butt-head conclude that 'petitions are stupid' but do get the signatures of 'Hugh G. Rection', 'Ben Dover' and 'Rosie Palm' and her '5 sisters'. This episode marks the third appearance of the character Daria Morgendorffer. Featured videos:
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29 | 24 | 'Washing the Dog' | Mike Judge | David Felton, Mike Judge, Jim Turner | July 8, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head volunteer to wash Mr. Anderson's dog in hopes that he'll leave them money in his will. Featured videos:
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30 | 25 | 'Friday Night' | Mike Judge | Mike Judge, Joe Stillman | July 14, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head hang out at Maxi-Mart in an attempt to pick up chicks and meet a biker chick who uses them to shoplift. Featured videos:
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31 | 26 | 'Be All You Can Be' | Mike Judge | Kristofor Brown, Mike Judge | July 15, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head ponder enlisting in the US Army as 'Major Woody' and 'Private Parts', but end up with some bullets and an active grenade. Featured videos:
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Season 3 (1993–94)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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32 | 1 | 'Comedians' | September 6, 1993 | |
The two go to a comedy club where Butt-Head's stand-up comedy fails. Beavis sets fire to the comedy club after burning newspapers to juggle with. This episode was blamed for the Ohio fire incident. Featured videos:
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33 | 2 | 'Carwash' | September 6, 1993 | |
The two are hired to wash a Chevrolet Corvair in order to pay for new TV remote batteries, but decide to take it for a ride. They stop on a junction, where another car crashes into it. Featured videos:
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34 | 3 | 'Couch-Fishing' | September 7, 1993 | |
The two search their couch for interesting items to use as bait to fish out of their window onto the street while they sit on their couch. They catch a raccoon, Stewart and an elderly woman. The woman leaves. Butt-Head sees a police car outside and hands the fishing rod to Stewart. A policeman kicks the door down to find Stewart holding the fishing rod - and arrests him. Featured videos:
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35 | 4 | 'Incognito' | September 8, 1993 | |
Under threat of possible death from a gun-toting student, the duo assume disguises and pretend to be exchange students. Featured videos:
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36 | 5 | 'Kidnapped' | September 8, 1993 | |
The duo conceive a plot to 'kidnap' clueless Stewart for ransom. Featured videos:
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37 | 6 | 'Kidnapped, Part II' | September 8, 1993 | |
'Kidnapping' Stewart proves to be more than the pair bargained for. Featured videos:
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38 | 7 | 'Naked Colony' | September 13, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head, upon discovering the concept of a nudist colony, attempt to join one. They cannot afford the membership fee, so they climb over the wall. Featured videos:
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39 | 8 | 'Tornado' | September 14, 1993 | |
Upon hearing of a coming tornado, the duo decide to investigate at a trailer park and meet two trailer trash girls who want to have sex with two men before dying in the storm. The boys are blown out of the girls' trailer by the storm. Featured videos:
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40 | 9 | 'Cleaning House' | September 20, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head are hired for a job, this time by their teacher, David Van Driessen, and the duo end up destroying his entire 8-track tape collection. Featured videos:
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41 | 10 | 'Scratch 'n' Win' | September 21, 1993 | |
The duo get a dollar and win $500 by buying a lottery ticket. They then buy a riding mower, which they use to cut a circle-A in the lawn in front of Highland High School. Featured videos:
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42 | 11 | 'Scared Straight' | September 27, 1993 | |
McVicker restarts a Scared Straight program and the duo find themselves having fun in prison. Featured videos:
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43 | 12 | 'Eating Contest' | September 30, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head enter a bratwurst-eating contest. They are unaware of and unable to pay the entrance fee, so they have to work with frogs to pay it. Featured videos:
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44 | 13 | 'Sporting Goods' | October 4, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head are sent by an angry Coach Buzzcut to the local shop because they need to buy athletic supporters (or as they call them 'sip otters') for gym class. The supporters are too big for them, so they are given eyepatches instead, which Daria writes about in the school paper. Featured videos:
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45 | 14 | 'Sperm Bank' | October 7, 1993 | |
The duo sell sperm, at the offices of Dr. Rod Johnson, and buy porn magazines with the money. Featured videos:
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46 | 15 | 'Buff 'n' Stuff' | October 14, 1993 | |
Disgusted with their pathetic physiques, Buzzcut decides to enlist the duo in a weight training course. Featured videos:
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47 | 16 | 'Citizen Butt-head' | October 18, 1993 | |
Bill Clinton is about to visit Highland, so McVicker does his best to keep Beavis and Butt-head preoccupied. He sends the boys off-campus. Featured videos:
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48 | 17 | 'Citizen Butt-head, Part II' | October 18, 1993 | |
Bill Clinton visits Highland, and encounters Beavis and Butt-head, as well as Daria, during an assembly. Featured videos:
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49 | 18 | 'Politically Correct' | October 21, 1993 | |
The duo accidentally run for student office - and receive one vote. Featured videos:
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50 | 19 | 'Ball Breakers' | October 25, 1993 | |
The duo take to bowling as their latest activity, While there, they steal Tom Anderson's bowling ball, put firecrackers in it and drop it from the roof of the building onto the street. Anderson is arrested for the 'bombing'. Featured videos:
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51 | 20 | 'Meet God' | October 28, 1993 | |
The two try to score chicks while hitchhiking—and unwittingly join a cult. Featured videos:
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52 | 21 | 'Meet God, Part II' | October 28, 1993 | |
The duo end up at the cult of a man claiming to be God. Featured videos:
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53 | 22 | 'True Crime' | November 1, 1993 | |
The duo arrive at a local bank, where they find that someone has left their bank card in the ATM. Beavis correctly guesses the card's pin code, and the duo pocket thousands of dollars from the person's account. The incident is captured on CCTV and ends up being shown on America's Most Hated, a spoof of America's Most Wanted. It is revealed that the bank card belongs to a professional basketball player, and the pin code guessed by Beavis was 'Balls'. The police are unsuccessful and draft in an armed team (shown on TV as Coppers, a spoof of Cops) to hunt the duo down and reclaim the money. They raid the house while the boys are sitting on the couch surrounded by the cash - and arrest them.
Featured videos:
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54 | 23 | 'The Trial' | November 4, 1993 | |
After being locked up for egging Tom Anderson's house, Beavis and Butt-head face trial. However, they have no defence, except from Butthead, who relies on his viewing of the Pupils' Court as a way of defence. Beavis and Butt-head are convicted and sentenced to 500 hours of community service, during which they are meant to help other kids; instead they egg his house again with the kids they are meant to be keeping out of trouble. Featured videos:
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55 | 24 | 'The Crush' | November 8, 1993 | |
The two attempt to join Todd's gang, and are made to ride together in the trunk of his car as an initiation test; afterwards he rejects them. The episode's name also refers to the crush that the pair have on Todd in this episode. Featured videos:
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56 | 25 | 'Plate Frisbee' | November 11, 1993 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go to Stewart's house, where they pick up an antique plate belonging to Stewart's mother. They go outside and use it as a frisbee. Featured videos:
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57 | 26 | 'Canoe' | November 15, 1993 | |
Van Driessen takes the duo and Stewart on a canoe trip. At their camp, Beavis and Butt-Head use poison ivy as toilet paper and a bear attacks Van Driessen.
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58 | 27 | 'Young, Gifted, & Crude' | November 25, 1993 | |
The duo ace a placement test by filling out the multiple choice answers at random and are moved up to a gifted class. A student there accidentally damages his brain and is demoted to Beavis and Butt-Head's old class. Featured videos:
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59 | 28 | 'Foreign Exchange' | December 9, 1993 | |
The duo befriend a foreign exchange student from Japan. They make him as dumb as they are, which greatly disappoints his parents when he returns to Japan. Featured videos:
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CS1 | 29 | 'A Very Special Christmas With Beavis and Butt-head' | December 17, 1993 | |
Extended episode. A Christmas-themed episode, featuring all music videos. Featured videos:
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60 | 30 | 'Closing Time' | December 23, 1993 | |
Left in charge of Burger World after closing, Beavis and Butt-head throw burgers across the restaurant. A health inspector arrives, and is disgusted by the state of it. The boys give him fried worms which they cooked. After he leaves, the manager arrives. He is disgusted by the mess, and also eats some of the fried worms. Featured videos:
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61 | 31 | 'Most Wanted' | March 5, 1994 | |
Extended episode. The two are confronted by an escaped killer and end up with tattoos. Featured videos
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Season 4 (1994)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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62 | 1 | 'Wall of Youth' | March 14, 1994 | |
Clark Cobb's latest community venture recruits Beavis and Butt-Head, who graffiti the names of rock bands on various pieces of artwork. The boys claim it is a tribute to the people who died in the Vietnam War. Featured videos
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63 | 2 | 'Cow Tipping' | March 15, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head attempt cow tipping. Butt-Head pushes the cow onto Beavis - trapping him under it. A crazy farmer decides to kill the cow with a chainsaw. Featured videos
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64 | 3 | 'Trouble Urinating' | March 17, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head forget how to urinate, and it is up to Coach Buzzcut to reteach them. He fails, so they are sent to a nurse who solves their problem. Featured videos
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65 | 4 | 'Rabies Scare' | March 18, 1994 | |
Beavis is bitten by a potentially rabid dog and treated by a mean-spirited doctor. Featured videos
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66 | 5 | 'They're Coming to Take Me Away, Huh Huh' | March 21, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head see the school psychiatrist. She questions them and they are subsequently committed. Featured videos
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67 | 6 | 'Jump!' | March 24, 1994 | |
The duo visit to a bank to try to withdraw money, despite not having accounts. The police turn up to arrest the bank officer for embezzlement when he is talking to the boys. The banker goes to the roof of the building, and is followed by the police. After talking to the boys, he decides to give himself up. Featured videos
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68 | 7 | 'Pumping Iron' | March 28, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go to a gym that is offering free trial memberships. Butt-Head repeatedly propels Beavis into a wall using the treadmill. Featured videos:
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69 | 8 | 'Let's Clean it Up' | March 31, 1994 | |
When Beavis and Butt-head are sent to the nurse's office by Mr. Buzzcut to fix their poor hygiene, they find that the young, attractive nurse is out to seduce them. They enjoy receiving a massage from her. They go back to the nurse's office, and are disappointed that the nurse is an ugly, fat, middle-aged woman and that the 'nurse' they saw before was actually a teaching assistant. Featured videos
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70 | 9 | '1-900-BEAVIS' | April 4, 1994 | |
The duo call a phone sex number and later try to set up their own service. Featured videos:
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71 | 10 | 'Water Safety' | April 7, 1994 | |
Swimming lessons by Buzzcut are put into jeopardy by the duo's ineptitude. Featured videos:
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72 | 11 | 'Blackout!' | April 11, 1994 | |
Highland is stricken by a blackout and Beavis and Butt-head try to find a working TV. Featured videos
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73 | 12 | 'Late Night with Butt-head' | April 14, 1994 | |
Butt-head is inspired by David Letterman and gets a shot at hosting his own talk show on the high school's TV channel. Featured videos
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74 | 13 | 'The Final Judgement of Beavis' | April 18, 1994 | |
Beavis runs into a wall, thinking that he can charge through it. He knocks himself out and dreams that he meets St. Peter, who is none too pleased with Beavis's actions while living on Earth. St. Peter refuses him entry to heaven, and Beavis is sent to hell. Butt-Head wakes Beavis by throwing a bucket of water over him. Featured videos
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75 | 14 | 'Pool Toys' | April 21, 1994 | |
Mr. Anderson hires Beavis and Butt-head to help him build an in-ground swimming pool. Anderson's plans go awry when he cannot find the tiles he needs and is left behind in the store after it closes as his car is towed away. Meanwhile, the boys put many gallons of water, six bags of cement, a bulldozer, a shed and themselves into the hole where they are meant to be building the pool - trapping themselves in there. Featured videos
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76 | 15 | 'Madame Blavatsky' | April 25, 1994 | |
The duo visit a 'psychic'. She uses cold reading techniques to deduce that they are high school students who are not A students. She tells Butt-Head that he will become important, rich and famous - and that he will get beautiful women, a mansion, servant and a yacht. Beavis looks into her crystal ball and sees visions of a major war. Featured videos
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77 | 16 | 'Beavis and Butt-head's Island' | April 28, 1994 | |
The duo go to a dress shop in a shopping mall, to 'check out chicks'. They are told to leave the store, then they walk into an artificial lake in the mall when it is dry in order to take coins that people have thrown into it when making wishes. The janitor turns on the water, so they climb onto the lake's island. They are there for three days, thinking they are trapped on the island - until the janitor tells them that they can walk through the shallow water. The boys walk out of the lake, then take a mannequin with a dress on it home with them. Featured videos
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78 | 17 | 'Figure Drawing' | May 2, 1994 | |
The two take a figure drawing class that features a female nude who wins their attention. When she leaves and a male nude takes her place, they are horrified and leave. Featured videos
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79 | 18 | 'Date Bait' | May 5, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head go to a movie theater. Outside, they are scammed by two girls, who tell them they will be their dates if the boys give them their tickets and that the girls will let them in through the exit doors. Hours later, the girls come out with two men - and the boys realize that the girls conned them. They then try to sneak in through the exit, where a member of staff stops them and kicks Butt-Head to the ground. Featured videos
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80 | 19 | 'Butt Is It Art?' | May 9, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head go on a school trip to an art museum, where the duo vandalize two paintings. Featured videos
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81 | 20 | 'Right On' | May 12, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head appear on 'The Gus Baker Show' and ruin both the show and Gus' grassroots presidential campaign in the process. The show is pulled off the air after the duo use coarse slang and Beavis moons the audience. Featured videos
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82 | 21 | 'Manners Suck' | May 21, 1994 | |
A guest teacher Mr. Manners attempts to teach Van Driessen's class, including the show's title characters, manners. Beavis and Butt-Head makes it difficult for him due to their crude nature. This leads to Mr. Manners grabbing the duo and a physical fight between him and Van Driessen. Later, the boys use manners while in the bathroom. Featured videos
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83 | 22 | 'The Pipe of Doom' | May 21, 1994 | |
The duo go to a construction site, where Butt-head climbs into a pipe and gets stuck inside. Beavis unsuccessfully tries to free him. A security guard finds them, contacts the media, and a crew rescue Butt-Head. Beavis stays behind after everyone leaves. He climbs into the same pipe that Butt-Head was stuck in and gets stuck there himself.
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84 | 23 | 'Safe Driving' | July 11, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head's class are shown a State Highway Patrol film by Buzzcut in which two youths, Vinnie and Frankie, drive recklessly and crash into a truck. Beavis and Butt-Head take driving lessons with Mr. Buzzcut, during which Butt-Head drives the car into a truck. Featured videos
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85 | 24 | 'Mr Anderson's Balls' | July 11, 1994 | |
The duo look for a missing kid in order to receive reward money. While walking in a shallow river, a golf ball hits Beavis. They realize they are at a golf course, where they steal golf balls that Tom Anderson is using - then sell them back to him. Featured videos
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86 | 25 | 'Patients Patients' | July 12, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head go to the optometrist and dentist, respectively. After they anger their doctors, Butt-Head's mouth is wired shut and Beavis is given glasses that make his eyesight worse. Featured videos
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87 | 26 | 'Teen Talk' | July 12, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head are forced to go on a TV talk show for teenage delinquents as punishment for vandalizing a display for an unveiling ceremony. They come very close to finally scoring when two girls invite them to make out with them. However, they take too long to join the girls and two other boys get to the girls before them. Beavis becomes angry at missing out on scoring, and a member of the show's staff jumps on him. The duo have to remove asbestos from the cafeteria as a worse punishment. Featured videos
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88 | 27 | 'Crisis Line' | July 13, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head volunteer to run a teen crisis line, during which they take a call from a girl whose boyfriend is pressuring her for sex. The duo advise her to put out to someone at school tomorrow who is polite. The boys decide to be polite to every girl they see, so that they will score with her. The caller recognizes them in the school cafeteria, and her boyfriend throws the duo against the wall.
