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Second City Television

Season 2 1978 - 1979

  • 1978-09-16T22:00:00Z on Super Channel
  • 30m
  • 9h 30m (19 episodes)
  • Canada
  • English
  • Comedy
Second City Television is a Canadian television sketch comedy show offshoot from Toronto's Second City troupe that ran between 1976 and 1984.

26 episodes

Season Premiere

1978-09-16T22:00:00Z

2x01 Premiere

Season Premiere

2x01 Premiere

  • 1978-09-16T22:00:00Z30m

As the show starts, the scripts are not finished. The first on-screen appearance of Guy Caballero, in a wheelchair (which he uses for respect) with a phone. And, seemingly out of nowhere, Lola Heatherton appears, fully formed, in her first special.

Additional Viewing: 70s TV series The Love Boat and The Incredible Hulk.

Monster Chiller Horror Theatre: The House of Cats; SCTV Sports Central: Desert Classic; Commercial: Delay; Betty Bain: Professional Juror; Promo: Masterpiece Theatre: Naughty Chambermaids; Bob Hope Desert Classic

1978-09-30T22:00:00Z

2x03 Kidnapping of Moe Green

2x03 Kidnapping of Moe Green

  • 1978-09-30T22:00:00Z30m

The Leutonian Liberation Front has threatened Moe Green with his life and his career. Once the dirty deed is done, SCTV's on-air personalities cannot hide their relief.

1978-10-07T22:00:00Z

2x04 SCTV Solid Gold Telethon

2x04 SCTV Solid Gold Telethon

  • 1978-10-07T22:00:00Z30m

Sammy Maudlin, Bobby Bittman and Johnny LaRue anchor the show-length star-studded charity telethon. A great celebrity schmooze fest. The Solid Gold Telethon marks the first of three telethons SCTV would air in an attempt to get cash from viewers; it was followed by Pledge Week in Series 4, and the very final SCTV episode, Pledge Week in Series 6.

The Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme duet is an almost note-for-note parody of Jackie and Roy's rendition of the tune "You Smell So Good", a jazz classic. (Thanks Charlie R)

1978-10-14T22:00:00Z

2x05 Writer's Strike

2x05 Writer's Strike

  • 1978-10-14T22:00:00Z30m

Something of a sequel to the first episode as Ernest Kirsch, SCTV writer, goes on strike, disrupting regular programming. At SCTV News, Floyd and Earl are forced to write their own copy. Caballero (still in a wheelchair with a phone) starts a tradition of giving speeches to the camera - as the show progressed, he would become more and more verbose, but here he's brief and to the point.

1978-10-21T22:00:00Z

2x06 Municipal Election

2x06 Municipal Election

  • 1978-10-21T22:00:00Z30m

Earl Camembert faces a conflict of interest as Johnny LaRue's campaign manager as SCTV News covers the municipal elections and Johnny's run for council.

Additional Viewing: The 1978 TV miniseries The Bastard, starring Tom Bosley; 70s sitcom Three's Company.

Guy Caballero gives his statement to the Arabs emerging on the world scene: ""Invest heavily in the SCTV Network."" Then programming begins with the first-ever Farm Film Report, with Big Jim McBob and Billy Saul Hurok discussing movies in which people get ""blowed up good."" Lou Jaffe does a Speaking of Talk interview with Harvey K-Tel in the recording studio shouting voice-overs. The Millionaire has given away just about all his money (his last check bounced). He is desperate to pay back Michael Anthony, until The Millionaire of Mecca appears. Peter O'Tool, Richard Berton, Richard Hariss, Shawn Connery, and Candice Burgen tease the audience with highlights of the new theatrical release How the Middle East Was Won. Farm Film Report, Speaking of Talk, Millionaire, How the Middle East Was Won

It appears there isn't any happiness on television, except on SCTV. Earl Camembert gives a bright side to tragic news stories. Lin Ye Tang must answer to viewers who have complained about the contents of Chinese Fairy Tales. And a Triple Feature Movie has three different settings with identical plots. The Mirthmakers, Chinese Fairy Tale, Happy Endings

1978-11-11T23:00:00Z

2x09 Undersea World

2x09 Undersea World

  • 1978-11-11T23:00:00Z30m

The first appearance of gameshow host Alex Trebel, hosting the high school quiz show High Q.

