A Minute with Stan Hooper, also known as Stan Hooper, is an American sitcom starring Norm Macdonald. The series was a Bungalow 78 production in association with Paramount Television and aired on Fox. The series was canceled after eight of the thirteen episodes produced were aired.
A Minute with Stan Hooper | |
---|---|
Also known as | Stan Hooper |
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Norm Macdonald Barry Kemp |
Written by | Norm Macdonald Cindy Caponera Barry Kemp Mike Lisbe Nate Reger Joseph Staretski |
Directed by | Jeffrey L. Melman Barry Kemp |
Starring | Norm Macdonald Penelope Ann Miller Reagan Dale Neis |
Composer | Jason Miller |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (5 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Norm Macdonald Barry Kemp Lori Jo Hoekstra |
Producer | Jessie Ward Dugan |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production companies | Bungalow 78 Productions Paramount Television |
Original release | |
Network | Fox |
Release | October 29 December 12, 2003 | –
The central character's name, Stan Hooper, was taken from Macdonald's work on Saturday Night Live, but the characters were vastly different. The role also allowed Macdonald to play the straight man among a cast of eccentric characters, a departure from his traditional comedy style.
Plot
editHooper, a famous newspaper columnist turned television commentator, moves his family from their New York home to a small Wisconsin town, Waterford Falls, where he hopes to better get in touch with Middle America in an attempt to make his weekly minute-long television commentaries more appealing to a larger audience. While there, he interacts with the folksy, and largely strange, townspeople of Waterford Falls.
Macdonald has said his goal was for the show to lull its audience into complacency, and become more subversive as time went on. It included a plan for Stan's wife Molly to be murdered by a drifter at the end of the first season.[1] The show was cancelled before any such plans were enacted.
Cast
edit- Norm Macdonald as Stan Hooper
- Penelope Ann Miller as Molly Hooper
- Brian Howe as Gary
- Garret Dillahunt as Lou Peterson
- Eric Lively as Ryan Hawkins
- Reagan Dale Neis as Chelsea
- Daniel Roebuck as Pete Peterson
- Fred Willard as Fred Hawkins
Episodes
editNo. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | Barry Kemp | Barry Kemp & Norm Macdonald | October 29, 2003 | 101 |
Stan moves with his family from New York to a small Wisconsin town, Waterford Falls, in order to better get in touch with “Middle America” to make his minute-long television commentaries more appealing to a larger audience. | |||||
2 | "Stan Goes to Washington" | Jeff Melman | Cindy Caponera | November 5, 2003 | 104 |
After he finds out that the same man has been mayor for five straight terms, Stan decides to run for town mayor to give the townsfolk another choice. However, Stan is shocked to learn of the cover-up behind the mayor and the involvement of Fred Hawkins in it, as well as the rest of the town. | |||||
3 | "The Hustle" | Jeff Melman | Norm Macdonald & Barry Kemp | November 12, 2003 | 102 |
After deciding to go out for a boy’s night out at Jimmy’s tavern with Lou and Pete Peterson, Stan is accused of using trick shots whenever he sinks a ball during a game of billiards for “dimes” and “nickels”. When Stan discovers that “dimes” and “nickels” are worth much more than he thought, Stan tries to save his opponent, Lou, from selling the diner. Meanwhile, Garry invites Molly to join him and the girls at their weekly bridge game at the Hooper residence. Ryan and Chelsea ask Stan for advice on planning their future while Chelsea contemplates her opportunities at a Cosmetics and Tattoo college. | |||||
4 | "An Old Fashioned Thanksgiving" | Jeff Melman | Mike Lisbe & Nate Reger | November 19, 2003 | 106 |
Stan gets interested in turkey hunting, ordering everything on the menu in preparation for an outing. Stan then enlists Chelsea’s help in preventing Molly from cooking anything for Thanksgiving. | |||||
5 | "Bye, Bye, Miss American Pie" | Jeff Melman | Story by : Josh Gardner Teleplay by : Josh Gardner & Sid Youngers | November 26, 2003 | 109 |
Fred’s frustration peaks because Gary has invited Molly and Chelsea to join the guys-only Christmas carolling group, ‘The Silent Knights’. Meanwhile, when the diner runs out of Stan’s favourite pie, Clara Meek’s apple pie, Stan tries his best in getting the recipe from the ailing Clara before she dies. | |||||
6 | "Fear Finds the Falls" | Jeff Melman | Joseph Staretski | December 3, 2003 | 107 |
To prove that the town isn’t inviolable to crime, Stan burgles the diner. | |||||
7 | "Stan's Biggest Fan" | Jeff Melman | Judd Pillot & John Peaslee | December 12, 2003 | 105 |
Stan discovers that his favourite fan lives nearby and gets the help of a cranky mailman to find him. | |||||
8 | "Good Golly, Miss Molly" | John Larroquette | Barry Kemp & Norm Macdonald | December 12, 2003 | 103 |
A typo in the ‘Cheese Quarterly’ naming Molly as Fred’s mistress brings the town’s press down on Stan. | |||||
9 | "Snow Job" | Jeff Melman | John Peaslee & Judd Pillot | Unaired | 108 |
The town’s snowplough operator has a thing for Stan, but when Stan denies her, the whole town suffers. | |||||
10 | "Ghost Family" | Jeff Melman | Nate Reger & Sid Youngers | Unaired | 110 |
After learning that his boathouse is supposedly haunted, Stan investigates his property’s past. | |||||
11 | "The Milkman" | Jeff Melman | Charlie Bonomo | Unaired | 111 |
After inadvertently getting the milkman fired, Stan helps him start his own “business”. | |||||
12 | "The Good Doctor" | Jeff Melman | Sid Youngers | Unaired | 112 |
Stan suspects that the town’s doctor, Doc Goodman, isn’t really a doctor. | |||||
13 | "Stan's Best Friend" | Jeff Melman | Miriam Trogdon | Unaired | 113 |
Problems arise after Stan mistakes a wolf that he found to be a cute puppy. |
International broadcasters
editIn Australia, the entire series aired in late-night timeslots on Network Ten.
References
edit- ^ Dave Itzkoff (September 7, 2010). "Norm Macdonald Doesn't Want to Go Back to Work Any More Than You Do". The New York Times. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
External links
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