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89 | 28 | 'Beavis and Butt-head vs. the Vending Machine' | July 13, 1994 | |
The duo attempt to buy pork rinds from a vending machine outside a convenience store. A mechanical failure causes the product not to be released, so they go into the store, but the man in there says that they do not have anything to do with the machine. They decide to get more money, believing that if they put the same amount of money in, two bags of pork finds will be released. Butt-Head begs for money from an old woman, who gives him a dollar. He buys nachos and goes home where he eats them while sitting on the couch and watching television. He has forgotten about Beavis - who is still waiting outside the store for him. Featured videos
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90 | 29 | 'Generation in Crisis' | July 14, 1994 | |
A graduate student in Film and Anthropology visits the school to make a documentary film about problem teenagers. He makes Beavis and Butt-Head the focus of his film. Featured videos
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91 | 30 | 'Radio Sweethearts' | July 14, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-head become guest radio DJs on a rock music station but run afoul of the host when the duo say that a band suck, that he is old and Butt-Head falsely announces on air that the tenth caller to the show will win a free tattoo on his butt. Featured videos
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92 | 31 | 'The Great Cornholio' | July 15, 1994 | |
The duo go to Stewart's house. They do not like the Burritos that his mother gives them. Beavis then frantically eats a huge amount of food that he finds in the cupboard. The duo go to school, where Beavis turns into a hyper-intense, hyperactive Hispanic called 'Cornholio' who walks around the school repeatedly saying that he needs TP for his bunghole. Originally titled: 'Breakfast Burritos'. Featured videos
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93 | 32 | 'Liar! Liar!' | July 15, 1994 | |
The Burger World manager makes the two take a polygraph test after their cash register comes up short. Butt-Head loses consciousness due to holding his breath. Beavis claims that he murdered 16 hippies in 1969. Featured videos
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Season 5 (1994–95)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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94 | 1 | 'Held Back' | October 31, 1994 | |
Due to their stupidity, Beavis and Butt-Head are progressively demoted from their original class down to kindergarten, where they wreak havoc. The principal there gets rid of them by promoting them back to their original class, by falsely claiming that they are the brightest students that they've ever had. Featured videos
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95 | 2 | 'Killing Time' | October 31, 1994 | |
The duo try to find things to do when there is nothing they want to watch on TV. Featured videos
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96 | 3 | 'Beard Boys' | November 1, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head want beards so that chicks will find them manly and cool. They cut hair from their heads, and super-glue it to their faces. They hit on girls at the mall, who reject them. Featured videos
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97 | 4 | 'Choke' | November 2, 1994 | |
While the duo are watching TV, Butt-Head begins to choke on a piece of chicken. They phone 9-1-1; the woman on the phone advises Beavis to perform the Heimlich maneuver on Butt-Head. Beavis does not know what it is, so he goes to Burger World to try to find a sign which gives instructions to it - while Butt-Head collapses onto the floor. Beavis brings back an irrelevant sign from Burger World. Beavis inadvertently saves Butt-Head's life when he treads on him, expelling the chicken from Butt-Head's trachea. As Butt-Head recovers, Beavis picks up the piece of chicken, and chokes on it. Featured videos
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98 | 5 | 'Safe House' | November 3, 1994 | |
While Beavis and Butt-Head are sitting on their couch, Todd kicks the door in. He uses the house as a hideout, telling the duo that he does not want anyone to know where he is. Three young men knock at the door looking for Todd. The duo falsely claim to be in his gang, and are beaten up by the trio. Two policemen knock on the door looking for Todd. They claim he is not there, then threaten to kick the police. They arrest the duo, who are put in a cell with the trio from earlier, who beat them up again. Featured videos
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99 | 6 | 'Hard Sell' | November 4, 1994 | |
The duo start jobs as telemarketers at a call center. Beavis phones a sex chat line from work, after which the duo are fired. Featured videos
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100 | 7 | 'Walkathon' | December 10, 1994 | |
For a 10-mile charity walkathon, the duo unwittingly pledge $10 each per mile to Daria. She pledges them a nickel between them per mile. After they finish, they are asked for the $100 that they owe. They do not have it, so are told to 'walk it off' at a rate of 5c per mile. Featured videos
Notes:100th segments of the series. | ||||
101 | 8 | 'Temporary Insanity' | December 10, 1994 | |
The duo get off the school bus part-way through their journey to school, after Butt-Head falsely claims to the driver that they have an emergency. They walk into a real estate office and are wrongly assumed to be temps. Butt-Head photocopies his buttocks and Beavis types in a manic and random way. The two actual temps arrive, and Beavis and Butt-Head tell them to take a seat. The computer that Beavis is using overheats and he throws water over it. Beavis and Butt-Head are told to come back to work tomorrow. Featured videos
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102 | 9 | 'Dude, a Reward' | December 10, 1994 | |
Beavis finds cameras in bag in a bush. He and Butt-Head take several close-up pictures of themselves, before Beavis repeatedly smashes one of them into the ground. Butt-Head finds a card in the bag which gives the name and address of the photographer who is the owner. They go to his studio to receive a reward. The photographs that the duo took are exhibited. Featured videos
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103 | 10 | 'Walking Erect' | December 13, 1994 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head go to the zoo. They find the guide boring, so they go to the snake house. They spark a panic that a snake has escaped. The lights go out and they wake up with their hands around each other's penises, each wrongly having believed that they were holding a thin snake. Featured videos
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104 | 11 | 'Career Day' | December 16, 1994 | |
The duo do a day's work experience as security guards at the mall. They are led by the mall's security guard, who wants to do a full cavity search on a young woman. Featured videos
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105 | 12 | 'Plastic Surgin' | December 19, 1994 | |
The duo watch a television advertisement for breast enlargement. They decide to go to a plastic surgeon to have their penises enlarged. When they are there, a misunderstanding means that they have their noses enlarged instead. Featured videos
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106 | 13 | 'Take a Number' | December 22, 1994 | |
The duo go to a rock concert. Outside, they meet two girls who are like female versions of them, but the girls reject them for not having tickets. They meet a scalper, but cannot afford the tickets. They stand in line for the portable toilet, but because it is very long, they urinate behind a dumpster, for which they are reprimanded by a security guard. When they finally reach the toilet, Beavis goes in it and Butt-Head tips it onto its side. Featured videos
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107 | 14 | 'Beaverly Buttbillies' | December 26, 1994 | |
The duo decide to dig for oil in their yard, but instead break a sewerage pipe, causing blackwater to gush out of the pipe onto them and the garden. Wrongly assuming it to be oil, they fill their trash can with human waste and try to sell it to Mr. Anderson. He tells them to get the barrel of crap the hell out of here; he slams his front door, tipping the waste onto his front path. Two workmen from the waste department arrive in a van and tell Beavis and Butt-Head that they have fixed the leak, before driving off. Featured videos
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108 | 15 | 'Tainted Meat' | December 29, 1994 | |
While the duo are at Burger World, Beavis' genitals itch a lot, so he scratches them, then cooks a burger. This causes a food poisoning outbreak, which hospitalizes 15 of the restaurant's customers. The restaurant is closed down and the duo are fired. When it re-opens, they are re-hired; a notice mandates that employees must wash their hands before handling meat. Featured videos
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109 | 16 | 'Stewart Moves Away' | January 5, 1995 | |
The duo enter Stewart's house by opening a window and climbing in. They find the house empty, and watch TV. Two burglars break the door down and claim to be moving men. The burglars steal some things and deliberately break some other things, before leaving in a van. Beavis and Butt-Head deliberately cause a great deal of damage to the house and its contents. Stewart and his parents arrive home, horrified at some of their possessions having been stolen and many other things badly damaged. Featured videos
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110 | 17 | 'Top o' the Mountain' | January 25, 1995 | |
The duo go to a hair salon in order to have haircuts so that they can get physically close to an attractive hairdresser's breasts. They are unaware that she is Todd's girlfriend. She washes their hair, then Todd arrives. He gives Beavis and Butt-Head very bad haircuts, cutting off the vast majority of their hair. Featured videos
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111 | 18 | 'Party' | January 29, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch a TV report on a parties, so they attempt to throw a party as a way to get chicks. However, no girls turn up. Stewart and his two nerdy friends from a youth group arrive and talk amongst themselves about MacGyver and Knight Rider. Todd and a member of his gang arrive and throw all the boys out, in order to have their own party there. Todd's party cause a lot of damage to the house. This episode aired during Super Bowl XXIX's halftime show on ABC. Featured videos
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112 | 19 | 'Wet Behind the Rears' | January 29, 1995 | |
During physical education, the duo are sitting on the sports field. A javelin impales Beavis' right hand to the ground. They try to avoid showering with the rest of the class, but Buzzcut demands that they do. They are undressing when McVicker sets the fire alarm off. Instead of showering, they are embarrassingly forced by Buzzcut to exit the school in just their underwear. All the other students are already outside, fully clothed. They, as well as Buzzcut and McVicker, laugh at Beavis and Butt-Head. Featured videos
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113 | 20 | 'Bad Dog' | February 9, 1995 | |
The duo watch a television advertisement encouraging people to adopt a dog from a shelter. They decide to, so they go to a dog shelter. They select the most violent, out-of-control dog. On their way home, Beavis throws a stick for the dog. The dog runs past the stick and does not return. Featured videos
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114 | 21 | 'Lightning Strikes' | February 16, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch an episode of a television documentary called Great American Minds, which is about Benjamin Franklin. They see Franklin fly a kite with a key attached to it during a storm, so they do likewise. Their kite soon becomes stuck in a tree. The tree is struck by lightning, and falls on them. It is then struck again. The duo are admitted to the emergency department of a hospital. A representative of a media watchdog visits them in hospital, where she asks Butt-Head what he was watching on TV. She is interviewed on TV, where she says that the duo were watching rockmusic videos, and implies that was what encouraged them to fly the kite in a storm. Featured videos
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115 | 22 | 'Dream On' | February 23, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head fall asleep on the couch while The Today Show is on. The duo dream that they are on various TV shows. Featured videos
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116 | 23 | 'Candy Sale' | April 8, 1995 | |
'Mr. Manners' returns to Highland High. He hands the students 100 candy bars each to sell door-to-door for $2 each. Buzzcut tells the class that they are competing against other classes. Beavis and Butt-Head together sell one each to Mr. Anderson for half-price. The duo then sell the rest to each other and eat them. Mr. Candy is angry with the duo for only having $2 in exchange for all their candy bars, and grabs them. Buzzcut comes in and the two men physically fight. Featured videos
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117 | 24 | 'Animation Sucks' | April 8, 1995 | |
When Van Driessen challenges his class to make animated films. One student creates a scene of a flower growing, blooming, then dying - which she is very pleased with. Beavis and Butt-Head draw 500 drawings of dead people, which create a scene in which two characters resembling themselves are repeatedly stabbed with tridents. One character is grabbed by a dog and the other has a plane crash into him. Van Driessen is pleased with both short films. Featured videos
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118 | 25 | 'What's the Deal' | June 5, 1995 | |
Tom Anderson employs the duo to do some work in his garden, which they are doing badly. He thinks that he can win money from them by having them join a poker game which he going to play with two other men. Beavis and Butt-Head do not know how to play the game, yet they win by luck alone. Anderson gives them plastic chips in exchange for the money that they won, which the duo think is a good deal. Featured videos
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119 | 26 | 'The History of Women' | June 5, 1995 | |
Van Driessen tells his class to each write an essay on the woman whom they admire most, for Women's History Month. Cassandra chooses k.d. lang. Beavis and Butt-Head initially both choose Beavis' mother. Van Driessen rejects that their weak efforts, so the duo go to the school library. The librarian recommends books about various women - as they try to look up her skirt while she is on a stepladder. They tell Van Driessen that she is the woman whom they admire most. He is disappointed with the again, and makes them return books to the library's shelves. While there, they put books in the wrong places, then look up the skirt of the same librarian. Featured videos
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120 | 27 | 'To the Rescue' | June 6, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are sitting in a field, when a light aircraft crashes nearby. They go to the nearby road and stop a car, whose driver calls the police and an ambulance. The pilot is airlifted to hospital, where he makes a full recovery. The story is re-enacted in Rescue 911. Featured videos
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121 | 28 | 'I Dream of Beavis' | June 7, 1995 | |
The duo watch I Dream of Jeannie, then rummage through a dumpster. Beavis finds a bottle containing a dead mouse, expecting it will grant him wishes. He brings it to school, where the classroom is evacuated because of its smell. Due to none of his wishes being answered, and the smell it, Beavis leaves the bottle in the school cafeteria. Featured videos
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122 | 29 | 'Pregnant Pause' | June 8, 1995 | |
Beavis fears that he is pregnant, due to having some of the symptoms and not realising that males cannot be impregnated. He uses a pregnancy test, and believes that it turning yellow when he urinates on it indicates a positive result. After defecating, he realizes that he is not pregnant. Featured videos
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123 | 30 | 'Here Comes the Bride's Butt' | June 9, 1995 | |
The duo attend a local church wedding, uninvited, in the belief that the attendees get to make out with the bride. Butt-Head objects to the wedding on the grounds that the groom is a dork. The duo try to kiss the bride, and are ejected by the ushers. Outside the church, Butt-Head says that being married would suck, due to spending your life with the same person. Featured videos
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124 | 31 | 'Screamers' | July 10, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch a horror film featuring screaming, the duo scream in the street, then knock on Tom Anderson's door and scream at him when he answers. When they scream at a policeman in the street, he grabs them and screams at them. The duo go home and phone Stewart and scream at him. They then phone the police and scream at them. Featured videos
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125 | 32 | 'Beavis, Can You Spare a Dime?' | July 10, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head encounter a beggar in the street, and attempt to become beggars themselves. A policeman move the duo along and they beg with the beggar. They are much more successful as a trio. After a passer-by wrongly assumes that they are his sons, he pretends that they are. Featured videos
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126 | 33 | 'Skin Trade' | July 11, 1995 | |
The duo ar eat a landfill site, where Beavis picks up a rotting animal carcass. He wants them to keep it as a pet, but Butt-Head points out that he cannot do so because it is dead. Butt-Head thinks it a good idea to attempt to sell the animal for its clothing. The shops they attempt to sell it to refuse to buy it. They fail in their attempt to pick up two girls while Beavis has the carcass on his head. Featured videos
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127 | 34 | 'Oil Change' | July 12, 1995 | |
The manager at Burger World tells Beavis and Butt-Head that customers have complained about their fries. He looks at the fryer, which is badly polluted and contains a grasshopper and a Band-Aid. He orders the duo to change the oil. They buy motor oil from an automobile repair shop on credit - and use that as the replacement oil. Featured videos
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128 | 35 | 'Buttniks' | July 13, 1995 | |
The duo visit a beatnik poetry night at a café. Butt-Head's poetry is not popular, and his performance is cut short. After drinking cappuccinos, Beavis' alter egoCornholio resurfaces and he takes to the stage with manic ramblings which are well-received. Featured videos
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129 | 36 | 'Bang the Drum Slowly Dumbass' | August 7, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are walking through the woods, when they encounter a men's group headed by Mr. Van Driessen. They are a four men who are on a monthly drum-banging se They invite the duo to join them, which they do. Beavis bangs the drum while manically expressing his frustration at being always rejected by girls. The group at first respond well to him, but when Beavis says that he wants to bulldoze the school, Van Driessen's three followers leave, which Van Driessen is disappointed with. At school the next day, Van Driessen asks Butt-Head asks where Beavis is. Beavis is still in the woods, talking and banging the drum. Featured videos
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130 | 37 | 'Another Friday Night' | August 7, 1995 | |
The duo go to Maxi-Mart, where the store owner complains to them that they come there every Friday night, stand there for six hours, scare off his customers and only ever buy a soda. He goes into the back room to get dimes for the cash register. Butt-Head decides to serve two girls who are at the counter. From the back room, the owner sees Butt-Head at the register, and phones the police, telling that he is being robbed and assumes that they are armed. The police arrive outside and a standoff ensues. The police ask Butt-Head what his demands are, and he asks for food. The owner tells Beavis and Butt-Head that he has a gun and will use it on them if they come there again, then pushes them outside. The police search them for weapons and do not find any. The duo tell them about the owner's threat. The police enter, arrest the owner and beat him. Featured videos
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131 | 38 | 'Tired' | August 8, 1995 | |
The duo find a truck tire at a filling station. They push it up a steep hill, Beavis climbs in it, and Butt-Head pushes it down with Beavis in it. It crosses a busy highway, causing Todd to spill beer on his jeans while driving and other cars to crash into each other. It then crosses a field, where it flattens Van Driessen and his camera. It bounces on a car which is on bricks, dislodging it and crushing the person under the car. The tire then hits a lever next to railroad tracks, causing a train to derail. The tire is stopped due to colliding with the back of a minivan in a parking lot. Beavis then climbs out of it. He is joined by Butt-Head, then confronted by Todd, who beats Beavis up. Featured videos
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132 | 39 | 'Close Encounters' | August 9, 1995 | |
McVicker tries an unorthodox approach to discipline Beavis and Butt-Head, sending them to a sensitivity encounter group therapy session. The leader tells them that he will get them in touch with his feelings. He gives Beavis a bat and pillow and tells him to pretend the pillow is Butt-Head and let his anger flow. Beavis repeatedly beats the pillow, breaking it open while screaming die! The duo go back to McVicar's office, where they tell him they are going to express their feelings. The duo then use McVicar's plant as a toilet. Featured videos
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133 | 40 | 'Womyn' | August 10, 1995 | |
On her last day teaching them, a feministteaching assistant expresses her anger at how sexist Beavis and Butt-Head's class is. She invites the female students to go to a local meeting of a feminist group, where they will discuss their plans to picket the movie theater because it shows films featuring actresses who have breast augmentation. The duo decide to go to the meeting, thinking that they can score with some of the attendees. The group are hostile to them, and beat them up. Featured videos
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134 | 41 | 'Premature Evacuation' | September 11, 1995 | |
A phone call is made to the school by a man claiming that a bomb was placed in the school cafeteria the previous night. All of Highland High's staff and students are told by McVicker over the school's public address system to evacuate the school. Beavis and Butt-Head stay at school and go to the cafeteria to search for the bomb. Beavis finds a cooking timer, and wrongly assumes that it is a bomb. He and Beavis fight over it, until a man from the bomb squad tells them what it is. No bomb is found. Featured videos
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135 | 42 | 'Whiplash' | September 11, 1995 | |
The duo watch a television advertisement in which an attorney, Joe Adler, encourages people to claim compensation for their injuries. In an attempt to win compensation for a staged injury, Butt-Head obstructs the road by sitting in the road on his bicycle while Beavis is a passenger on the school bus. The bus driver brakes suddenly; the bus crashes into Butt-Head and causes Beavis to be thrown to the front of the bus. The duo go to Adler's office to ask him to get them compensation. Adler tells the duo that they are going to sue the school system, the city, the state and the driver. The police arrest Adler for 257 counts of fraud. One officer grabs and interrogates the duo. Featured videos
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136 | 43 | 'Spare Me' | September 12, 1995 | |
Two attractive girls whose car has a flat tire ask the duo to change the wheel for the one in their trunk, saying that they will take them for a ride. Daria is walking past and helps them do so. The boys think that they will score with the girls, but they drive off without them. The duo encounter the same girls and car further up the road, their engine having overheated. The girls again ask them to fix the car, using the same ruse. Featured videos
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137 | 44 | 'Patsies' | September 13, 1995 | |
During detention with Buzzcut, he orders the duo to join Mr. Graham and his group 'Positive-Acting Teens'. PAT take the duo to do community service together, picking up litter by the side of the road. The duo throw a hubcap to each other across the road. It hits a passing truck and rebounds against Mr. Graham's head. Butt-Head steals his wallet. Featured videos
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138 | 45 | 'Murder Site' | September 14, 1995 | |
The duo are watching Baywatch, when the show is interrupted by a news bulletin about a fratricide in a nearby apartment. They walk to the scene of the murder, past a police officer and through the police tape. In the room where the murder occurred, Butt-Head repeatedly calls him 'buttknocker', and they fight. The police enter the room and arrest Beavis. At the police station, Butt-Head refuses to fill in a form about Beavis threatening to kill him, which would be needed to press charges. The police therefore release Beavis. Featured videos
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139 | 46 | 'Spanish Fly' | October 9, 1995 | |
The duo are at a gas station, where Beavis blows air from the air hose up an attractive young woman's dress and is disappointed that it did not lead to him having sex with her. Butt-Head buys Spanish fly from the station's restroom and they try to use it to score with girls in the school cafeteria. Beavis distracts a girl while Butt-Head puts Spanish fly in her taco. She does not notice, but loses her appetite and throws the taco in the garbage can. The duo try the same trick with a milk carton which is next to another girl. They are disappointed when she tells them that it is not hers. It belongs to a tall muscular boy, Tommy, who drinks it. When Tommy gets an erection while wrestling Beavis in the school gym, Beavis kicks him in the groin and leaves the gym. Featured videos