Additional Viewing: The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau, the long-running nature show from the 60s and 70s.

Second City notes: Marriage Counsellor originated in the 1976 revue For a Good Time Call 363-1674, Thomas and O'Hara reprising their respective roles here.

Edith Prickley has succeeded Moe Green as SCTV Station Manager. (Naturally, she rubs Guy Caballero the wrong way.) Her first day on the job sees the world television premiere of Jaws 23, where Amity residents want to lure a mackerel into town for the Fourth of July. Edith Prickley: Station Manager, Shoot at the Stars, Jaws 23' Sore Loser

2x11 SCTV 30th Anniversary Show

  • 1978-11-25T23:00:00Z30m

Features the show-length, star-studded salute to SCTV's 30th anniversary, with some great parodies of 50's television.

Additional Viewing: Branded, the 1965 TV show starring Chuck Connors; and What's My Line?, the long-running 50s panel show. While Kirk Douglas made two appearances as a mystery guest on What's My Line? (in 1953 and 1960), he was never a guest panelist (his second wife, Anne Buydens, did appear as a guest panelist on a 1966 show, however). Coincidentally, Andrea Martin, like Arlene Francis, is of partial Armenian descent, while Catherine O'Hara, like Dorothy Kilgallen, is from an Irish-Catholic family. The opening sequence of What's My Shoesize? has more in common with the 1968-75 syndicated version of What's My Line? (Thanks William Brown

Mr. Science: Acid and Electricity, SCTV News: SCTV is Haunted, Fireside Chat: Firewood, 4th Degree, Monster Chiller Horror Theatre: Whispers of the Wolf, Words to Live By with Mulciber Arimaspians

1978-12-09T23:00:00Z

2x13 Bad Acting In Hollywood

2x13 Bad Acting In Hollywood

  • 1978-12-09T23:00:00Z30m

Features Sid Dithers Private Eye and the superb Bad Acting In Hollywood.

Additional Viewing: Bad Acting In Hollywood is a parody of That's Hollywood, a late 70s TV show hosted by Tom Bosley that looked at historic Hollywood films (mostly from 20th Century-Fox) (Thanks Jim Donato). Johnny Dark Always Rings Twice parodies 30's and 40' gangster films; start with Little Caesar from 1931. The Phil Donahue Show, which ran through the 70s and 80s, was the precursor of all modern daytime talk shows. C.P.O. Sharkey was a mid-seventies sitcom starring Don Rickles.

1978-12-16T23:00:00Z

2x14 Alfred Hitchcock Presents

2x14 Alfred Hitchcock Presents

  • 1978-12-16T23:00:00Z30m

Additional Viewing: Alfred Hitchcock Presents, the 50s anthology series hosted by the man himself. Murder Is Bad For Your Health is (possibly) a parody of the 1948 film An Act Of Murder, starring Florence Eldridge and Fredric March (thanks Dusty Towne); Cecil and Cynthia appear again in Series 3's Gaslight.

1978-12-23T23:00:00Z

2x15 Fighting Air Dogs

2x15 Fighting Air Dogs

  • 1978-12-23T23:00:00Z30m

Promo: Undercover Policewoman, SCTV News: Marijuana, Commercial: Daylea Yogurt, Masterpiece Theatre: The Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Mohicans Galore, Cretin's Island, Commercial: Mike's Mercenaries from Amco the Toy People, SCTV Movie of the Week: Fighting Air Dogs over the Pacific

1978-12-31T23:00:00Z

2x16 Death Takes No Holiday

2x16 Death Takes No Holiday

  • 1978-12-31T23:00:00Z30m

Phil from Phil's Nails (later the Garment King) is a send-up of Phil Givner, who did similar commercials for his carpet outlet back in the 70's in Toronto.