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140 | 47 | 'Sexual Harassment' | October 9, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head's class are taught about sexual harassment by Van Driessen. The duo claim that a female classmate, Kimberley, is sexually harassing them by giving them erections. They hire Joe Adler to sue her. He tries to also sue her parents, Van Driessen and the school system, for sexual harassment. The judge stops the case and throws it out for being ridiculous. Featured videos
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141 | 48 | 'Bus Trip' | October 10, 1995 | |
Mr. Van Driessen leads the duo on a field trip in a school bus. Van Driessen moves them to the front of the bus after they moon against the window. When the driver brakes suddenly while on a winding mountain road, Van Driessen is thrown through the windshield and down a steep cliff. He is airlifted on a stretcher by helicopter. Featured videos
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142 | 49 | 'Green Thumbs' | October 11, 1995 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head make counterfeit money using a photocopier. They try to use it to pay for food in Maxi Mart. The man behind the counter can see that it is fake, so he rips it up and ejects the duo. Featured videos
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143 | 50 | 'Steamroller' | October 12, 1995 | |
Tom Anderson rents a steamroller, which he leaves running while unattended. Beavis and Butt-Head take a destructive ride on it along a street and into school. Featured videos
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Season 6 (1995–96)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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HW1 | 1 | 'Bungholio: Lord of the Harvest' | October 31, 1995 | |
Extended episode; Halloween Special: The duo attempt trick-or-treating. They are unsuccessful due to being too old and not wearing costumes. They knock on Tom Anderson's front door, then sneak in when he is distracted by taking a phone call. Beavis devours his bowl of candy, then turns into Cornholio. Todd puts Butt-Head in the trunk of his car; Todd lets him out in a field and drives off. Beavis walks into a field and encounters a farmer who hangs Beavis on a hook attached to the inside of his barn. Beavis awakens on the hook. The farmer and Butt-Head open the barn doors and approach him. They each pick up a chainsaw, turn it on and move closer to him. Featured videos:
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144 | 2 | 'The Mystery of Morning Wood' | November 20, 1995 | |
Van Driessen sets the class a weekend assignment to solve something that is a mystery to them. Beavis and Butt-Head attempt to learn why they get erections in the morning, but do not work out the cause. Featured videos:
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145 | 3 | 'US History' | November 20, 1995 | |
Van Driessen's class have to each give an oral report about a historical American figure to the rest of the class. Daria presents a conspiracy theory of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Beavis does his oral report about a meal he and Butt-Head ate last week at Burger World, which Van Driessen says is the worst he has heard. Butt-Head does his report on the time that he kicked Beavis in the nads, which Van Driessen is very disappointed with. He gives them each a D-. Featured videos:
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146 | 4 | 'Feel a Cop' | November 21, 1995 | |
The duo watch a television news report about female police officers posing as street prostitutes in Highland. They fail to understand the report and approach an undercover cop, who leads the duo to her motel room which is being used to trap prospective clients, as her two colleagues listen and record the conversation from another room in the building. She becomes frustrated at the duo's use of vague slang, and a colleague of hers walks in and stops the interaction due to her entrapping them. Featured videos:
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147 | 5 | 'Date Watchers' | November 22, 1995 | |
The duo see Mr. Van Driessen on a date with a young woman at a cafe. They follow the couple to his house and watch them through his window. The duo are disappointed when he pulls down the shade, so they ring his doorbell and tell him that they want to watch them doing it. The duo push their way into the house. Van Driessen drives her back to her place in his van. Featured videos:
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148 | 6 | 'Blood Pressure' | November 23, 1995 | |
The duo go to a supermarket, where they see a blood pressure testing machine, and assume that it is a ride. Beavis puts his right arm in it and it clamps itself so tightly that he cannot remove it. Butt-Head fails in his attempts to free him. A pharmacist frees Beavis, then gives him a bottle of medication for his hypertension. When Beavis tries to open the bottle, he accidentally kicks it into a storm drain. Featured videos:
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CS2A | 7 | 'Huh-Huh-Humbug' | December 19, 1995 | |
Part one of two. Beavis annoys his manager at Burger World by cooking a mouse. Beavis has a dream in which he is the Scrooge-like manager there and Principal McVicker is one of his employees. Beavis is visited by the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future – Tom Anderson, Mr. Van Driessen and Coach Buzzcut – while trying to watch a porno on VHS. | ||||
CS2B | 8 | 'It's a Miserable Life' | December 19, 1995 | |
Conclusion. In this parody of It's A Wonderful Life, the duo are visited by his guardian angel, who shows Butt-Head that everyone in Highland would have had a better life if he had not been born. In the version of Highland in which Butt-Head had not been born, Anderson's yard is in a much better condition, Burger World has more customers and McVicker still has his hair. Beavis and Stewart are volunteers at a homeless shelter. | ||||
149 | 9 | 'Babysitting' | January 14, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are hired to babysit a neighbor's two young children. They are useless at the job, and go to sleep in the children's beds. When the mother returns, she is horrified and ejects the duo without paying them. Featured videos:
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150 | 10 | 'Vidiots' | January 14, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch an episode of talk show Hiraldo, in which the topic is dating services. The duo go to a video dating service, where they are greeted by an attractive woman to whom Beavis gives his name as Hiraldo. She is attracted to Beavis, but he fails to recognize that. The duo receive calls from women on the phone and at the door, but they fail to understand that they are members of the dating service, and reject them. Featured videos:
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151 | 11 | 'Stewart Is Missing' | January 15, 1996 | |
Stewart's mother knocks on the door while the duo are watching TV to tell them that she does not know where he is. The duo help Stewart's parents find him. The duo open their closet to get their flashlight. There they find Stewart, whom they had shut in there hours earlier and forgotten about. Featured videos:
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152 | 12 | 'Gang of Two' | January 16, 1996 | |
Todd and a member of his gang grab and threaten the duo outside Maxi-Mart, after which they attempt to form their own gang. Stewart asks Beavis and Butt-Head to join their gang. They tell him that he has to break a milk crate in order to be admitted. While doing so at the back of the store, the owner catches him and drags him through the store to the front. The owner grabs Butt-Head and hits him, as Todd arrives and does the same to Beavis. Featured videos:
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153 | 13 | 'Sprout' | January 17, 1996 | |
Van Driessen challenges his class to grow plants, so Beavis and Butt-Head attempt to grow some corn in order to make nachos. The duo become impatient with the plant's slow growth, and repeatedly stamp on it. Featured videos:
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154 | 14 | 'Prank Call' | January 28, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head receive a new phone book. They make a man named Harry Sachz (pronounced 'hairy sacks') very angry by repeatedly prank calling him. They unwittingly lead him to Stewart's house, where Harry breaks their front door in, walks in and grabs Stewart. He lets him go, then grabs Mr. Stevenson. Harry holds Mr. Stevenson upside down, puts his head in the toilet and flushes it. He then inserts the Stevensons' phone into Mr. Stevenson's rectum. An ambulance takes Mr. Stevenson away. The duo prank call Harry again. Featured videos:
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155 | 15 | 'No Service' | January 28, 1996 | |
Burger World is very busy, so Beavis is called in to work. Butt-Head later arrives and attempts to ruin his day by being a difficult customer. Featured videos:
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156 | 16 | 'Yard Sale' | March 4, 1996 | |
A friend of Tom Anderson's phones him to ask him to man his bar for an hour while he takes his wife to the hospital. Beavis and Butt-Head take are hired by Anderson to operate his yard sale, paying them in the form of a motorized hedge trimmer and 10% of the takings. Anderson is horrified when he walks into his house to see that the duo have sold virtually everything in his house for a small fraction of their value. Featured videos:
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157 | 17 | 'P.T.A.' | March 4, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head attend a P.T.A. meeting that results in a brawl between McVicker and several of the parents. Featured videos:
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158 | 18 | 'Substitute' | March 5, 1996 | |
Van Driessen sits on his desk in the lotus position. He falls to the floor and is injured. His temporary replacement, Jim, is easy-going and inspires most of the class to improve their academic performance – except for Beavis and Butt-Head. The duo repeatedly slam a locker door in the hall, causing cracks in the wall it shares with the classroom. When Van Driessen returns, the cracks worsen, and the blackboard shatters - falling on him. Featured videos:
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159 | 19 | 'Shopping List' | March 6, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are hired to shop by a constipated and injured Tom Anderson. After doing the shopping, they take the it home and forget to return to his house. Featured videos:
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160 | 20 | 'Buy Beer' | March 7, 1996 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch a television commercial for non-alcoholic beer. They buy some from Maxi-Mart, failing to understand what the drink is. They sit outside and drink it, expecting to get drunk. They are approached by a police officer who gives them a sobriety test, which they fail. He then sees that the beer is non-alcoholic, realizes they are stupid rather than drunk, and drives off. Featured videos:
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Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (1996)[edit]
Title | Directed by | Screenplay by | Release date (U.S.) |
---|---|---|---|
Beavis and Butt-Head Do America | Mike Judge | Mike Judge & Joe Stillman | December 20, 1996 |
Season 7 (1997)[edit]
Starting this season, the show switched to a 7-minute short act, with most of the shorts running approximately 5 minutes with one music video at the end.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | |
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161 | 1 | 'Butt, Butt, Hike' | January 26, 1997 | |
The duo are outside, fighting over the remote control, when they are invited to join a football game. The duo have no idea how to play, and Butt-Head is quickly injured. Beavis kicks two players, then takes the ball and runs with it way beyond the playing field. This episode aired on MTV during Super Bowl XXXI's halftime show on Fox. Featured videos:
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162 | 2 | 'Vaya Con Cornholio' | January 26, 1997 | |
Beavis turns into Cornholio due to drinking a large amount of Burger World's new caffeine-laden drink 'Volt Cola' (a parody of Jolt Cola). A man from the immigration department arrives and mistakes him for an illegal immigrant and Beavis is deported to Mexico. Featured videos:
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163 | 3 | 'Evolution Sucks' | January 31, 1997 | |
During a lesson by Van Driessen about evolution, Beavis and Butt-Head dream of being cavemen. In the dream, they hit each other with clubs. Featured videos:
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164 | 4 | 'Ding-Dong-Ditch' | January 31, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head have trouble getting Ding Dong Ditch down correctly. Featured videos:
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165 | 5 | 'Just for Girls' | January 31, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head go to Mrs. Dickey's girls-only sex education class. They are initially told to leave, but Van Driessen convinces her to let them stay. The class watch a short film about a 16-year-old girl, Cathy, who is impregnated by her boyfriend. The duo are disgusted at seeing Cathy give birth - and leave the room. Featured videos:
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166 | 6 | 'A Very Special Episode' | February 7, 1997 | |
In this very special episode, Beavis and Butt-Head are walking along the street when an injured baby bird falls in front of them. Mr. Stevenson takes them to a vet, who tells the duo that it cannot survive. At home, Beavis takes some live worms out of his pants pocket, chews them and feeds them to the bird. Butt-Head launches it into the air; it flies for a few seconds, then falls to the ground. Featured videos:
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167 | 7 | 'Dumbasses Anonymous' | February 7, 1997 | |
Buzzcut introduces an alcoholic to the class to convince them to stay sober. Beavis and Butt-Head go to the Rolling Hills Treatment Center, the clinic that he spends a lot of time at. There, the duo attend an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. The duo think they can get beer there. They suggest getting a drink, and the group's members go to a bar. They get drunk - except for the duo, who are refused service by the barman due to being underage. Featured videos:
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168 | 8 | 'Underwear' | February 14, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head visit a new lingerie store in the mall. After standing outside the store for hours, they enter. They feel up the merchandise in the belief that doing so is like feeling up the customers who will be wearing the items. Featured videos:
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169 | 9 | 'Head Lice' | February 14, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are scratching their heads in class. Buzzcut tells them that they have head lice, and sends them to the school nurse, who finds them in their hair. Instead of following the nurse's advice, the duo break open a bug zapper and touch the element in order to kill the lice - electrocuting themselves in the process. Beavis also has pubic lice, so he puts his genitals into the zapper, electrocuting himself again. Featured videos:
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170 | 10 | 'Cyber-Butt' | February 21, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head talk Stewart into helping them look up pornography on the school computer. A librarian sees the three looking at porn and the three are sent to McVicker, who gives them each detention for the rest of the year and bans them from using the computer. Featured videos:
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171 | 11 | 'Nose Bleed' | February 21, 1997 | |
Butt-Head punches Beavis, causing him a severe nosebleed. Butt-Head makes several useless attempts to help him, before plugging Beavis' nose with a tampon in each nostril. Featured videos:
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172 | 12 | 'Citizens Arrest' | February 28, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head are working at Burger World, when a man who says he has a gun tries to rob it. A police officer walks in and congratulates the duo on making a citizen's arrest. The duo then think that they can then tell people what to do. Featured videos:
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173 | 13 | 'Pierced' | February 28, 1997 | |
After being beaten up outside school by an older student who is wearing a skull earring in his left ear, Beavis and Butt-Head decide to get their ears pierced. They want to have them pierced at Pencer Gifts, but are refused piercings by the girl behind the counter due to not having their parents' permission. They pierce their right ears themselves at home. They go back to Pencer Gifts later the same day, but decide not to have earrings after the same member of staff informs them that a ring in the right ear only indicates homosexuality. Featured videos:
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174 | 14 | 'A Great Day' | March 7, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head have a great day when they find out school is closed because it is a public holiday. They then find porn magazines in a dumpster, see crashes between two cars and a truck and see two dogs having sex. The duo are paid $21 by a strange man to not mention evidence of a murder he has recently committed. The duo buy nachos and a soda at Maxi-Mart, outside which Todd drives past and takes the rest of their money, then crashes into another car and repeatedly punches the driver. Featured videos:
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175 | 15 | 'On Strike' | March 7, 1997 | |
The duo watch a TV news report about baseball players on strike, so they refuse to work during their shift at Burger World. A journalist speaks to them outside, then Beavis and Butt-Head's manager ends their strike after an hour when he calls them in and makes them clean the tables. Featured videos:
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176 | 16 | 'Follow Me' | March 14, 1997 | |
While watching TV, Beavis decides to mimic Butt-Head. He continues to do so as they walk down the street and punch each other, then are each hit by vehicles while walking into the road. They see Todd kissing his girlfriend in his car while it is parked in front of Maxi Mart and tell him that Beavis wants his chick. The duo are beaten up by Todd, who then drives away. Featured videos:
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177 | 17 | 'Nothing Happening' | March 14, 1997 | |
After the TV goes out due to a damaged wire outside the house, Beavis and Butt-Head fall asleep on the couch. A plane crashes into their school, police chase a fugitive and shoot him; Stewart causes an explosion in his house using his chemistry set and the ambulance picking him up crashes into the P.A.T. van. Repairmen fix the wire and the duo wake up and see a news report about the events. Featured videos:
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178 | 18 | 'Take a Lap' | March 28, 1997 | |
After seeing an infomercial by muscular workout guru Peter Small, Beavis and Butt-Head attempt to get fit. However, they find it difficult and soon give up. The duo see a news report stating that Peter collapsed while filming another infomercial and died of heart failure. Featured videos:
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179 | 19 | 'Shortcuts' | March 28, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head miss the school bus home and get lost trying to walk home via what Butt-Head says will be a shortcut. They walk to the other side of town before being given a lift back to Highland High in the back of a pickup truck. The next day, they stay on the bus until the end of the route and Butt-Head claims to know a shortcut. Featured videos:
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180 | 20 | 'Bride of Butt-Head' | July 18, 1997 | |
After seeing a magazine advertisement, Butt-Head phones a company that provides Russianmail-order brides. A Russian woman, Katya, who is already in Texas and has recently left the man whom the company set her up with, is sent to Butt-Head. She is disappointed with him and he is disappointed that she will not allow him to touch her. Katya gets into Todd's car, where she has sex with him. Featured videos:
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181 | 21 | 'Special Delivery' | July 18, 1997 | |
Burger World attempts to launch a delivery service, but Beavis and Butt-Head make their first delivery to the wrong address. The manager ends the delivery service on its first night. Featured videos:
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182 | 22 | 'Woodshop' | July 25, 1997 | |
The duo use a table saw in wood shop at school to cut the teacher's possessions in two, and Beavis uses it to cut his right index finger off. After it is reattached, he breaks it off again by using it to pick his nose. Featured videos:
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183 | 23 | 'T.V. Violence' | July 18, 1997 | |
When the Stevensons have a new satellite dish installed, the duo attempt to watch several violent programs with Stewart. His mother prevents them from doing so and insists that they only watch children's television series. Featured videos:
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184 | 24 | 'Canned' | August 1, 1997 | |
While the duo are standing on a highway's central reservation, Beavis sees an unopened can of root beer at the edge of the highway. He crosses it to pick up the can, causing several vehicles to crash. They shake the can many times, then tie it to Beavis' bicycle. He rides with it with Butt-Head riding alongside, until the can becomes caught in Butt-Head's front wheel, causing them to crash to the ground outside Maxi-Mart. Todd runs over their bikes, then puts the duo and the can in the trunk of his car. Todd and his accomplice hold the duo upside down and shake them, then Todd drives off with his acquaintance. Butt-Head opens the can - which fizzes slightly - then Beavis drinks from it. Featured videos:
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185 | 25 | 'Garage Band' | August 1, 1997 | |
After watching a rock star on being interviewed on television, the duo attempt to start a band. He says that he started by playing in someone's garage, so the duo try to play in Van Driessen's garage. Beavis plays Van Driessen's guitar, then smashes it into pieces. The duo go to a venue that needs a band, claiming that they are a band called Metallica. The duo argue and go home. The audience are angry at Metallica not arriving. Featured videos:
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186 | 26 | 'Impotence' | August 8, 1997 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head watch a TV ad for Leibowitz Impotence Clinic. They wrongly believe that being impotent means being unable to get sex, and go there thinking that they will receive advice about how to score. Dr Leibowitz is puzzled because the duo are easily aroused. The nurse refuses to examine them because they have erections. Leibowitz prescribes them saltpeter. Featured videos:
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187 | 27 | 'The Miracle That Is Beavis' | August 8, 1997 | |
The duo watch a self-help guru on TV advertise his appearance at a bookshop that night. Beavis goes there, meets him and is inspired to be more assertive. Featured videos:
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188 | 28 | 'Shopping Cart' | August 15, 1997 | |
Butt-Head is in a shopping cart being pushed through a parking lot by Beavis. A car backs into Butt-Head and the driver bribes him $10 to not tell anyone about the accident. The duo reason that they can make more money the same way, so Butt-Head pushes Beavis in the cart behind another car. However, the driver backs into him, then drives off. Beavis pushes Butt-Head in the cart behind a van, which reverses into Beavis and drives off. The duo sit in the cart behind Tom Anderson's motorhome. He backs into it and it attaches to the cart. The cart is flung off as they go around a bend and the cart crashes into a tree. Featured videos:
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189 | 29 | 'Inventors' | August 15, 1997 | |
The duo watch a TV ad inviting ideas for new inventions. Butt-Head bends a wire hanger and they unsuccessfully try to sell it door-to-door as a new invention, the Buttscratcher 2000. Featured videos:
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190 | 30 | 'Die Fly, Die!' | August 22, 1997 | |
The duo are annoyed by a fly in the lounge, so they try to kill it using a hammer, spade, hedge trimmer and baseball bat, causing a great deal of damage to the wall, toilet and couch. Butt-Head brings a full can of garbage into the room and tips it over to attract the fly to it so that they can kill it with fly spray. Butt-Head sprays so much that they are both knocked out. When they regain consciousness, Beavis throws the spray can, breaking the window. A swarm of flies enters through the hole. Featured videos:
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191 | 31 | 'Drinking Butt-ies' | August 22, 1997 | |
Todd beats up the duo outside Maxi-Mart. He drives off to a party; the duo follow him on their bikes. They wait outside the house for six hours until a drunken Todd comes outside and talks nonsense while sitting with them on the house's front steps. All three fall asleep there. When Todd wakes, he threatens them, then drives off. Featured videos:
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192 | 32 | 'Work Is Death' | November 4, 1997 | |
The duo find out from their manager at Burger World about the existence of workers' compensation, In an attempt to become eligible to claim, Butt-Head hits Beavis several times. When their boss tells them that does not make them eligible, Butt-Head tries to injure Beavis in ways that appear to be accidental and work-related. They fail, but unintentionally cause their boss to have an accident in the kitchen. Featured videos
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193 | 33 | 'Breakdown' | November 4, 1997 | |
McVicker is admitted to a mental hospital after being driven insane by the duo vandalizing the teachers' lounge. Van Driessen, Beavis and Butt-Head visit him together, during which time McVicker tries to strangle Beavis. Featured videos:
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194 | 34 | 'Graduation Day' | November 18, 1997 | |
Van Driessen attempts to help his class gain self-esteem by holding a mock graduation, but Beavis and Butt-Head think that it is real. After the 'ceremony', the duo walk out of class and go to Maxi-Mart, where they sit outside and eat nachos from their mortar boards. Featured videos:
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195 | 35 | 'The Future of Beavis and Butt-Head' | November 18, 1997 | |
The two visit a career counselor and consider different career paths. For Butt-Head: porn video store owner and TV commercial spokesman promoting beer. For Beavis: wrecking ball operator (Beavis imagines himself wrecking the school with Principal McVicker trying to stop him) and militarycommanding officer. Featured videos:
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196 | 36 | 'Speech Therapy' | November 18, 1997 | |
McVicker is horrified when the duo walk into his office, having returned after their two-week suspension. The boys are supposed to be in Van Driessen's class, but he has taken his class to the botanical garden. McVicker sends them to a speech therapy class, where they misinterpret sentences that the teacher tells them to repeat. | ||||
197 | 37 | 'Leave It to Beavis' | November 25, 1997 | |
A Leave It to Beaverparody in which Beavis portrays The Beaver (as 'The Beavis'), Butt-Head is a crude Ward, Mrs. Stevenson is an oblivious June, and Todd is a sociopathic Eddie. On his way to school, Beavis reluctantly gets into Eddie's car and is pressured by Eddie to buy him cigarettes. Beavis is unable to, due to being underage. Eddie beats him up and takes him home. Featured videos:
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198 | 38 | 'Butt Flambe' | November 25, 1997 | |
The duo walk into hospital. Beavis' rear end is severely burned to partial cremation, which he is treated for. Butt-Head goes into the supply closet where he puts on clothes, then masquerades as a doctor. Featured videos:
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199 | 39 | 'Our Founding Losers' | November 25, 1997 | |
The duo are put in detention by Coach Buzzcut, who orders them to write about the Founding Fathers of the United States. Instead, they fall asleep and dream about themselves as American history's famous figures. | ||||
TG1 | 40 | 'Beavis and Butt-head Do Thanksgiving' | November 27, 1997 | |
Extended episode, presented by Kurt Loder. The boys celebrate the season of giving with live action guest stars. Featured videos:
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200 | 41 | 'Beavis and Butt-Head Are Dead' | November 28, 1997 | |
When Highland High's secretary calls Beavis and Butt-Head's home to see why the boys are not in school, Beavis falsely claims that he and Butt-Head are dead. Principal McVicker is pleasantly surprised and even stops his typical nervous shaking. Mr. Van Driessen remembers several instances in which the duo caused major problems for him, but mourns them and tries to get the class to remember something good about the obnoxious duo. Daria echoes most of the class's sentiments by saying 'it's not like they had bright futures ahead of them'. The school faculty mostly agree (except Van Driessen) that although they never liked Beavis and Butt-Head, they should exploit their apparent deaths to make their trouble worthwhile. Van Driessen. Beavis and Butt-Head see news that someone died at school, and decide to show up. As Principal McVicker is on camera, holding a jar full of the memorial charity's change saying he would (hypothetically) trade it to have Beavis and Butt-Head back, the duo greet him to his shock and end up in possession of the jar. Beavis and Butt-Head walk off into the sunset, believing that they are rich and have no need to attend school anymore. This episode was the original series finale, up until the 2011 revival. |
Season 8 (2011)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date | US viewers (millions) | |
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201 | 1 | 'Werewolves of Highland' | October 27, 2011 | 3.286[7] | |
The duo sneak in to a movie theater where they watch Twilight - until they are thrown out by a member of staff during the screening. Van Driessen mentions vampires and werewolves during a class on romantic literature. The duo are confused about what the appeal of such beings is, to which Van Driessen tells the class that they are antiheroes whom women find sexually attractive. Beavis and Butt-Head leave class early and set out to get bitten by a vampire or werewolf so they can get girls. They mistake Henry, a homeless man with a myriad of diseases, for a werewolf. They ask him to bite them, which he does several times. The duo sit outside a shop, where two girls have them taken to hospital, where they are admitted to intensive care.[6] Featured videos:
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202 | 2 | 'Crying' | October 27, 2011 | 3.286 | |
While eating a chili dog, Beavis sniffs a piece of onion and begins to tear up, but Butt-Head mistakes it for crying and mocks Beavis relentlessly. A flashforward 80 years shows the duo sitting in wheelchairs in a rest home, where Butt-Head mocks Beavis for the same thing.[8] Featured videos:
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203 | 3 | 'Daughter's Hand' | November 3, 2011 | 2.071 | |
After watching an old movie, Beavis and Butt-Head ask a man for his daughter's 'hand'.[9] Featured videos:
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204 | 4 | 'Tech Support' | November 3, 2011 | 2.071 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head get jobs working at a computer tech support center, a position for which they are woefully under-qualified.[10] Featured videos:
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205 | 5 | 'Holy Cornholio' | November 10, 2011 | 1.798 | |
Beavis screws an action figure into his hand and has to go the hospital. At the hospital, a cult sees him as the second coming of the Messiah after he transforms into his alter ego, The Great Cornholio.[11] This is an extended episode. Featured videos:
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206 | 6 | 'Drones' | November 10, 2011 | 1.554 | |
The boys go on a field trip to a military base and wind up in the virtual pilot seats of drone planes on an Afghan mission, thinking that it is Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas with planes.[9] This is an extended episode. Featured videos:
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207 | 7 | 'Supersize Me' | November 17, 2011 | 1.559 | |
In a parody of Super Size Me, the duo makes a documentary about teenage obesity, eating fast food for 30 days straight.[9][12] Featured videos:
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208 | 8 | 'Bathroom Break' | November 17, 2011 | 1.559 | |
At Burger World, Butt-Head realizes that he gets paid even when he goes to the bathroom, so he and Beavis go in the restroom, and they do not come out, causing a long line of customers waiting to be served.[9] Featured videos:
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209 | 9 | 'The Rat' | December 1, 2011 | 1.606 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head discover that they have a rat in the house, and befriend it after catching it, taking it with them to Burger World.[13] Featured videos:
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210 | 10 | 'Spill' | December 1, 2011 | 1.606 | |
After hearing a TV report about a shoreline oil spill, Beavis and Butt-Head visit the site, where they try to win the affection of hot volunteers, mistaking them for the 'chicks' (which are actually young oil-drenched birds) they were told about before volunteering.[14] Featured videos:
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211 | 11 | 'Doomsday' | December 1, 2011 | 1.562 | |
When Highland residents are forced to evacuate after a toxic gas leak, Beavis and Butt-Head believe that they are the last survivors on Earth.[15] Featured videos:
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212 | 12 | 'Dumb Design' | December 1, 2011 | 1.562 | |
The boys consider religion after learning that students who believe in creationism can skip the evolution section of biology class.[15] Featured videos:
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213 | 13 | 'Copy Machine' | December 8, 2011 | 1.410 | |
After Coach Buzzcut sends the duo to the copy room, Beavis tries to copy his butt on the new copy machine, but breaks the glass and gets stuck inside the machine.[16] Featured videos:
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214 | 14 | 'Holding' | December 8, 2011 | 1.410 | |
Two porn actresses confuse twitchy compadres Beavis and Butt-Head for drug dealers.[17] Featured videos:
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215 | 15 | 'Used Car' | December 15, 2011 | 1.404 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head shanghai a used car salesman on a joyride that leaves the car in pieces.[18] Featured videos:
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216 | 16 | 'Bounty Hunters' | December 15, 2011 | 1.404 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head become ace bounty hunters after a chance meeting with someone they believe to be a reality TV star in a hardware store.[18] Featured videos:
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217 | 17 | 'Time Machine' | December 15, 2011 | 1.385 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head try to erase Mr. Van Driessen's existence after falling asleep on a bus ride to a colonial village reenactment, waking up believing that they have traveled back in time to the year 1832.[6] Featured videos:
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218 | 18 | 'Massage' | December 15, 2011 | 1.385 | |
Inspired by beautiful women getting massages at the mall, Beavis and Butt-Head decide to open up their own makeshift massage shop. Featured video:
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219 | 19 | 'School Test' | December 22, 2011 | 1.273 | |
Concerned with the boys' impact on the school's public funding, Principal McVicker organizes intensive tutoring in order to help Beavis and Butt-Head prepare for the state standardized test. Featured videos:
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220 | 20 | 'Snitchers' | December 22, 2011 | 1.273 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head witness a brutal beating involving Todd, and while testifying in court, fail to protect him. Featured videos:
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221 | 21 | 'Whorehouse' | December 29, 2011 | .919 | |
The duo mistake an abortion clinic for a whorehouse, and try to score with the many women there. Featured videos:
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222 | 22 | 'Going Down' | December 29, 2011 | .919 | |
Beavis and Butt-Head get trapped in an elevator with an attractive woman and do all they can to escape.[19] Featured videos:
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Miscellaneous appearances[edit]
- Appearances at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards, 1993 MTV Video Music Awards, 1994 MTV Video Music Awards, 1995 MTV Video Music Awards, 1996 MTV Video Music Awards, 1997 MTV Movie Awards, 69th Academy Awards, MTV's 20th Anniversary, 2005 MTV Video Music Awards and 2011 MTV Video Music Awards.
- Appearance in the April 1993 music video for AC/DC's 'Back in Black' (aptly called the 'Beavis and Butt-head Version' on MTV's website).
- Appearance on Tiny Toon Adventures Spring Break Special (parodied as 'Beaver and Hoghead', not an official appearance).
- Appearance on Arthur (parodied as 'Peabrain and Nuthead', not an official appearance).
- Appearance (in voice only) on the 1994 movie Airheads.
- Appearance in Clueless.
- Appearances on the Late Show with David Letterman (12–93 and 12/13–96).
- Appearance at the end of the Friends episode 'The One Where Ross and Rachel... You Know' (during the credits roll, Joey and Chandler watch them on TV; 02/08–96)
- Appearances on Saturday Night Live (12/14–96 and 3–9/02).
- Mentioned on MTV 'all time top 10' animated videos by Daria and Jane, and their music video for Love Rollercoaster is Featured. (6/28/1998).
- Appearance on Celebrity Deathmatch
- Appearance on Robot Chicken (official action figures used, but not an official appearance).
- Appearance in Duke Nukem: Total Meltdown (Butt-head's voice only – voiced by Randy Pitchford).
- Appearance in Duke Nukem 3D (PC version) (Butt-head's voice only – voiced by Randy Pitchford).
- Appearance on Jackassworld.com: 24 Hour Takeover (watched the music video for Steve-O's song 'Poke the Puss' and provided negative commentary) (2/23/08).
- Minor character resembles Butt-head in The Triplets of Belleville.
- Appearance in a promotional video for Mike Judge's 2009 film Extract.
- Appearance in Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery.
- Appearance in Jackass 3D.
- Appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! (10/25/11)
- Appearance on Step by Step in the 1994 episode 'Great Expectations' (parodied as blind dates for Dana and Karen, not an official appearance).
- Appearance on Two and a Half Men episode 'A Possum on Chemo' (01/16/12)
- The film Sandy Wexler, released April 14, 2017.
References[edit]
- ^ abcdefghttps://rjwj.home.xs4all.nl/mirror/bnbepguide.html#MTVE
- ^ abchttps://groups.google.com/d/msg/alt.tv.beavis-n-butthead/yhPlUHU1Wng/Pg4aOLufw2EJ
- ^'Taint of Greatness: The Story of Beavis and Butt-head Part 1', in The Mike Judge Collection Volume 1
- ^https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/alt.tv.liquid-tv/6XSDJEkrr7U/hp-Xc269QZkJ
- ^ abhttps://archive.org/details/BeavisButtheadMarathon
- ^ abSitterson, Aubrey (2011-07-21). 'Beavis and Butthead Panel and Coverage – Comic Con 2011'. UGO.com. Archived from the original on 2012-09-08. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^Gorman, Bill (28 October 2011). 'Thursday Cable: 'Beavis & Butt-Head' Return Tops + 'It's Always Sunny,' 'The League,' 'Project Runway' & More'. TV By the Numbers. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
- ^'Beavis and Butt-head – Upcoming Airings – MSN TV'. Tv.msn.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^ abcd'Episode list on Msn.com'. Tv.msn.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Comic-Con: Beavis And Butthead'. Nxfilm.com. 2011-07-22. Archived from the original on 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Beavis and Butt-Head | SDCC '11 Sneak Peek | Video'. MTV. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Photos From the New Season of 'Beavis and Butt-Head' Pictures – Episode: 'Supersize Me''. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Photos From the New Season of 'Beavis and Butt-Head' Pictures – Episode: 'The Rat''. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Beavis and Butt-head : The Rat; Spill – Zap2it'. Tvlistings.zap2it.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^ ab'Beavis and Butt-head : Doomsday; Dumb Design – Zap2it'. Tvlistings.zap2it.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Photos From the New Season of 'Beavis and Butt-Head' Pictures – Episode: 'Copy Machine''. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Beavis and Butt-head : Copy Machine; Holding – Zap2it'. Tvlistings.zap2it.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^ ab'Beavis and Butt-head : Used Car; Bounty Hunters – Zap2it'. Tvlistings.zap2it.com. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
- ^'Photos From the New Season of 'Beavis and Butt-Head' Pictures – Episode: 'Going Down''. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
External links[edit]
- Beavis and Butt-head at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Beavis and Butt-head at epguides.com
Type | Television network(1948–present) Radio network(1943–2007, 2014–present) |
---|---|
Branding | ABC |
Country | |
Availability | Worldwide |
Founded | May 15, 1943; 76 years ago New York City, New York, United States by Edward J. Noble and Louis Blanche |
Slogan |
|
Headquarters | Burbank, California, (broadcasting) and New York, New York (corporate) United States |
Parent | |
Key people |
|
October 12, 1943; 75 years ago (radio) April 19, 1948; 71 years ago (television) | |
Former names | NBC Blue Network |
720p (HDTV) (downscaled to letterboxed480i for SDTVs) | |
Affiliates | Lists: By state and territories or by market |
Official website | abc.go.com |
Language | English |
Replaced | Blue Network |
The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) is an American commercial broadcasttelevision network that is a flagship property of Walt Disney Television, a subsidiary of the Disney Media Networks division of The Walt Disney Company. The network is headquartered in Burbank, California on Riverside Drive, directly across the street from Walt Disney Studios and adjacent to the Roy E. Disney Animation Building, But the network's second corporate headquarters and News headquarters remains in New York City, New York at their broadcast center on 77 West 66th Street in Lincoln Square in Upper West Side Manhattan.
Since 2007, when ABC Radio (also known as Cumulus Media Networks) was sold to Citadel Broadcasting, ABC has reduced its broadcasting operations almost exclusively to television. The fifth-oldest major broadcasting network in the world and the youngest of the Big Three television networks, ABC is nicknamed as 'The Alphabet Network', as its initialism also represents the first three letters of the English alphabet, in order.
ABC launched as a radio network on October 12, 1943, serving as the successor to the NBC Blue Network, which had been purchased by Edward J. Noble. It extended its operations to television in 1948, following in the footsteps of established broadcast networks CBS and NBC. In the mid-1950s, ABC merged with United Paramount Theatres, a chain of movie theaters that formerly operated as a subsidiary of Paramount Pictures. Leonard Goldenson, who had been the head of UPT, made the new television network profitable by helping develop and greenlight many successful series. In the 1980s, after purchasing an 80 percent interest in cable sports channel ESPN, the network's corporate parent, American Broadcasting Companies, Inc., merged with Capital Cities Communications, owner of several print publications, and television and radio stations. In 1996, most of Capital Cities/ABC's assets were purchased by The Walt Disney Company.
The television network has eight owned-and-operated and over 232 affiliated television stations throughout the United States and its territories. Some of the ABC-affiliated stations can also be seen in Canada via pay-television providers, and certain other affiliates can also be received over-the-air in areas within the Canada–United States border. ABC News provides news and features content for select radio stations owned by Citadel Broadcasting, which purchased the ABC Radio properties in 2007 (however relaunched in 2014).
- 1History
- 1.3American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres
- 1.4Transition to color (1960s)
- 1.8New century, new programs; divisional restructuring (2001–2010)
- 1.9Current state
- 2Programming
- 5Related services
- 7International development
- 10References
History[edit]
Blue Network (1927–1945)[edit]
In the 1930s, radio in the United States was dominated by three companies: the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), the Mutual Broadcasting System, and the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). The last was owned by electronics manufacturer Radio Corporation of America (RCA), which owned two radio networks that each ran different varieties of programming, NBC Blue and NBC Red. The NBC Blue Network was created in 1927 for the primary purpose of testing new programs on markets of lesser importance than those served by NBC Red, which served the major cities,[2] and to test drama series.[3]
In 1934, Mutual filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regarding its difficulties in establishing new stations, in a radio market that was already being saturated by NBC and CBS.[3] In 1938, the FCC began a series of investigations into the practices of radio networks[3] and published its report on the broadcasting of network radio programs in 1940. The report recommended that RCA give up control of either NBC Red or NBC Blue.[2] At that time, the NBC Red Network was the principal radio network in the United States and, according to the FCC, RCA was using NBC Blue to eliminate any hint of competition. Having no power over the networks themselves, the FCC established a regulation forbidding licenses to be issued for radio stations if they were affiliated with a network which already owned multiple networks[2] that provided content of public interest.[3]
Once Mutual's appeals against the FCC were rejected, RCA decided to sell NBC Blue in 1941, and gave the mandate to do so to Mark Woods.[4] RCA converted the NBC Blue Network into an independent subsidiary, formally divorcing the operations of NBC Red and NBC Blue on January 8, 1942,[3][5] with the Blue Network being referred to on-air as either 'Blue' or 'Blue Network'.[6] The newly separated NBC Red and NBC Blue divided their respective corporate assets. Between 1942 and 1943, Woods offered to sell the entire NBC Blue Network,[7][8] a package that included leases on landlines, three pending television licenses (WJZ-TV in New York City, KGO-TV in San Francisco and WENR-TV in Chicago), 60 affiliates, four operations facilities (in New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C.), contracts with actors, and the brand associated with the Blue Network. Investment firm Dillon, Read & Co. offered $7.5 million to purchase the network, but the offer was rejected by Woods and RCA president David Sarnoff.[7]
Edward J. Noble, the owner of Life Savers candy, drugstore chain Rexall and New York City radio station WMCA, purchased the network for $8 million.[2][3] Due to FCC ownership rules, the transaction, which was to include the purchase of three RCA stations by Noble, would require him to resell his station with the FCC's approval.[7] The Commission authorized the transaction on October 12, 1943.[4][9] Soon afterward, the Blue Network was purchased by the new company Noble founded, the American Broadcasting System.[3] Noble subsequently acquired the rights to the American Broadcasting Company name from George B. Storer in 1944; its parent company adopted the corporate name American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.[3][7] Woods retained his position as president and CEO of ABC until December 1949, and was subsequently promoted to vice-chairman of the board before leaving ABC altogether on June 30, 1951.[10]
Meanwhile, in August 1944, the West Coast division of the Blue Network, which owned San Francisco radio station KGO, bought Los Angeles station KECA from Earle C. Anthony for $800,000.[11] Both stations were then managed by Don Searle, the vice-president of the Blue Network's West Coast division.[12]
Entry into television (1945–1949)[edit]
The ABC Radio Network created its audience slowly. The network acquired Detroit radio station WXYZ from KingTrendle Broadcasting in 1946 for a little less than $3 million (the station remained under ABC ownership until 1984).[13]
ABC became an aggressive competitor to NBC and CBS when, continuing NBC Blue's traditions of public service, it aired symphony performances conducted by Paul Whiteman,[3] performances from the Metropolitan Opera, and jazz concerts aired as part of its broadcast of The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street announced by Milton Cross.[14] The network also became known for such suspenseful dramas as Sherlock Holmes, Gang Busters and Counterspy, as well as several mid-afternoon youth-oriented programs.[14] However, ABC made a name for itself by utilizing the practice of counterprogramming, with which it often placed shows of its own against the offerings of NBC and CBS, adopting the use of the Magnetophon tape recorder, brought to the U.S. from Nazi Germany after its conquest, to pre-record its programming.[15] With the help of the Magnetophon, ABC was able to provide its stars with greater freedom in terms of time, and also attract several big names, such as Bing Crosby[15] at a time when NBC and CBS did not allow pre-taped shows.
While its radio network was undergoing reconstruction, ABC found it difficult to avoid falling behind on the new medium of television.[16] To ensure a space, in 1947, ABC submitted five applications for television station licenses, one for each market where it owned and operated a radio station (New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco and Detroit).[17] These applications all requested for the stations to broadcast on VHFchannel 7, as Frank Marx, then ABC's vice-president of engineering, thought that the low-band VHF frequencies (corresponding to channels 2 through 6) would be requisitioned from broadcasting use and reallocated for the U.S. Army.[17]
The ABC television network made its debut on April 19, 1948, with WFIL-TV in Philadelphia (now WPVI-TV) becoming its first primary affiliate.[18] The first program ever broadcast on the network was On the Corner, featuring satirist Henry Morgan. Other stations carrying the initial broadcast were WMAR-TV in Baltimore, WMAL-TV in Washington, D.C., and WABD, the DuMont station in New York City, since ABC's New York station had yet to sign on.[19]
The network's flagship owned-and-operated station, WJZ-TV in New York City (later re-called WABC-TV), signed on the air on August 10, 1948,[18] with its first broadcast running for two hours that evening.[20] ABC's other owned-and-operated stations launched over the course of the next 13 months:[18] WENR-TV in Chicago signed on the air on September 17,[21] while WXYZ-TV in Detroit went on the air on October 9, 1948.[22] In October 1948, as a result of an influx of television station license applications that it had issued as well as a study it undertook on the use of the VHF spectrum for broadcasting purposes, the FCC implemented a freeze on new station applications.[23] However, KGO-TV in San Francisco, which had received its license prior to the freeze, made its debut on May 5, 1949.[24][25] On May 7, 1949, Billboard revealed that ABC had proposed an investment of $6.25 million, of which it would spend $2.5 million to convert 20 acres (80,937 m2) of land in Hollywood into what would become The Prospect Studios, and construct a transmitter on Mount Wilson, in anticipation of the launch of KECA-TV, which was scheduled to begin operations on August 1[26] (but would not actually sign on until September 16).[27][28]
In the fall of 1949, ABC found itself in the position of an outsider, with less coverage than two of its competing networks, CBS and NBC, even though it was on par with them in some major cities and had a headstart over its third rival at the time, the DuMont Television Network.[29] On November 3, 1949, The Ruggles starring Charlie Ruggles debuted, becoming the first family sitcom on the fledgling ABC network.[30]
Before the freeze ended in 1952, there were only 108 existing television stations in the United States; a few major cities (such as Boston) had only two television stations, many other cities (such as Pittsburgh and St. Louis) had only one, and still many others (such as Denver and Portland) did not yet have any television service.[29] The result was an uneven transition period where television flourished in certain areas and network radio remained the sole source of broadcast entertainment and news in others.