Additional Viewing: William Castle was a director of B-movie thrillers that usually featured a gimmick of some sort. His 1961 film Mr Sardonicus featured The Punishment Poll, a gimmick whereby the movie audience could vote to determine how the movie would end. The Amazing World of Kreskin, the early 70s mentalist show hosted by the Amazing Kreskin.

1979-01-06T23:00:00Z

2x17 Rock Concert

2x17 Rock Concert

  • 1979-01-06T23:00:00Z30m

Features the first Tex and Edna Boil Organ Emporium commercial, while Bob Clark in the Mailbag segment is a very similar character to Bill Needle, who would take over the Mailbag in series 3.

Additional Viewing: Mind Games includes a neat little parody of the 1966 film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor. They parodied the film again (in a radically different way) in Fast Talking Playhouse.

1979-01-13T23:00:00Z

2x18 Fantasy Island

2x18 Fantasy Island

  • 1979-01-13T23:00:00Z30m

Features the show-length parody of Fantasy Island, which itself incorporates a bevy of parodies of classic 40s pictures.

Additional viewing: the 70s hit TV show Fantasy Island; Hope and Crosby road pictures; Casablanca; and The Wizard of Oz.

1979-01-20T23:00:00Z

2x19 On the Waterfront Again

2x19 On the Waterfront Again

  • 1979-01-20T23:00:00Z30m

The second episode in a row to feature a show-length sketch, an episode of The Sammy Maudlin Show with Bobby Bittman promoting his remake of On the Waterfront. Maudlin music is "Soulful Strut" by Young-Holt Unlimited.

Additional Viewing: On The Waterfront, the 1954 classic

1979-01-27T23:00:00Z

2x20 SCTV Disco

2x20 SCTV Disco

  • 1979-01-27T23:00:00Z30m

SCTV Boogie, from episode 20 of the first series, has been rechristened SCTV Disco.

Additional Vieweing: Lou Grant, the Mary Tyler Moore Show spinoff series starring Ed Asner; Art Linkletter's House Party, a long-running TV series during the 50s and 60s, included a segment Kids Say the Darndest Things.

1979-02-03T23:00:00Z

2x21 Pipeline

2x21 Pipeline

  • 1979-02-03T23:00:00Z30m

Notable for the unusual Pipeline documentary and the Dr Braino Hour (featuring "Casey Jones" by Grateful Dead and "Fresh Air" by Quicksilver Messenger Service).

1979-02-10T23:00:00Z

2x22 Consumer Action Line

2x22 Consumer Action Line

  • 1979-02-10T23:00:00Z30m

Features the mysteriously cut from syndication Family Crisis Game Show.

Syndication Note: Family Crisis was dropped; replaced by Wara Wara Wara from 1-2 (2)

Promo: Take the Money and Run, Natalie Wingneck, Commercial: Big Giant Restaurant, Relaxing with Raoul, Commercial: National Council of Antique and Restricted Automatic Weapons, Dining With LaRue: French Restaurant

1979-02-24T23:00:00Z

2x24 The Flaming Turkey

2x24 The Flaming Turkey

  • 1979-02-24T23:00:00Z30m

Hugh Betcha's Insights and Firing Squad, both first seen in Series 1, return; Socrates is now played by Thomas (replacing Ramis) - the numbskulls are stilled played by Levy and Candy.

Second City notes: A Flaming Turkey-style ballet parody was featured in the 1975 revue Alterations While You Wait; the stage version was also introduced by Candy.

2x25 Best Of 1

  • no air date30m

Promo: Lola Heatherton In Concert, Donna: Barbara Streisberg, Promo: U.F.O. Sharkey, What's My Shoesize?, Commercial: Phil's Nails, Bob Hope Desert Classic

Season Finale

2x26 Best Of 2

Season Finale

2x26 Best Of 2

  • no air date30m

Rerun package: all sketch material was seen earlier in the season. Speaking of Talk with Lou Jaffe, Commercial: Long Distance, Family Crisis Game Show, Commercial: Tex and Edna Boil's Organ Emporium: Rhythm Ace, The $Millionaire, SCTV Rock Concert with Big Jim and Billy Sol,

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