American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres[edit]
At the end of 1949, movie theater operator United Paramount Theatres (UPT) was forced by the U.S. Supreme Court to become an independent entity, separating itself from Paramount Pictures.[31] For its part, ABC was on the verge of bankruptcy, with only five owned-and-operated stations and nine full-time affiliates.[32] Its revenues, which were related to advertising and were indexed compared to the number of listeners/viewers, failed to compensate for its heavy investments in purchasing and building stations. In 1951, a rumor even mentioned that the network would be sold to CBS.[17][33] In 1951, Noble held a 58% ownership stake in ABC,[34] giving him $5 million with which to prevent ABC from going bankrupt; as banks refused further credit,[35] that amount was obtained through a loan from the Prudential Insurance Company of America.[36]
Leonard Goldenson, the president of UPT (which sought to diversify itself at the time), approached Noble in 1951 on a proposal for UPT to purchase ABC.[35] Noble received other offers, including one from CBS founder William S. Paley; however, a merger with CBS would have forced that network to sell its New York City and Los Angeles stations at the very least.[37] Goldenson and Noble reached a tentative agreement in the late spring of 1951[35] in which UPT would acquire ABC and turn it into a subsidiary of the company that would retain autonomy in its management.[38] On June 6, 1951, the tentative agreement was approved by UPT's board of directors.[38] However, the transaction had to be approved by the FCC because of the presence of television networks and the recent separation between Paramount and UPT. Insofar as Paramount Pictures was already a shareholder in the DuMont Television Network, the FCC conducted a series of hearings to ensure whether Paramount was truly separated from United Paramount Theatres, and whether it was violating antitrust laws.[16]
In 1952, when the release of the FCC's Sixth Report and Order announced the end of its freeze on new station license applications, among the issues the Commission was slated to address was whether to approve the UPT-ABC merger.[23] One FCC Commissioner saw the possibility of ABC, funded by UPT, becoming a viable and competitive third television network.[39] On February 9, 1953, the FCC approved UPT's purchase of ABC in exchange for $25 million in shares.[39][40] The merged company, renamed American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres, Inc. and headquartered in the Paramount Building at 1501 Broadway in Manhattan,[41] owned six AM and several FM radio stations, five television stations and 644 cinemas in 300 U.S. cities.[36] To comply with FCC ownership restrictions in effect at the time that barred common ownership of two television stations in the same market, UPT sold its Chicago television station, WBKB-TV, to CBS (which subsequently changed the station's call letters to WBBM-TV) for $6 million,[42] while it kept ABC's existing Chicago station, WENR-TV. The merged company acquired the WBKB call letters for channel 7, which would eventually become WLS-TV.[43] Goldenson began to sell some of the older theaters to help finance the new television network.[36]
On March 1, 1953, ABC's New York City flagship stations – WJZ, WJZ-FM and WJZ-TV – changed their respective callsigns to WABC, WABC-FM and WABC-TV,[44] and moved their operations to facilities at 7 West 66th Street, one block away from Central Park.[36] The WABC call letters were previously used by the flagship station of CBS Radio (now WCBS (AM)) until 1946. The WJZ calls would later be reassigned to the then-ABC affiliate in Baltimore in 1959, in an historical nod to the fact that WJZ was originally established by the Baltimore station's owner at the time, Westinghouse.
However, a problem emerged regarding the directions taken by ABC and UPT. In 1950, Noble appointed Robert Kintner to be ABC's president while he himself served as its CEO, a position he would hold until his death in 1958.[16] Despite the promise of non-interference between ABC and UPT, Goldenson had to intervene in ABC's decisions because of financial problems and the FCC's long period of indecision. Goldenson added to the confusion when, in October 1954,[45] he proposed a merger between UPT and the DuMont Television Network, which was also mired in financial trouble.[16] As part of this merger, the network would have been renamed 'ABC-DuMont' for five years, and DuMont would have received $5 million in cash, room on the schedule for existing DuMont programming, and guaranteed advertising time for DuMont Laboratories receivers.[16] In addition, to comply with FCC ownership restrictions, it would have been required to sell either WABC-TV or DuMont owned-and-operated station WABD in the New York City market, as well as two other stations.[16] The merged ABC-DuMont would have had the resources to compete with CBS and NBC.[45]
Goldenson sought to develop the ABC television network by trying to convince local stations to agree to affiliate with the network.[16] In doing this, he contacted local entrepreneurs who owned television stations themselves, many of whom had previously invested in Paramount cinemas and had worked with him when he undertook the responsibility of restructuring United Paramount Theatres.[16]
Hollywood begins to produce television series[edit]
At the same time he made attempts to help grow ABC, Goldenson had been trying since mid-1953 to provide content for the network by contacting his old acquaintances in Hollywood, with whom he had worked when UPT was a subsidiary of Paramount Pictures.[16] ABC's merger with UPT led to the creation of relationships with Hollywood's film production studios, breaking a quarantine that had existed at that time between film and television,[46] the latter of which had previously been more connected to radio. ABC's flagship productions at the time were The Lone Ranger, based on the radio program of the same title, and The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, the latter of which (at 14 seasons, running from 1952 to 1966) held the record for the longest-running prime time comedy in U.S. television history, until it was surpassed by The Simpsons in 2003.
Goldenson's efforts paid off, and on October 27, 1954, the network launched a campaign ushering in the 'New ABC', with productions from several studios, including Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox.[47]
Warner tried with mixed success to adapt some of its most successful films as ABC television series, and showcase these adaptations as part of the wheel seriesWarner Bros. Presents. Airing during the 1955–56 season, it showcased television adaptations of the 1942 films Kings Row and Casablanca; Cheyenne (adapted from the 1947 film Wyoming Kid); Sugarfoot (a remake of the 1954 film The Boy from Oklahoma); and Maverick.[46] However, the most iconic of ABC's relationships with Hollywood producers was its agreement with Walt Disney; after the start of the network's bond with the Disney studio, James Lewis Baughman, who worked as a columnist at that time, observed that 'at ABC's headquarters in New York, the secretaries [were now] wearing hats with Mickey Mouse ears'.[46]
Daisies In December Movie
First bonds with Disney[edit]
Walt Disney and his brother Roy contacted Goldenson at the end of 1953[48] for ABC to agree to finance part of the Disneyland project in exchange for producing a television program for the network.[49][50][51] Walt wanted ABC to invest $500,000 and accrued a guarantee of $4.5 million in additional loans, a third of the budget intended for the park.[49][52] Around 1954, ABC agreed to finance Disneyland in exchange for the right to broadcast a new Wednesday night program, Disneyland, which debuted on the network on October 27, 1954[49][50][51] as the first of many anthology television programs that Disney would broadcast over the course of the next 50 years.
When Disneyland opened on July 17, 1955, ABC aired a special live broadcast commemorating the park's first day of operation, Dateline: Disneyland.[53] Shortly thereafter, on October 3, 1955, a second regularly scheduled program produced by Disney made its debut, The Mickey Mouse Club, a children's program that aired Monday through Friday afternoons, which starred a group of 24 children known as the 'Mouseketeers'.[50][54] The two Disney programs made 1955 the year that the network was first profitable and as a station owner.[55]
Affiliate issues[edit]
By 1954, all U.S. networks had regained control of their programming, with higher advertising revenues: ABC's revenue increased by 67% (earning $26 million), NBC's went up by 30% ($100 million) and CBS's rose by 44% ($117 million).[56] However that year, ABC had only 14 primary affiliates compared to the 74 that carried the majority of CBS programs and the 71 that were primarily affiliated with NBC. Most markets outside the largest ones were not large enough to support three full-time network affiliates. In some markets that were large enough for a third full-time affiliate, the only available commercial allocation was on the less-desirable UHF band. Until the All-Channel Receiver Act (passed by Congress in 1961) mandated the inclusion of UHF tuning, most viewers needed to purchase a converter to be able to watch UHF stations, and the signal quality was marginal at best even with a converter. Additionally, during the analog television era, UHF stations were not adequately receivable in rugged terrain. These factors made many prospective station owners skittish about investing in a UHF station, especially one that would have had to take on an affiliation with a weaker network.
As a result, with the exception of the largest markets, ABC was relegated to secondary status on one or both of the existing stations, usually via off-hours clearances (a notable exception during this time was WKST-TV in Youngstown, Ohio, now WYTV, despite the small size of the surrounding market and its close proximity to Cleveland and Pittsburgh even decades before the city's economic collapse). According to Goldenson, this meant that an hour of ABC programming reported five times lower viewership than its competitors.[57] However, the network's intake of money at the time would allow it to accelerate its content production. Still, ABC's limited reach would continue to hobble it for the next two decades; several smaller markets would not grow large enough to support a full-time ABC affiliate until the 1960s, with some very small markets having to wait as late as the 1980s or even the advent of digital television in the 2000s, which allowed stations like WTRF-TV in Wheeling, West Virginia to begin airing ABC programming on a digital subchannel after airing the network's programs outside of recommended timeslots decades before.
The DuMont Television Network ceased broadcasting on September 15, 1955,[45] and went bankrupt the next year. ABC then found itself as the third U.S. television network, dubbed the 'little third network',[58] but still continued to look for successful programming. That same year, Kintner was forced to resign due to disagreements between Noble and Goldenson,[16] a consequence of Goldenson's many interventions in ABC's management.[59]
Counterprogramming: successful, but criticized[edit]
It was not until the late 1950s that the ABC network became a serious contender to NBC and CBS, and this was in large part due to the diverse range of programming that met the expectations of the public, such as westerns and detective series. Despite an almost 500% increase in advertising revenues between 1953 and 1958, the network only had a national reach of between 10% and 18% of the total U.S. population, as it still had relatively fewer affiliates than NBC and CBS.[60] In 1957, ABC Entertainment president Ollie Trez discovered that the locally produced variety show Bandstand had pulled very strong ratings in the Philadelphia market on WFIL-TV; Trez ultimately negotiated a deal to take the show national, under the revised title American Bandstand;[61] the show quickly became a social phenomenon by presenting new musical talent and dances to America's youth[61] and helped make a star out of its host, Dick Clark.
On September 3, 1958, the Disneyland anthology series was retitled Walt Disney Presents[51] as it became disassociated with the theme park of the same name. The movement in westerns, which ABC is credited for having started, represented a fifth of all primetime series on American television in January 1959, at which point detective shows were beginning to rise in popularity as well.[62] ABC requested additional productions from Disney.[63] In late 1958, Desilu Productions pitched its detective series The Untouchables Starring Robert Stack to CBS; after that network rejected the show because of its use of violence, Desilu then presented it to ABC, which agreed to pick up the show,[64] and debuted The Untouchables in April 1959. The series went on to quickly become 'immensely popular'.[64]
These kinds of programs presented ABC with an image of the 'philosophy of counterprogramming against its competitors', offering a strong lineup of programs that contrasted with those seen on its rival networks,[63] which helped Goldenson give the network a continuum between film and television.[65] ABC's western series (as well as series such as the actioner Zorro) went up against and defeated the variety shows aired by NBC and CBS in the fall of 1957, and its detective shows did the same in the fall of 1959. To captivate the network's audiences, short 66-minute series were scheduled a half-hour before their hour-long competition.[65] In May 1961, Life criticized the public enthusiasm and sponsorship for these types of shows at the expense of news programming and denounced an unofficial law 'replacing the good programs with the bad ones'.[66]
Transition to color (1960s)[edit]
During the 1960s, ABC continued on the same path that it began to take in the mid-1950s, by consolidating the network as part of its effort to gain loyalty from the public. The network's finances improved and allowed it to invest in other properties and programming. In May 1960, ABC purchased Chicago radio station WLS, which had shared airtime with WENR since the 1920s.[67] This acquisition allowed ABC to consolidate its presence in the market. On May 9, 1960, WLS launched a new lineup consisting of ABC Radio programming.[68] In 1960, Canadian entrepreneur John Bassett, who was trying to establish a television station in Toronto, sought the help of ABC to launch the station.[69] Leonard Goldenson agreed to acquire a 25% interest in CFTO-TV; however, legislation by the Canadian Radio-Television Commission prohibited ABC's involvement, resulting in the company withdrawing from the project before the station's launch.[69]
Children's programming and the debut of ABC Sports (1960–1965)[edit]
The 1960s would be marked by the rise of family-oriented series in an attempt by ABC to counterprogram its established competitors, but the decade was also marked by the network's gradual transition to color.[70] On September 30, 1960, ABC premiered The Flintstones, another example of counterprogramming; although the animated series from William Hanna and Joseph Barbera was filmed in color from the beginning, it was initially broadcast in black and white, as ABC had not made the necessary technical upgrades to broadcast its programming in color at the time.[71]The Flintstones allowed ABC to present a novelty, that of prime-time animated programming, but it also allowed the network to begin filling the hole opened by the conclusion of the Disney partnership by carrying family-oriented programming from other producers.[71]
In 1959, Walt Disney Productions, having improved its financial situation, had purchased ABC's shares in the Disneyland theme park for $7.5 million[49] and initiated discussions to renew ABC's television contract for Walt Disney Presents, which was due to expire in 1961.[70] Walt Disney was approached by NBC to produce color broadcasts of his anthology series (which would be renamed Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color).[70] Goldenson said ABC could not counter the offer, because the network did not have the technical and financial resources to carry the program in the format.[70] As a result, ABC and Disney's first television collaboration ended in 1961[49] (the network would resume its relationship with Disney in 1985, when the anthology series returned to the network for a three-season run as the Disney Sunday Movie until it lost the rights to NBC again in 1988; the Disney anthology series would return to ABC in 1996, following the company's purchase of the future Capital Cities/ABC, as The Wonderful World of Disney).
However, in 1961, ABC continued with its niche in animated series with Calvin and the Colonel, Matty's Funday Funnies, Top Cat and The Bugs Bunny Show,[71] the latter of which showcased classic Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts.
Always in search of new programs that would help it compete with NBC and CBS, ABC's management believed that sports could be a major catalyst in improving the network's market share.[72] On April 29, 1961, ABC debuted Wide World of Sports, an anthology series created by Edgar Scherick through his company Sports Programs, Inc. and produced by a young Roone Arledge which featured a different sporting event each broadcast.[73][74] ABC purchased Sports Programs, Inc. in exchange for shares in the company,[75] leading it to become the future core of ABC Sports, with Arledge as the executive producer of that division's shows.[76]Wide World of Sports, in particular, was not merely devoted to a single sport, but rather to generally all sporting events.[72]
Due to pressure from film studios wanting to increase their production, as the major networks began airing theatrically released films,[77] ABC joined CBS and NBC in broadcasting films on Sunday nights in 1962, with the launch of the ABC Sunday Night Movie, which debuted a year behind its competitors and was initially presented in black-and-white.[77] Despite a significant increase in viewership (with its audience share having increased to 33% from the 15% share it had in 1953), ABC remained in third place; the company had a total revenue of $15.5 million, a third of the revenue pulled in by CBS at the same period.[77] To catch up, ABC followed up The Flintstones with another animated series from Hanna-Barbera, The Jetsons, which debuted on September 23, 1962 as the first television series to be broadcast in color on the network.[78] On April 1, 1963, ABC debuted the soap operaGeneral Hospital,[79] which would go on to become the television network's long-running entertainment program. That year also saw the premiere of The Fugitive (on September 17),[80] a drama series starring David Janssen,centering on a man on the run after being accused of committing a murder he did not commit.This program, like The Untouchables, went on to become an enormous hit.
The 1964–65 season was marked by the debuts of several classic series including Bewitched (on September 17)[81] and The Addams Family (on September 18). Arledge's success with acquiring prime sports content was confirmed in 1964 when he was appointed vice-president of ABC Sports.[82]
New regulations and the radio network's recovery (1966–1969)[edit]
It was not until the 1965–66 season that color became the dominant format for the three broadcast television networks. ABC, meanwhile, remained in third place and still needed money to grow itself into a major competitor. However, ABC's issues with its transition to color became secondary compared to the network's financial problems; in 1964, the network found itself, as Goldenson later wrote in the 1991 book Beating the Odds: The Untold Story Behind the Rise of ABC, 'in the middle of a war [where] the battlefield was Wall Street'.[83] Many companies sought to take over ABC, including Norton Simon,[77]General Electric, Gulf and Western Industries, International Telephone and Telegraph[84] and Litton Industries.[85]
In 1965, the corporate entity, American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres, was renamed as the American Broadcasting Companies,[86][87] while its cinema division became ABC Theatres; its recording division was renamed ABC Records in 1966.[88] In December of that year, the ABC television network premiered The Dating Game, a pioneer series in its genre, which was a reworking of the blind date concept in which a suitor selected one of three contestants sight unseen based on the answers to selected questions. This was followed up in July 1966 by The Newlywed Game, featuring three recently married couples who guessed the responses to their partner's questions (some of which were fairly risque). As ABC began to outgrow its facilities at 7 West 66th Street, Goldenson found a new headquarters for ABC in a 44-story building located at 1330 Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan, at the corner of 54th Street[89][90] (now occupied by The Financial Times's New York office). This operation allowed for the conversion of the premises at 66th Street into production facilities for television and radio programs.[90]
On December 7, 1965, Goldenson announced a merger proposal with ITT to ABC management; the two companies agreed to the deal on April 27, 1966.[85] The FCC approved the merger on December 21, 1966; however, the previous day (December 20), Donald F. Turner, head antitrust regulator for the United States Department of Justice, expressed doubts related to such issues as the emerging cable television market,[91] and concerns over the journalistic integrity of ABC and how it could be influenced by the overseas ownership of ITT.[92] ITT management promised that the company would allow ABC to retain autonomy in the publishing business.[91] The merger was suspended, and a complaint was filed by the Department of Justice in July 1967, with ITT going to trial in October 1967; the merger was officially canceled after the trial's conclusion on January 1, 1968.[93]
On January 12, 1966, ABC replaced The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet with Batman, an action series based on the DC Comics series starring Adam West that was known for its kitschy style.[94] In 1967, WLS radio CEO Ralph Beaudin was appointed as the president of ABC Radio.[95] Under his leadership, ABC Radio was divided into four 'networks' devoted to different types of programming: news, informative series, pop music, and talk shows.[95] Two other networks were later created to provide rock music and traffic reporting.
In 1968, ABC took advantage of new FCC ownership regulations that allowed broadcasting companies to own a maximum of seven radio stations nationwide in order to purchase Houston radio stations KXYZ and KXYZ-FM for $1 million in shares and $1.5 million in bonds.[96] That year, Roone Arledge was named president of ABC Sports; the company also founded ABC Pictures, a film production company which released its first picture that year, the Ralph Nelson-directed Charly. It was renamed ABC Motion Pictures in 1979; the unit was dissolved in 1985.[97] The studio also operated two subsidiaries, Palomar Pictures International and Selmur Pictures. In July 1968, ABC continued its acquisitions in the amusement parks sector with the opening of ABC Marine World in Redwood City, California;[98] that park was sold in 1972 and demolished in 1986, with the land that occupied the park later becoming home to the headquarters of Oracle Corporation.
In July 1968, ABC Radio launched a special programming project for its FM stations, which was spearheaded by Allen Shaw,[99] a former program manager at WCFL in Chicago[100] who was approached by ABC Radio president Harold L. Neal to develop a format to compete with the new progressive rock and DJ-helmed stations.[101] The new concept called 'LOVE Radio', which featured a limited selection of music genres, was launched on ABC's seven owned-and-operated FM stations in late November 1968; the concept replaced nearly all of the programming provided by these stations; however, several affiliates (such as KXYZ) retained the majority of their content.[101] In August 1970, Shaw announced that ABC FM's music choice policy should be reviewed to allow listeners access to many styles of music.[102]
On the television side, in September 1969, ABC launched the Movie of the Week, a weekly showcase aimed at capitalizing on the growing success of made-for-TV movies since the early 1960s. The Movie of the Week broadcast feature-length dramatic films directed by such talented filmmakers as Aaron Spelling, David Wolper and Steven Spielberg (the latter of whom gained early success through the showcase for his 1971 film Duel) that were produced on an average budget of $400,000–$450,000.[103] One of those movies – A Matter of Humanities, broadcast in early 1969 – became the basis for the hit show Marcus Welby, M.D. which, in its second season (1970–1971), became ABC's first Number One show in the Nielsen ratings (Bewitched was the closest the network had come prior to this, reaching #2 in its debut season, 1964–1965). Other hits for the television network during the late 1960s and early 1970s included the comedies The Courtship of Eddie's Father, The Brady Bunch and The Partridge Family, the now-iconic That Girl, the Emmy-winning Room 222, and the drama The Mod Squad.
Success in television (1971–1980)[edit]
In the early 1970s, ABC completed its transition to color; the decade as a whole would mark a turning point for ABC, as it began to pass CBS and NBC in the ratings to become the first place network.[104] It also began to use behavioral and demographic data to better determine what types of sponsors to sell advertising slots to and provide programming that would appeal towards certain audiences.[105] ABC's gains in audience share were greatly helped by the fact that several smaller markets had grown large enough to allow full-time affiliations from all three networks.
In 1970, ABC debuted Monday Night Football as part of its Monday prime time schedule;[106] the program became a hit for the network and served as the National Football League (NFL)'s premier game of the week until 2006, when Sunday Night Football, which moved to NBC that year as part of a broadcast deal that in turn saw MNF move to ESPN, took over as the league's marquee game. According to Goldenson, Monday Night Football helped earn ABC regularly score an audience share of 15%–16%; ABC Sports managed the budget for the Monday night time slot to reallocate the weekly budget for ABC's prime time schedule to just six days, as opposed to seven on competing networks.[107] 1970 also saw the premieres of several soap operas including the long-running All My Children, which ran on the network for 41 years.
In 1970, the FCC voted to pass the Financial Interest and Syndication Rules, a set of regulations aimed at preventing the major networks from monopolizing the broadcast landscape by barring them from owning any of the prime time programming that they broadcast.[108] In 1972, the new rules resulted in the company's decision to split ABC Films into two separate companies: the existing Worldvision Enterprises, which would produce and distribute programming for U.S. syndication, and ABC Circle Films as a production unit.[109][110] Worldvision was sold to a consortium of ABC executives for nearly $10 million.[110]
In April 1970, Congress passed the Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act which banned cigarette advertising from all television and radio networks, including ABC, when it took effect on January 2, 1971.[111] Citing limited profitability of its cinemas, ABC Great States, the Central West division of ABC Theatres, was sold to Henry G. Plitt in 1974.[109] On January 17, 1972, Elton Rule was named President and Chief Operating Officer of ABC a few months after Goldenson reduced his role in the company after suffering a heart attack.[33]
In the early 1970s, Michael Eisner, who joined ABC in 1966, became the network's program development manager.[112] He helped bring about ideas for many series including Happy Days (which originated as a segment on the anthology series Love, American Style),[112][113] as well as several soap operas; however, Eisner's main credit at ABC was for developing youth-oriented programming.[114] He was responsible for reacquiring the rights to the Looney Tunes-Merrie Melodies library, bringing the shorts back to ABC after spending several years on CBS, as well as developing The Jackson 5ive animated series and a series about the Osmonds, and greenlighting Super Friends, based on DC Comics' Justice League of America series[112] He also laid ground-work for the development of educational children's programming (predating the 1990 Congressional passage of the Children's Television Act) through interstitials such as Time for Timer, The Bod Squad and, perhaps most famously, Schoolhouse Rock!. Eisner left ABC in 1976 to become president of Paramount Pictures;[115] he would later become the President of ABC's eventual parent company, Disney.
In the spring of 1975, Fred Pierce, the newly appointed president of ABC Television, convinced Fred Silverman to become the first president and director of programming of the independent television production subsidiary ABC Entertainment, created from the network's namesake programming division.[116][117] In 1974, ABC premiered the police series S.W.A.T. That same year, the network made the decision to compete with NBC's morning news-talk programToday. Its first attempt at such competition was AM America; however, that show's success was not straightforward.[118] One of its affiliates, WCVB-TV premiered morning show Good Day!. First premiering in 1973 as Good Morning!, it was groundbreaking for being entirely produced on the road and broadcasting from locations outside the Boston area. Also, in the summer of 1975, ABC discovered that its Cleveland affiliate WEWS-TV was producing its own morning program The Morning Exchange, which debuted in 1972 and was now locally pre-empting AM America; it was the first morning show to utilize a set modeled after a living room, and established a concept now commonplace among network morning shows in which news and weather updates were featured at the top and bottom of each hour. Discovering that their formats seemed to appeal to their viewers,[118] the network became the first to adopt them for a new national morning show, Good Morning America, which debuted on November 3, 1975.[118]
The 1970s were highlighted by several successful comedy, fantasy, action and superhero-themed series for the network including Kung Fu, The Six Million Dollar Man, Wonder Woman, Starsky & Hutch, Charlie's Angels, The Bionic Woman, Fantasy Island and Battlestar Galactica. Many of these series were greenlit by Silverman, who left ABC in 1978 to become president of NBC's entertainment division. The rousing success of Happy Days also led to a successful spin-off series, Laverne & Shirley, which debuted during the 1975–76 season. Charlie's Angels and Three's Company (which debuted during the 1976–77 season) were two prime examples of a trend among the major networks during the 1970s known as 'jiggle TV', featuring attractive, often buxom, women in main and guest roles.
In 1977, Henry Plitt, who at the time was associated with Thomas Klutznick, a real estate entrepreneur in Chicago, purchased the southern division of ABC Theatres, ABC Southern.[109] The sale stripped ABC of control over its theaters as a result of changes in the theater operation sector, mainly the fact that the population was migrating to the suburbs and moving away from older cinemas in larger cities[109] (Plitt Theatres was later purchased by Cineplex Odeon Corporation in 1987[109]).
For its part, the television network produced a few new hits during 1977: January saw the premiere of Roots, a miniseries based on an Alex Haleynovel that was published the previous year. Roots went on to become one of the highest-rated programs in American television history, with unprecedented ratings for its finale.[119][120] In September, The Love Boat, a comedy-drama anthology series produced by Aaron Spelling which was based around the crew of a cruise ship and featured three stories centered partly on the ship's various passengers; although critically lambasted, the series turned out to be a ratings success and lasted nine seasons. The success of Roots, Happy Days and The Love Boat allowed the network to take first place in the ratings for the first time in the 1976–77 season.[69] On September 13, 1977, the network debuted Soap, a controversial soap opera parody which became known for being the first television series to feature an openly gay main character (played by a then-unknown Billy Crystal); it last ran on the network on April 20, 1981.
Meanwhile, ABC News, which formed as a newly separate division, sought to become a global leader in television news.[121] In 1977, Roone Arledge was named president of the new ABC News in addition to being president of ABC Sports.[122] That same year, ABC launched a major expansion of its office facilities in New York City. The company first constructed a new 10-story building on land previously occupied by an abandoned warehouse on the corner of Columbus Avenue and West 66th Street; the facility that was built in its place is nicknamed '7 Lincoln Square' (although it is actually located at 149 Columbus Avenue). Meanwhile, a former parking lot, located at 30 West 67th Street, was transformed into an impressive 15-story building. Both buildings were completed in June 1979. WABC-TV moved its operations from offices at 77 West 66th Street to 149 Columbus Avenue, freeing up space for the ABC network to house some of its operations.
In June 1978, Arledge created the newsmagazine20/20;[123] after its first episode received harshly negative reviews, the program – which debuted as a summer series, before becoming a year-round program in 1979 – was immediately revamped to feature a mix of in-depth stories and interviews, with Hugh Downs appointed as its anchor (later paired alongside his former Today colleague Barbara Walters). In February 1979, ABC sold its recording division to MCA Inc. for $20 million; the label was discontinued by March 5 of that year, and all of its 300 employees were laid off[124] (the rights to the works of ABC Records and all of MCA's other labels have since been acquired by Universal Music Group).
Merger with Capital Cities, purchase of ESPN and reprogramming Friday nights (1981–1990)[edit]
ABC dominated the American television landscape during the 1970s and early 1980s (by 1980, the three major networks represented 90% of all prime-time television viewership in the U.S.[125]). Several flagship series debuted on the network during this time including Dynasty, an opulent drama from Aaron Spelling that became a hit when it premiered as a midseason series in 1981, five months before Spelling's other ABC hit Charlie's Angels ended its run. The network was also propelled during the early 1980s by the continued successes of Happy Days, Three's Company, Laverne & Shirley and Fantasy Island, and gained new hits in Too Close for Comfort, Soap spinoff Benson and Happy Days spinoff Mork & Mindy. In 1981, ABC (through its ABC Video Services division) launched the Alpha Repertory Television Service (ARTS), a cable channel operated as a joint venture with the Hearst Corporation offering cultural and arts programming, which aired as a nighttime service over the channel space of Nickelodeon.[126]
On August 9, 1982, ABC purchased a 10% stake in the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN) for $20 million; in exchange for the interest, ESPN gained the U.S. television rights to the British Open, which ABC had not been able to broadcast in its entirety.[127] The purchase provided ABC the option of purchasing additional shares of up to 49% under certain conditions,[128] which included the option to purchase at least 10% of Getty Oil's shares in the channel prior to January 2, 1984.[128]
Daisies In December 1995 Download Torrent Free
In 1983, ABC sold KXYZ to the Infinity Broadcasting Corporation.[129] On January 4, 1984, The New York Times reported that ABC, through its subsidiary ABC Video Enterprises, had exercised its option to purchase up to 15% (or between $25 million and $30 million) of Getty Oil's shares in ESPN, which would allow it to expand its shares at a later date.[128] In June 1984, ABC's executive committee approved the company's interest acquisition in ESPN, and ABC arranged with Getty Oil to obtain an 80% stake in the channel, while selling the remaining 20% to Nabisco.[130] That year, ABC and Hearst reached an agreement with RCA to merge ARTS and competing arts service, The Entertainment Channel, into a single cable channel called Arts & Entertainment Television (A&E); the new channel subsequently leased a separate satellite transponder, ending its sharing agreement with Nickelodeon to become a 24-hour service.[126] Meanwhile, ABC withdrew from the theme park business for good when it sold the Silver Springs Nature Theme Park.[98]
In December 1984, Thomas S. Murphy, chief executive officer of Capital Cities Communications, contacted Leonard Goldenson about a proposal to merge their respective companies.[131] On March 16, 1985, ABC's executive committee accepted the merger offer,[132] which was formally announced on March 18, 1985, with Capital Cities purchasing ABC and its related properties for $3.5 billion and $118 for each of ABC's shares as well as a guarantee of 10% (or $3) for a total of $121 per share. The merger shocked the entertainment industry, as Capital Cities was some 4 times smaller than ABC was at the time. [131] To finance the purchase, Capital Cities borrowed $2.1 billion from a consortium of banks, which sold certain assets that Capital Cities could not acquire or retain due to FCC ownership rules for a combined $900 million and sold off several cable television systems, which were sold to The Washington Post Company (forming the present-day Cable One).[133] The remaining $500 million was loaned by Warren Buffett, who promised that his company Berkshire Hathaway would purchase $3 million in shares, at $172.50 apiece.[133][134] Due to an FCC ban on same-market ownership of television and radio stations by a single company (although the deal would have otherwise complied with new ownership rules implemented by the FCC in January 1985, that allowed broadcasters to own a maximum of 12 television stations[131]), ABC and Capital Cities respectively decided to sell WXYZ-TV and Tampa independent station WFTS-TV to the E. W. Scripps Company (although Capital Cities/ABC originally intended to seek a cross-ownership waiver to retain WXYZ and Capital Cities-owned radio stations WJR and WHYT).
The merger between ABC and Capital Cities received federal approval on September 5, 1985. After the ABC/Capital Cities merger was finalized on January 3, 1986, the combined company – which became known as Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. – added four television stations (WPVI-TV/Philadelphia, KTRK-TV/Houston, KFSN-TV/Fresno and WTVD/Raleigh) and several radio stations to ABC's broadcasting portfolio, and also included Fairchild Publications and four newspapers (including The Kansas City Star and Fort Worth Star-Telegram).[135] It also initiated several changes in its management:[136] Frederick S. Pierce was named president of ABC's broadcasting division; Michael P. Millardi became vice president of ABC Broadcasting, and president of ABC Owned Stations and ABC Video Enterprises; John B. Sias was appointed president of the ABC Television Network; Brandon Stoddard became president of ABC Entertainment (a position to which he had been appointed in November 1985); and Roone Arledge became president of ABC News and ABC Sports. In February 1986, Thomas S. Murphy, who had been serving as CEO of Capital Cities since 1964, was appointed chairman and CEO emeritus of ABC.[137] Jim Duffy stepped down as ABC Television president for a management position at ABC Communications, a subsidiary that specialized in community service programming, including shows related to literary education.[121]
As far as programming is concerned, four of ABC's marquee shows of the 1970s ended their runs during the mid-1980s: Laverne & Shirley ended its run in 1983, Happy Days and Three's Company ended in 1984 (with the latter producing a short-lived spinoff that year), while The Love Boat ended its run in 1986. After nearly a decade of ratings trouble, NBC had regained the ratings lead among the Big Three networks in 1984 on the success of series such as The Cosby Show, Cheers and Miami Vice. To counteract NBC, ABC decided to refocus itself on comedies and family-oriented series beginning in the mid-1980s including Who's the Boss?, Mr. Belvedere, Growing Pains, Perfect Strangers, Head of the Class, Full House, The Wonder Years, Just the Ten of Us and Roseanne.
Following the initial success of these series, ABC revamped its Friday night schedule around family-friendly comedies in the late 1980s, culminating in the 1989 debut of the 'TGIF' block (which promotions referenced stood for 'Thank Goodness It's Funny').[138] Many of the series featured during the run of the block were produced by Miller-Boyett Productions, a Warner Bros.-based studio that briefly programmed the entire Friday lineup during the 1990–91 season (with Going Places joining Family Matters, Full House and Perfect Strangers on the 'TGIF' schedule) and through its development deal with Paramount Television prior to 1986 (as Miller-Milkis, and later, Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions), had earlier produced Happy Days and its various spinoffs among other series for the network.
In 1988, ABC constructed a new building to serve as the network's headquarters, located near the studios of WABC-TV on West 66th Street. The television network's restructuring program, launched in 1974, helped with the purchases and exchanges of nearly 70 stations during the late 1980s, and aided in increasing its ratings by more than 2 million viewers.[121]
Sale to Disney (1991–2000)[edit]
In 1990, Thomas S. Murphy delegated his position as president to Daniel B. Burke while remaining ABC's chairman and CEO.[137] Capital Cities/ABC reported revenues of $465 million.[139] Now at a strong second place, the network entered the 1990s with additional family-friendly hits including America's Funniest Home Videos (which has gone on to become the longest-running prime time entertainment program in the network's history), Step by Step, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, Boy Meets World and Perfect Strangers spinoff Family Matters, as well as series such as Doogie Howser, M.D., Life Goes On, cult favorite Twin Peaks and The Commish. In September 1991, the network premiered Home Improvement, a sitcom starring stand-up comicTim Allen centering on the family and work life of an accident-prone host of a cable-access home improvement show. Lasting eight seasons, its success led ABC to greenlight additional sitcom projects helmed by comedians during the 1990s including The Drew Carey Show; Brett Butler vehicle Grace Under Fire; and Ellen, which became notable for a 1997 episode which served as the coming out of series star Ellen DeGeneres (as well as her character in the series) as a lesbian.
In 1993, the FCC repealed the Financial Interest and Syndication Rules, once again allowing networks to hold interests in television production studios.[140] That same year, Capital Cities/ABC formed a limited partnership with DIC Animation City known as DIC Entertainment L.P.[141] it also signed an agreement with Time Warner Cable to carry its owned-and-operated television stations on the provider's systems in ABC O&O markets.[142] By that year, ABC had a total viewership share of 23.63% of American households, just below the limit of 25% imposed by the FCC.[140]
Daniel Burke departed from Capital Cities/ABC in February 1994, with Thomas Murphy taking over as president[137] before ceding control to Robert Iger. September 1993 saw the debut of NYPD Blue, a gritty police procedural from Steven Bochco (who created Doogie Howser, M.D. and the critically pilloried Cop Rock for ABC earlier in the decade); lasting twelve seasons, the drama became known for its boundary pushing of network television standards (particularly its occasional use of graphic language and rear nudity), which led some affiliates to initially refuse to air the show in its first season.
In order to compete with CNN, ABC proposed a 24-hour news channel called ABC Cable News, with plans to launch the network in 1995; however, the plan would ultimately be shelved by company management. ABC would reattempt such a concept in July 2004 with the launch of ABC News Now, a 24-hour news channel distributed for viewing on the Internet and mobile phones. On August 29, 1994, ABC purchased Flint, Michigan affiliate WJRT-TV and WTVG in Toledo, Ohio (which was previously affiliated with ABC from 1958 to 1970) from SJL Broadcast Management, with the latter switching to ABC once its contract with NBC expired two months after the purchase was finalized in early 1995.[143] Both stations were acquired as a contingency plan in the event that CBS reached an affiliation deal with WXYZ-TV (to replace WJBK, which switched to Fox as a result of that network's group affiliation agreement with New World Communications) in order to allow the network to retain some over-the-air presence in the Detroit market (the E.W. Scripps Company and ABC would reach a group affiliation deal that renewed affiliation agreements with WXYZ and WEWS, and switch four other stations, including two whose Fox affiliations were displaced by the New World deal, with the network).[144]
On July 31, 1995, The Walt Disney Company announced an agreement to merge with Capital Cities/ABC for $19 billion.[49][145] Disney shareholders approved the merger at a special conference in New York City on January 4, 1996,[145][146] with the acquisition of Capital Cities/ABC being completed on February 9; following the sale, Disney renamed its new subsidiary ABC Inc.[145] In addition to the ABC network, the Disney acquisition integrated ABC's ten owned-and-operated television and 21 radio stations; its 80% interest in ESPN, ownership interests in The History Channel, A&E Television Networks, and Lifetime Entertainment, DIC Productions L.P.; and Capital Cities/ABC's magazine and newspaper properties into the company.[49] As FCC ownership rules forbade the company from keeping both it and KABC-TV, Disney sold Los Angeles independent station KCAL-TV to Young Broadcasting for $387 million.[147] On April 4, Disney sold the four newspapers that ABC had controlled under Capital Cities to Knight Ridder for $1.65 billion.[148] Following the merger, Thomas S. Murphy left ABC with Robert Iger taking his place as president and CEO.[149] Around the time of the merger, Disney's television production units had already produced series for the network such as Home Improvement and Boy Meets World, while the deal also allowed ABC access to Disney's children's programming library for its Saturday morning block. In 1998, ABC premiered the Aaron Sorkin-created sitcom Sports Night, centering on the travails of the staff of a SportsCenter-style sports news program; despite earning critical praise and multiple Emmy Awards, the series was cancelled in 2000 after two seasons.
On May 10, 1999, Disney reorganized its publishing division, the Buena Vista Publishing Group, renaming it as Disney Publishing Worldwide; the rechristened division became a subsidiary of Disney Consumer Products while Hyperion Books became affiliated with ABC.[150] On July 8, 1999, Disney consolidated Walt Disney Television Studio, Buena Vista Television Productions and ABC's primetime division into the ABC Entertainment Television Group.
In August 1999, ABC premiered a special series event, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, a game show based on the British program of the same title. Hosted throughout its ABC tenure by Regis Philbin, the program became a major ratings success throughout its initial summer run, which led ABC to renew Millionaire as a regular series, returning on January 18, 2000. At its peak, the program aired as much as six nights a week.[151] Buoyed by Millionaire, during the 1999–2000 season, ABC became the first network to move from third to first place in the ratings during a single television season. Millionaire ended its run on the network's primetime lineup after three years in 2002, and in September of that year, Buena Vista Television relaunched the show as a syndicated program which throughout its run starred various hosts, of whom the first and longest-tenured, Meredith Vieira, became the first woman to win multiple Emmy Awards for hosting a game show.
New century, new programs; divisional restructuring (2001–2010)[edit]
In addition to Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, the network entered the 2000s with hits held over from the previous decade such as The Practice, NYPD Blue and The Wonderful World of Disney and new series such as My Wife and Kids and According to Jim, all of which managed to help ABC stay ahead of the competition in the ratings in spite of the later departure of Millionaire. 2000 saw the end of the original 'TGIF', which was struggling to find new hits following the loss of Family Matters and Step by Step to CBS as part of its own failed attempt at a family-oriented Friday comedy block in the 1997–98 season. Outside of 20/20, Friday nights remained a weak spot for ABC for the next 11 years.
On April 30, 2000, as a result of a carriage dispute with ABC, Time Warner Cable removed ABC owned-and-operated stations from the cable provider's systems in four markets (WABC-TV in New York City, KABC-TV in Los Angeles, KTRK in Houston and WTVD in Raleigh-Durham). The network had earlier reached an eleventh-hour deal to renew its carriage agreement with the provider on December 31, 1999.[142] ABC filed an emergency petition to the Federal Communications Commission on May 1 to force TWC to restore the affected stations; the FCC ruled in favor of ABC, ordering Time Warner Cable to restore the stations, doing so on the afternoon of May 2.[142] ABC ended the 2000–01 season as the most-watched network, ahead of NBC.
Networks affiliates approved a two-year affiliate agreement in 2002. In September 2006, Disney Chairman/CEO Michael Eisner outlined a proposed realignment of the ABC broadcast network day parts with the similar unit in its cable channels: ABC Saturday mornings with Disney Channels (Toon & Playhouse), ABC daytime with Soapnet and ABC prime time with ABC Family.[152] 2002 saw the debut of the network's first hit reality series, The Bachelor (the elimination-style dating show's success led to a spinoff, The Bachelorette, which premiered the following year, as well as two additionalspinoffs that later debuted in the early 2010s).
In 2004, ABC's average viewership declined by ten ratings points, landing the network in fourth place, behind NBC, CBS and Fox (by the following year, the combined season-ending average audience share of ABC, NBC and CBS represented only 32% of U.S. households[125]). However, during the 2004–05 season, the network experienced unexpected success with new series such as Desperate Housewives, Lost and Grey's Anatomy as well as reality series Dancing with the Stars, which helped ABC rise to second place, jumping ahead of CBS, but behind a surging Fox. On April 21, 2004, Disney announced a restructuring of its Disney Media Networks division with Marvin Jacobs being named president of ABC parent Disney–ABC Television Group, and ESPN president George Bodenheimer becoming co-CEO of the division with Jacobs, as well as president of ABC Sports.[153] On December 7, 2005, ABC Sports and ESPN signed an eight-year broadcast rights agreement with NASCAR, allowing ABC and ESPN to broadcast 17 NASCAR Cup Series races each season (comprising just over half of the 36 races held annually) effective with the 2006 season.[154]
Separation of the radio network[edit]
Between May and September 2005, rumors circulated that Disney–ABC was considering a sale of ABC Radio, with Clear Channel Communications and Westwood One (which had earlier purchased NBC's radio division, as well as the distribution rights to CBS's, and the Mutual Broadcasting System during the 1990s) as potential buyers. On October 19, 2005, ABC announced the restructuring of the group into six divisions: Entertainment Communications, Communications Resources, Kids Communications, News Communications, Corporate Communications, and International Communications.
On February 6, 2007, The Walt Disney Company announced an agreement with Citadel Broadcasting to merge the ABC Radio Network with Citadel. The new entity, Citadel Communications,[155] was majority owned (52%) by Disney, in conjunction with Forstmann Little (32%) and former shareholders of Citadel Broadcasting (16%). Citadel eventually merged with Cumulus Media in September 2011.
Entertainment reorganization and struggles with new shows (2007–2009)[edit]
In February 2007, Disney announced that it would rename its Touchstone Television production unit as the ABC Television Studio (simplified to ABC Studios by that summer), as part of a corporate move to eliminate secondary production brands such as Buena Vista.[156] In May 2007, ABC unveiled a new image campaign, revolving around the slogan 'Start Here', which highlighted the multi-platform availability of ABC's program content.[157]
The Writers Guild of America strike that halted production of network programs for much of the 2007–08 season affected the network in 2007–08 and 2008–09, as various ABC shows that premiered in 2007, such as Dirty Sexy Money, Pushing Daisies, Eli Stone and Samantha Who?, did not live to see a third season; other series such as Boston Legal and the U.S. version of Life on Mars suffered from low viewership, despite the former, a spin off of The Practice, being a once-highlighted breakout series when it debuted in 2005.[158] One of the network's strike-replacement programs during that time was the game show Duel, which premiered in December 2007. The program would become a minor success for the network during its initial six-episode run, which led ABC to renew Duel as a regular series starting in April 2008. However, Duel suffered from low viewership during its run as a regular series, and ABC canceled the program after sixteen episodes. On August 15, 2008, Disney denied rumors started by Caris & Co. that it would be selling the ten ABC owned-and-operated stations.[159]
In early 2009, Disney–ABC Television Group merged ABC Entertainment and ABC Studios into a new division, ABC Entertainment Group, which would be responsible for both its production and broadcasting operations.[160][161][162][163][164] During this reorganization, the group announced that it would lay off 5% of its workforce.[165] On April 2, 2009, Citadel Communications announced that it would rebrand ABC Radio as Citadel Media;[166] however, ABC News continued to provide news content for Citadel. On December 22, Disney–ABC Television Group announced a partnership with Apple Inc. to make individual episodes of ABC and Disney Channel programs available for purchase on iTunes.[167]
Current state[edit]
In March 2010, reports suggested that The Walt Disney Company was considering spinning off ABC into an independent company because 'it [did not] add a lot of value to Disney's other divisions'.[168] The company entered advanced negotiations with two private equity firms to sell ABC; however, the planned sale was cancelled as a result of an FBI investigation into allegations of attempted insider trading by an ex-employee which they later denied.[169]
The network began running into some trouble in the ratings by 2010. That year, the sixth and final season of Lost became the drama's lowest-rated season since its debut in 2004. Ratings for the once instant-hit Ugly Betty collapsed dramatically after it was moved to Fridays at the start of its fourth season in the fall of 2009; an attempt to boost ratings by moving the dramedy to Wednesdays failed, with its ultimate cancellation by the network eliciting negative reaction from the public, and particularly the show's fanbase.[170] With the network's two former hit shows now out of the picture, the network's remaining top veteran shows Desperate Housewives and Grey's Anatomy, and another hit drama Brothers & Sisters, all ended the 2009–10 season having recorded their lowest ratings ever.
Among the few bright spots during this season were the midseason crime dramedy Castle as well as the success of two family sitcoms that anchored the network's revamped Wednesday comedy lineup, The Middle and Modern Family, the latter of which was both a critical and commercial success. Shark Tank (based on the Dragon's Den reality format) also became a midseason sleeper hit on Sundays in the spring of 2010; the following season, it became the tentpole of the network's Friday night schedule, gradually helping make ABC a strong competitor (after being paired with 20/20 and beginning with the 2012–13 season, the Tim Allen sitcom Last Man Standing) against CBS' long-dominant drama/reality lineup on that night for the first time since the 'TGIF' lineup ended in 2000.
The network's troubles with sustaining existing series and gaining new hits spilled over into its 2010–11 schedule: ABC's dramas during that season continued to fail, with the midseason forensic investigation drama Body of Proof being the only one that was renewed for a second season.[171] The network also struggled to establish new comedies to support the previous year's debuts, with only late-season premiere Happy Endings earning a second season.[171] Meanwhile, the new lows hit by Brothers & Sisters led to its cancellation, and the previous year's only drama renewal, V, also failed to earn another season after a low-rated midseason run.[172] Despite this and another noticeable ratings decline, ABC would manage to outrate NBC for third place by a larger margin than the previous year.[173]
With relatively little buzz surrounding its 2010–11 pilots, compounded by a sexual harassment lawsuit against him, Stephen McPherson resigned as ABC Entertainment Group president on July 27, 2010. Paul Lee (who previously served as the president of sister cable channel ABC Family) was announced as his replacement that same day.[174][175]
On April 14, 2011, ABC canceled the long-running soap operas All My Children and One Life to Live after 41 and 43 years on the air, respectively[176] (following backlash from fans, ABC sold the rights to both shows to Prospect Park, which eventually revived the soaps on Hulu for one additional season in 2013 and with both companies suing one another for allegations of interference with the process of reviving the shows, failure to pay licensing fees and issues over ABC's use of certain characters from One Life to Live on General Hospital during the transition[177][178]). The talk/lifestyle show that replaced One Life to Live, The Revolution, failed to generate satisfactory ratings and was in turn canceled after only seven months. The 2011–12 season saw ABC drop to fourth place in the 18–49 demographic despite renewing a handful of new shows (including freshmen dramas Scandal, Revenge and Once Upon a Time) for second seasons.[179]
In 2012, ABC News and Univision Communications announced a partnership to launch an English-language cable news channel primarily aimed at younger English-speaking Hispanics; the new network, Fusion, launched on October 28, 2013.[180][181][182] The 2012–13 season failed to live up to the previous year, with only one drama, Nashville, and one comedy, The Neighbors, earning a second season renewal.
The 2013–14 season was a slight improvement for ABC with three new hits in The Goldbergs, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Resurrection, all of which were renewed; however, that season saw the cancellations of holdovers The Neighbors (which languished in its new Friday time slot despite being bookended by Last Man Standing and Shark Tank) and Suburgatory. NBC, which had lagged behind ABC for eight years, finished the season in first place in the 18–49 demographic for the first time since 2004, and in second place in total viewership behind long-dominant CBS. ABC itself would finish the season in third place as Fox crashed to fourth in both demographics.
The 2014–15 season saw moderate hits in Black-ish (the first series on the four major U.S. networks to feature a predominately African-American cast since 2006) and major successes in How to Get Away with Murder (which, alongside Grey's Anatomy and Scandal, became one of the centerpieces of a new Thursday drama lineup, 'TGIT', composed of dramas executive produced by Shonda Rhimes). New hits came in with fellow new comedy Fresh Off the Boat, a new drama Secrets and Lies and a low rated but critically acclaimed show American Crime, all of which were renewed. However, that season saw cancellations of Resurrection and Revenge.
The 2015–16 season saw breakout hits such as Quantico, The Real O'Neals, The Catch, and Dr. Ken. On April 18, 2016, ABC and ABC Productions announced that Stana Katic and Tamala Jones would not return for Castle's ninth season, should it be renewed.[183] Despite several other cast members having signed on for a ninth season, on May 12, 2016, it was announced that the show would be cancelled instead; the final episode aired on May 16, 2016.[184]
The 2016–17 season saw a successful expansion of the network's Tuesday night comedy line-up by an extra hour, with long-time Wednesday staple The Middle leading the night, along with the returning Fresh Off the Boat and The Real O'Neals, and new series American Housewife, Imaginary Mary, and Downward Dog. Wednesday's comedy block, with The Goldbergs leading the night in place of The Middle, introduced Speechless. Both American Housewife and Speechless were renewed for second seasons. This season also saw the cancellation of long-running sitcom Last Man Standing and Dr. Ken. The former stirred controversy due to allegations that Last Man Standing was cancelled due to the star Tim Allen's and the show's right-leaning viewpoints.[185] ABC also saw the success of freshman series Designated Survivor. However, the previous season's breakout hit Quantico saw its ratings decline during its sophomore year.[186]
The 2017–18 season saw ABC acquire a breakout hit with The Good Doctor, which led to the series getting an early full-season pickup.[187] Additionally, ABC revived former Fox series American Idol which premiered during the mid-season. As a result, veteran dramas Once Upon a Time and Marvel Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. were displaced to Friday nights, while Shark Tank was moved to Sunday nights in order to accommodate a time slot for American Idol.[188] This season also saw veteran series The Middle, Once Upon a Time, and Scandal end their runs. ABC also revived Roseanne, which originally ran from 1988 to 1997, for a tenth season, which saw ratings success. While Roseanne was initially renewed for an eleventh season, the series was abruptly cancelled due to a Twitter scandal involving Roseanne Barr. However, the series returned without Barr, under the new title of The Conners.
Leadership reshuffle[edit]
A major reshuffle in executive leadership also occurred after Disney announced its acquisition of 21st Century Fox On November 16, 2018, Freeform President Karey Burke had succeeded Channing Dungey as head of ABC Entertainment.[1] It was also announced that former head of 20th Century Fox TelevisionDana Walden had been appointed to take over as head of ABC, Freeform, and all other Disney television-studio operations.[1] Former Fox executive Peter Rice will also manage non-sports television programming for ABC and other Disney networks as well.[1]
Programming[edit]
The ABC television network provides 89 hours of regularly scheduled network programming each week. The network provides 22 hours of prime time programming to affiliated stations from 8:00–11:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday (all times Eastern and Pacific Time) and 7:00–11:00 p.m. on Sundays.
Daytime programming is also provided from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. weekdays (with a one-hour break at 12:00 p.m. Eastern/Pacific for stations to air newscasts, other locally produced programming such as talk shows, or syndicated programs) featuring the talk/lifestyle shows The View and The Chew and the soap opera General Hospital. ABC News programming includes Good Morning America from 7:00 to 9:00 a.m. weekdays (along with one-hour weekend editions); nightly editions of ABC World News Tonight (whose weekend editions are occasionally subject to abbreviation or preemption due to sports telecasts overrunning into the program's timeslot), the Sunday political talk showThis Week, early morning news programs World News Now and America This Morning and the late night newsmagazine Nightline. Late nights feature the weeknight talk show Jimmy Kimmel Live!.
The network's three-hour Saturday morning children's programming timeslot is programmed by syndication distributor Litton Entertainment, which produces Litton's Weekend Adventure under an arrangement in which the programming block is syndicated exclusively to ABC owned-and-operated and affiliated stations, rather than being leased out directly by the network to Litton.
Daytime[edit]
ABC's daytime schedule currently features the talk show The View and the soap opera General Hospital, the latter of which is the longest-running entertainment program in the history of the ABC television network, having aired since 1963. ABC also broadcasts the morning news program Good Morning America and has done so since 1975, though that program is not considered to be part of the ABC Daytime block. In addition to the long-running All My Children (1970–2011) and One Life to Live (1968–2012), notable past soap operas seen on the daytime lineup include Ryan's Hope, Dark Shadows, Loving, The City and Port Charles. ABC also aired the last nine years of the Procter & Gamble-produced soap The Edge of Night, following its cancellation by CBS in 1975. ABC Daytime has also aired a number of game shows, including The Dating Game, The Newlywed Game, Let's Make a Deal, Password, Split Second, The $10,000/$20,000 Pyramid, Family Feud, The Better Sex, Trivia Trap, All-Star Blitz and Hot Streak.
Sports[edit]
Sports programming is provided on occasion, primarily on weekend afternoons; since 2006, the ABC Sports division has been defunct, with all sports telecasts on ABC being produced in association with sister cable network ESPN under the branding ESPN on ABC. While ABC has, in the past, aired notable sporting events such as the NFL's Monday Night Football, and various college footballbowl games (including, most prominently for a period, the Bowl Championship Series), general industry trends and changes in rights have prompted reductions in sports broadcasts on broadcast television (the BCS's successor, the College Football Playoff and national championship, air exclusively on ESPN).[189][190]
ABC is the broadcast television rightsholder of the National Basketball Association (NBA), with its package (under the NBA on ESPN branding) traditionally beginning with its Christmas Day games, followed by a series of Sunday afternoon games through the remainder of the season, weekend playoff games, and all games of the NBA Finals. During college football season, ABC typically carries an afternoon doubleheader on Saturdays, along with the primetime Saturday Night Football. ABC also airs coverage of selected bowl games. The Saturday afternoon lineup outside of football season typically features airings of ESPN Films documentaries or other studio programs under the banner ESPN Sports Saturday, while Sunday afternoons usually feature either brokered programming, or encore and burn-off airings of ABC programs.
Specials[edit]
ABC currently holds the broadcast rights to the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards (which are rotated across all four major networks on a year-to-year basis), American Music Awards, and the Country Music Association Awards (along with two associated specials, the CMA Music Festival and CMA Country Christmas). ABC has also aired the Miss America competition from 1954 to 1956, 1997 to 2005 (with the television rights being assumed by cable channel TLC in 2006, when the event moved from its longtime home in Atlantic City to Las Vegas, before returning to Atlantic City in 2013) and since 2011. Under its current contract with the Miss America Organization, ABC continued to broadcast the event through 2016.[191]
Since 2000, ABC has also owned the television rights to most of the Peanuts television specials, having acquired the broadcast rights from CBS, which originated the specials in 1965 with the debut of A Charlie Brown Christmas (other Peanuts specials broadcast annually by ABC, including A Charlie Brown Christmas, include It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving). ABC also broadcasts the annual Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade special on Christmas morning.
Since 1974, ABC has generally aired Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve on New Year's Eve, hosted first by its creator Dick Clark, and later by his successor Ryan Seacrest. The only exception was in 1999, when ABC instead broadcast ABC 2000—a day-long telecast produced by ABC News and hosted by Peter Jennings, covering festivities from around the world (although Clark would join Jennings to cover Times Square). ABC is also among one of several broadcasters of the Tournament of Roses Paradethe next day (although the Rose Bowl Game itself now airs exclusively on ESPN after previously airing on ABC).
In 2015, ABC began airing the ESPY Awards, which normally aired on ESPN before 2015. In the ABC debut of the ESPY's, Caitlyn Jenner was awarded the Arthur Ash Award for courage, after she announced in a 20/20 interview, that she was becoming transgender.
Programming library[edit]
ABC owns nearly all its in-house television and theatrical productions made from the 1970s onward, with the exception of certain co-productions with producers (for example, The Commish is now owned by the estate of its producer, Stephen Cannell). Worldwide video rights are currently owned by various companies, for example, Kino Lorber owns the North American home video rights to the ABC feature film library (along with some lesser known live action films from Disney's library, mostly from Touchstone Pictures, Hollywood Pictures and 20th Century Fox).
When the FCC imposed its fin-syn rules in 1970, ABC proactively created two companies: Worldvision Enterprises as a syndication distributor, and ABC Circle Films as a production company. However, between the publication and implementation of these regulations, the separation of the network's catalog was made in 1973. The broadcast rights to pre-1973 productions were transferred to Worldvision, which became independent in the same year. The company has been sold several times since Paramount Television acquired it in 1999, and has most recently been absorbed into CBS Television Distribution, a unit of CBS Corporation. Nonetheless, Worldvision sold portions of its catalog, including the Ruby-Spears and Hanna-Barbera libraries, to Turner Broadcasting System in 1991. With Disney's 1996 purchase of ABC, ABC Circle Films was absorbed into Touchstone Television, a Disney subsidiary which in turn was renamed ABC Studios in 2007.[156]
Also part of the library are most films in the David O. Selznick library, the Cinerama Productions/Palomar theatrical library (with the exception of those films produced in Cinerama which are now under the control of Pacific Theatres and Flicker Alley), the Selmur Productions catalog that the network acquired some years back, and the in-house productions it continues to produce (such as America's Funniest Home Videos, General Hospital, ABC News productions, as well as series from ABC Studios and 20th Century Fox Television), although Disney–ABC Domestic Television (formerly known as Buena Vista Television) handles domestic television distribution, while Disney–ABC International Television (formerly known as Buena Vista International Television) handles international television distribution.
Stations[edit]
Since its inception, ABC has had many affiliated stations, which include WABC-TV and WPVI-TV, the first two stations to carry the network's programming. As of November 2017, ABC has eight owned-and-operated stations, and current and pending affiliation agreements with 236 additional television stations encompassing 49 states, the District of Columbia, four U.S. possessions, Bermuda and Saba;[192][193] this makes ABC the largest U.S. broadcast television network by total number of affiliates. The network has an estimated national reach of 97.76% of all households in the United States (or 305,477,424 Americans with at least one television set).
Daisies In December 1995
Currently, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Delaware are the only U.S. states where ABC does not have a locally licensed affiliate (New Jersey is served by New York City O&O WABC-TV and Philadelphia O&O WPVI-TV; Rhode Island is served by New Bedford, Massachusetts-licensed WLNE, though outside of the transmitter, all other operations for the station are based in Providence; and Delaware is served by WPVI and Salisbury, Maryland affiliate WMDT). ABC maintains affiliations with low-power stations (broadcasting either in analog or digital) in a few markets, such as Birmingham, Alabama (WBMA-LD), Lima, Ohio (WPNM-LP) and South Bend, Indiana (WBND-LD). In some markets, including the former two mentioned, these stations also maintain digital simulcasts on a subchannel of a co-owned/co-managed full-power television station.
The network has the unusual distinction of having separately owned and operated affiliates which serve the same market in Tampa, Florida (WFTS-TV and WWSB), Lincoln, Nebraska (KLKN-TV and KHGI-TV), and Grand Rapids, Michigan (WZZM and WOTV), with an analogous situation arising in Kansas City, Missouri (KMBC-TV and KQTV). KQTV is licensed to St. Joseph, Missouri, which is designated by Nielsen as a separate market from Kansas City despite being located within 55 miles (89 km) of one another (though in the 2010s through digital subchannels, KQTV's competitor in the market, News-Press & Gazette Company, has established locally based affiliates of the other four major networks and Telemundo on three low-power stations to end St. Joseph's dependence on Kansas City; NPG itself proposed an acquisition of KQTV in April 2019, subject to FCC approval), while WWSB, KHGI and WOTV serve areas that do not receive an adequate signal from their market's primary ABC affiliate (in the case of WWSB, this dates back to when WTSP was Tampa's primary ABC affiliate prior to 1994, with the former being necessitated to serve the southern part of the Tampa market including the station's city of license, Sarasota, due to WTSP's transmitter being short-spaced to avoid interfering with the analog signal of Miami affiliate WPLG – which like WTSP, broadcast on VHF channel 10).
The Sinclair Broadcast Group is the largest operator of ABC stations by numerical total, owning or providing services to 28 ABC affiliates and two additional subchannel-only affiliates; Sinclair owns the largest ABC subchannel affiliate by market size, WABM-DT2/WDBB-DT2 in the Birmingham market, which serve as repeaters of WBMA-LD (which itself is also simulcast on a subchannel of former WBMA satellite WGWW, owned by Sinclair partner company Howard Stirk Holdings). The E. W. Scripps Company is the largest operator of ABC stations in terms of overall market reach, owning 15 ABC-affiliated stations (including affiliates in larger markets such as Cleveland, Phoenix, Detroit and Denver), and through its ownership of Phoenix affiliate KNXV, Las Vegas affiliate KTNV-TV and Tucson affiliate KGUN-TV, it is the only provider of ABC programming for the majority of Arizona (outside the Yuma-El Centro market) and Southern Nevada. Scripps also owns and operates several ABC stations in the Mountain and Pacific time zones, including in Denver, San Diego, Bakersfield, California, and Boise, Idaho, and when combined with the ABC-owned stations in Los Angeles, Fresno, and San Francisco, the affiliations from the News-Press & Gazette Company in Santa Barbara, Palm Springs, Yuma-El Centro, and Colorado Springs-Pueblo, and Sinclair's affiliations in Seattle and Portland, Oregon, these four entities control the access of ABC network programming in most of the Western United States, particularly in terms of audience reach.
Facilities and studios[edit]
All of ABC's owned-and-operated stations and affiliates have had their own facilities and studios, but transverse entities have been created to produce national programming. As a result, television series were produced by ABC Circle Films beginning in 1962 and by Touchstone Television beginning in 1985, before Touchstone was reorganized as ABC Studios in February 2007. Since the 1950s, ABC has had two main production facilities: the ABC Television Center (now The Prospect Studios) on Prospect Avenue in Hollywood, California, shared with the operations of KABC-TV until 1999; and the ABC Television Center, East, a set of studios located throughout the New York City.
In addition to the headquarters building on Riverside Drive, other ABC facilities in Burbank include a building at 3800 West Alameda, known as 'Burbank Center,' which is primarily associated with Disney–ABC Television Group, and functions as the headquarters and broadcast center for Disney Junior, Disney Channel, Disney XD, FreeForm, as well as Radio Disney. Additionally, Disney Television Animation has a facility on Empire Avenue near the Hollywood Burbank Airport. In nearby Glendale, Disney/ABC also maintains the Grand Central Creative Campus, which houses other company subsidiaries, including the studios of KABC-TV and the Los Angeles bureau of ABC News.
ABC owns several facilities in New York grouped mainly on West 66th Street. The main set of facilities is on the corner of Columbus Avenue and West 66th Street. In total, ABC's facilities occupy a combined 9,755 square meters (105,000 sq ft) of the 14,864 square meters (159,990 sq ft) of the blocks they encompass. The aforementioned set includes:
- 77 West 66th Street, a 22-story building built in 1988 on a 175-by-200-foot (53 m × 61 m) plot, built partially on the site of the former St. Nicholas Arena;
- A pair of buildings at 147–155 Columbus Avenue (with one building comprising 10 stories and the other seven, and both containing glass bays connecting them to each other), constructed on a 150-by-200-foot (46 m × 61 m) plot;
- 30 West 67th Street, a 15-story building with a facade on 67th Street on a 100-by-100-foot (30 m × 30 m) plot;
- The former First Battery of the New York National Guard, a five-story building located at number 56 on the other side of the street, on a 174-by-100-foot (53 m × 30 m) plot;
- ABC also owns 7, 17 and 47 West 66th Street, three buildings on a 375-by-100-foot (114 m × 30 m) plot; the first two being the original Durland's Riding Academy buildings;
- From 1983 to 2013, Disney leased 70,000 square feet (6,500 m2) at 157 Columbus Avenue, just on the other side of 67th Street.[194]
Entrance of ABC's headquarters at 77 West 66 Street
WABC-TV buildings at 149–155 Columbus Avenue and behind 157 Columbus Avenue
ABC facilities in the former First Battery of the New York National Guard
ABC also owns the Times Square Studios at 1500 Broadway on land in Times Square owned by a development fund for the 42nd Street Project; opened in 1999, Good Morning America and Nightline are broadcast from this particular facility. ABC News has premises a little further on West 66th Street, in a six-story building occupying a 196-by-379-foot (60 m × 116 m) plot at 121–135 West End Avenue. The block of West 66th street between Central Park West and Columbus Ave which houses the ABC News building was renamed Peter Jennings Way in 2006 in honor of the recently deceased longtime ABC News chief anchor and anchor of World News Tonight.[195]
On July 9, 2018, the Walt Disney Company announced that it was selling its two West 66th Street campuses (except for the National Guard Amory) to Silverstein Properties and purchasing one square block of property in lower Manhattan to build a new New York based broadcast center.[196]
Related services[edit]
Video-on-demand services[edit]
ABC maintains several video on demand services for delayed viewing of the network's programming, including a traditional VOD service called ABC on Demand, which is carried on most traditional cable and IPTV providers. The Walt Disney Company is also a part-owner of Hulu (as part of a consortium that includes, among other parties, the respective parent companies of NBC and Fox, NBCUniversal and 21st Century Fox), and has offered full-length episodes of most of ABC's programming through the streaming service since July 6, 2009 (which are available for viewing on Hulu's website and mobile app, and since July 2016, through Yahoo! View as part of Hulu's spin-off of their free service to Yahoo),[197] as part of an agreement reached in April that year that also allowed Disney to acquire a 27% ownership stake in Hulu.
In May 2013, ABC launched 'WatchABC', a revamp of its traditional multi-platform streaming services encompassing the network's existing streaming portal at ABC.com and a mobile app for smartphones and tablet computers; in addition to providing full-length episodes of ABC programs, the service allows live programming streams of local ABC affiliates in select markets (the first such offering by a U.S. broadcast network). Similar to sister network ESPN's WatchESPN service, live streams of ABC stations are only available to authenticated subscribers of participating pay television providers in certain markets. New York City O&O WABC-TV and Philadelphia O&O WPVI-TV were the first stations to offer streams of their programming on the service (with a free preview for non-subscribers through June 2013), with the six remaining ABC O&Os offering streams by the start of the 2013–14 season. Hearst Television also reached a deal to offer streams of its ABC affiliates (including stations in Boston, Kansas City, Milwaukee and West Palm Beach) on the service, though as of 2016 these stations are only available for live-streaming for DirecTV subscribers.[198][199]
In November 2015, it was reported that ABC had been developing a slate of original digital series for the WatchABC service, internally codenamed 'ABC3', with one series set to feature Iliza Shlesinger.[200] In July 2016, ABC re-launched its streaming platforms, dropping the 'WatchABC' brand, adding a streaming library of 38 classic ABC series, as well as introducing seven original short-form series under the blanket branding ABCd.[201]
The most recent episodes of the network's shows are usually made available on the ABC app, Hulu and ABC on Demand the day after their original broadcast. In addition, ABC on Demand (like the video-on-demand television services provided by the other U.S. broadcast networks) disallows fast forwarding of accessed content. Restrictions implemented on January 7, 2014 restrict streaming of the most recent episode of any ABC program on Hulu and the ABC app until eight days after their initial broadcast, in order to encourage live or same-week (via both DVR and cable on demand) viewing, with day-after-air streaming on either service limited to subscribers of participating pay television providers (such as Comcast, Verizon FiOS and Time Warner Cable) using an ISP account via an authenticated user login.
ABC HD[edit]
ABC's network feeds are transmitted in 720phigh definition, the native resolution format for The Walt Disney Company's U.S. television properties. However, most of Hearst Television's 16 ABC-affiliated stations transmit the network's programming in 1080i HD, while 11 other affiliates owned by various companies carry the network feed in 480istandard definition[192] either due to technical considerations for affiliates of other major networks that carry ABC programming on a digital subchannel or because a primary feed ABC affiliate has not yet upgraded their transmission equipment to allow content to be presented in HD.
ABC began its conversion to high definition with the launch of its simulcast feed, ABC HD, on September 16, 2001 at the start of the 2001–02 season, with its scripted prime time series becoming the first shows to upgrade to the format. The network's slate of freshmen scripted series were broadcast in HD from their debuts, while all scripted series held over from the 2000–01 season were converted from standard-definition to high definition beginning that season.
With the 2011 cancellation of Supernanny, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition became the only remaining program on the network's schedule that was broadcast in 4:3 standard definition. All of the network's programming has been presented in HD since January 2012 (with the exception of certain holiday specials produced prior to 2005 – such as the Peanuts specials – which continue to be presented in 4:3 SD), when Extreme Makeover: Home Edition ended its run as a regular series and One Life to Live (which had been presented in 16:9 standard definition since 2010) also ended its ABC run. The affiliate-syndicated Saturday morning E/I block Litton's Weekend Aventure is also broadcast in HD, and was the first children's program block on any U.S. broadcast network to feature programs available in the format upon its September 2011 debut.
On September 1, 2016, ABC began to use 16:9 framing for all of most graphical imaging (primarily the network's logo bug, in-program promotions and generic closing credit sequences as well as sports telecasts, where the BottomLine and scoreboard elements now extend outside the 4:3 frame), requiring its stations and pay television providers to display its programming in a compulsory widescreen format, either in high definition or standard definition; with the change, some programs (such as Grey's Anatomy, The Goldbergs and Quantico) also began positioning their main on-screen credits outside the 4:3 aspect ratio. This left CBS and The CW as the last two major networks to continue to prefer 4:3 framing for graphics, with CBS converting to 16:9 framing effective September 24, 2018.
Visual identity[edit]
The ABC logo has evolved many times since the network's creation in 1943. The network's first logo, introduced in 1946, consisted of a television screen containing the letters 'T' and 'V', with a vertical ABC microphone in the center,[202] referencing the network's roots in radio. When the ABC-UPT merger was finalized in 1953, the network introduced a new logo based on the seal of the Federal Communications Commission, with the letters 'ABC' enclosed in a circular shield surmounted by the bald eagle.[202] In 1957, just before the television network began its first color broadcasts, the ABC logo consisted of a tiny lowercase 'abc' in the center of a large lowercase letter a, a design known as the 'ABC Circle A'.[202]
In 1962, graphic designer Paul Rand redesigned the ABC logo into its best-known (and current) form, with the lowercase letters 'abc' enclosed in a single black circle. The new logo debuted on-air for ABC's promos at the start of the 1963–64 season. The letters are strongly reminiscent of the Bauhaus typeface designed by Herbert Bayer in the 1920s,[203] but also share similarities with several other fonts, such as ITC Avant Garde and Horatio, and most closely resembling Chalet. The logo's simplicity made it easier to redesign and duplicate, which conferred a benefit for ABC (mostly before the advent of computer graphics). A color version of this logo was also developed around 1963, and animated as a brief 10-second intro to be shown before the then-small handful of network programs broadcast in color (similar to the NBC 'Laramie' peacock intro used during that era). The 'a' was rendered in red, the 'b' in blue, and the 'c' in green, against the same single black circle. A variant of this color logo, with the colored letters against a white circle, was also commonly used throughout the 1960s.
The 1970s and 1980s saw the emergence of many graphical imaging packages for the network which based the logo's setting mainly on special lighting effects then under development including white, blue, pink, rainbow neon and glittering dotted lines. Among the 'ABC Circle' logo's many variants was a 1977 ID sequence that featured a bubble on a black background representing the circle with glossy gold letters, and as such, was the first ABC identification card to have a three-dimensional appearance.[202]
In 1983, for the 40th anniversary of the network's founding, ID sequences had the logo appear in a gold CGI design on a blue background, accompanied by the slogan 'That Special Feeling' in a script font.[202] Ten years later, in 1993, the 'ABC Circle' logo reverted to its classic white-on-black color scheme, but with gloss effects on both the circle and the letters, and a bronze border surrounding the circle.[202] The ABC logo first appeared as a on-screen bug in the 1993–94 season, appearing initially only for 60 seconds at the beginning of an act or segment, before appearing throughout programs (except during commercial breaks) beginning in the 1995–96 season; the respective iterations of the translucent logo bug were also incorporated within program promotions until the 2011–12 season.
During the 1997–98 season, the network began using a minimalist graphical identity, designed by Pittard Sullivan, featuring a small black-and-white 'ABC Circle' logo on a yellow background (promotions during this time also featured a sequence of still photos of the stars of its programs during the timeslot card as well as the schedule sequence that began each night's prime time lineup).[202] A new four-note theme tune was introduced alongside the package, based around the network's 'We Love TV' image campaign introduced in January 1998, creating an audio signature on par with the NBC chimes, CBS' various three-note soundmarks (including the current version used since 1992) and the Fox Fanfare. The four-note signature has been updated with every television season thereafter (though variants of it remain in use during the production company vanity cards shown following the closing credits of most programs).
In 2000, ABC launched a web-based promotional campaign focused around its circle logo, also called 'the dot', in which comic book character Little Dot prompted visitors to 'download the dot', a program which would cause the ABC logo to fly around the screen and settle in the bottom-right corner.[204] The network hired the Troika Design Group to design and produce its 2001–02 identity, which continued using the black-and-yellow coloring of the logo and featured dots and stripes in various promotional and identification spots.[205]
On June 16, 2007, ABC began to phase in a new imaging campaign for the upcoming 2007–08 season, 'Start Here'. Also developed by Troika, the on-air design was intended to emphasize the availability of ABC content across multiple platforms (in particular, using a system of icons representing different devices, such as television, computers and mobile devices), and 'simplify and bring a lot more consistency and continuity to the visual representation of ABC'. The ABC logo was also significantly redesigned as part of the transition, with a glossy 'ball' effect that was specifically designed for HD. On-air, the logo was accompanied by animated water and ribbon effects. Red ribbons were used to represent the entertainment division, while blue ribbons were used for ABC News.[157][206]
A revised version of the ABC logo was introduced for promotions for the 2013–14 season during the network's upfront presentation on May 14, 2013, and officially introduced on-air on May 30 (although some affiliates implemented the new design prior to then), as part of an overhaul of ABC's identity by design agency LoyalKaspar. The updated logo carries a simpler gloss design than the previous version, and contains lettering more closely resembling Paul Rand's original version of the circle logo. A new custom typeface inspired by the ABC logotype, 'ABC Modern', was also created for use in advertising and other promotional materials. The logo was used in various color schemes, with a gold version used primarily for ABC's entertainment divisions, a red version used primarily for ESPN on ABC, steel blue and dark grey versions used primarily by ABC News, and all four colors used interchangeably in promotions.[207] As part of a reimaging for the 2018–19 season, the color variants were dropped in favor of the dark grey version.[208]
The Circle 7 logo, designed in 1962, is also commonly associated with ABC affiliates who broadcast on channel 7, including its flagship local stations WABC-TV (New York City), KABC-TV (Los Angeles), KGO-TV (San Francisco) and WLS-TV (Chicago). This logo was intended to be used somewhat interchangeably by these stations with the main circular network logo, and has itself also become an iconic symbol of the ABC network.
International development[edit]
The first attempts to internationalize the ABC television network date back to the 1950s, after Leonard Goldenson, following the United Paramount Theatres model, tried to use on ABC the same strategies he had made in expanding UPT's theater operation to the international market.[209] Leonard Goldenson said that ABC's first international activity was broadcasting the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in June 1953; CBS and NBC were delayed in covering the coronation due to flight delays.[210][211] Goldenson tried international investing, having ABC invest in stations in the Latin American market, acquiring a 51% interest in a network covering Central America and in 1959 established program distributor Worldvision Enterprises[212] Goldenson also cited interest in Japan in the early 1950s,[213] acquiring a 5% stake in two new domestic networks, the Mainichi Broadcasting System in 1951 and Nihon Educational Television in 1957.[213] Goldenson also invested in broadcasting properties in Beirut in the mid-1960s.[214]
The idea was to create a network of wholly and partially owned channels, and affiliates to rebroadcast the network's programs. In 1959, this rerun activity was completed with program syndication, with ABC Films selling programs to networks not owned by ABC.[215] The arrival of satellite television ended the need for ABC to hold interests in other countries;[109] many governments also wanted to increase their independence and strengthen legislation to limit foreign ownership of broadcasting properties. As a result, ABC was forced to sell all of its interests in international networks, mainly in Japan and Latin America, in the 1970s.[69]
A second period of international expansion is linked to that of the ESPN network in the 1990s, and policies enacted in the 2000s by Disney Media Networks (which included the expansion of several of the company's U.S.-based cable networks including Disney Channel and its spinoffs Toon Disney, Playhouse Disney and Jetix; although Disney also sold its 33% stake in European sports channel Eurosport for $155 million in June 2000[216]). In contrast to Disney's other channels, ABC is broadcast in the United States, although the network's programming is syndicated in many countries. The policy regarding wholly owned international networks was revived in 2004 when on September 27 of that year, ABC announced the launch of ABC1, a free-to-air channel in the United Kingdom owned by the ABC Group.[217] However, on September 8, 2007, Disney announced that it would discontinue ABC1 citing to the channel's inability to attain sustainable viewership.[218] With ABC1's shutdown that October, the company's attempt to develop ABC International were discontinued.[218]
Prior to the ABC1 closure, on October 10, 2006, Disney–ABC Television Group entered into an agreement with satellite provider Dish TV to carry its ABC News Now channel in India.[219] However, nothing has been heard from either parties thereafter.
Canada[edit]
Most Canadians have access to at least one U.S.-based ABC affiliate, either over-the-air (in areas located within proximity to the Canada–United States border) or through a cable, satellite or IPTV provider, although most ABC programs are subject to simultaneous substitution regulations imposed by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission that allow pay television providers to replace an American station's signal with the feed of a Canadian broadcaster to protect domestic programming rights and advertising revenue.
Movies produced by ABC or its divisions[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Footnotes[edit]
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- ^ abCox 2009, p. 91.
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- ^ abcdGoldenson & Wolf 1991–1993, p. 97.
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- ^ abSterling 2004, p. 292.
- ^ abSterling 2004, p. 89.
- ^ abcdefghijGoldenson & Wolf 1991–1993, p. 104.
- ^ abcMurray 1997, p. 6.
- ^ abcCox 2009, p. 98.
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- ^ ab'Encyclopedia of Television – 'Freeze' of 1948'. Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on December 2, 2013. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
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- ^The Billboard, April 23, 1949, p. 120.
- ^The Billboard, May 14, 1949, p. 13.
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- ^The Billboard, September 16, 1950, p. 5.
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