A series comprised entirely of short (several per episode) comedy sketches. Recurring bits included "Kentucky Boys," a pair of stereotypical hicks discussing life; "Ivan Tellalie," Soviet ne... Read allA series comprised entirely of short (several per episode) comedy sketches. Recurring bits included "Kentucky Boys," a pair of stereotypical hicks discussing life; "Ivan Tellalie," Soviet newscaster (and Hero of Soviet Union, 23rd Class); and animated sequences involving the turk... Read allA series comprised entirely of short (several per episode) comedy sketches. Recurring bits included "Kentucky Boys," a pair of stereotypical hicks discussing life; "Ivan Tellalie," Soviet newscaster (and Hero of Soviet Union, 23rd Class); and animated sequences involving the turkey that created TV. The show also included clips from Monty Python and other classic comed... Read all
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There were some sources they'd pull more frequently than others, but it was a diverse collection none the less. You'd see short wordless cartoon clips (many from Germany), novelty song music videos, samples from British comedy shows like "The Pink Medicine Show", independent short films, the bad advice columnist "Dr. Joyce Brothers", gross-out food comedian "Eddie Slobbo" (these last two of which I've never seen anywhere else), stand-up comedy, and other assorted oddities.
As for the clips, they were sometimes a hit or miss, really. Naturally everything had to be clean for Nickelodeon. But they did find some truly funny stuff. Early stand-up material from Dana Carvey was not uncommon. There were also some skits where he played a sadistic German-accented dentist. Turkey TV even managed to squeeze in some George Carlin, like his "idiots and maniacs" rant on driving.
It's been 20 years since I've seen an episode, but I can still remember a lot of the clips vividly. I don't know if anybody in recent years has built a TV show on this same principle of source variety, but somebody should. As an adult, I now host my own comedy clip show on the radio, and although I've idolized many different comedians over the years, I do have to wonder if some of the inspiration for my show can be traced back to Turkey Television.
Two skits stick out in my mind.
The first was about an old man, Uncle Hogan, who made up all these phony stories he would tell kids. It typically ran like this:
Woman singing: It's time for Uncle Hogan Old man: Wanna hear a story, kids? Kids (in unison): No, Uncle Hogan! Old man: I knew you would. (proceeds to tell a completely unbelievable story about how he saved the world) Old man: Do you believe me kids? Kids (in unison): No, Uncle Hogan! Old man: I knew you would. Continues like this...then at the end) Woman singing: Say goodbye to Uncle Hogan, the biggest liar of all! Old man: I heard that.
The second was this guy who painted a face on his hand--he painted eyes on his index finger, and his thumb was the mouth. He would always start out with some friendly conversation with his painted hand (Pippi, if I recall), then it would turn into something demented. The typical skit ran something like this.
Man: Have you ever been swimming before? Pippi: No, I don't much care for the water Man: How bout we go for a little swim today? Pippi: Actually I'd rather not (Man pulls out a bucket of water and dunks the hand in it) Pippi: Aaaaaahh!
Anyone remember these skits?
Poor Philo T. Farnsworth, could he have envisioned this?
My younger brother and I used to watch this pretty wacky show. I remember it had comedy clips: like Robin Williams singing Elmer Fudd singing Bruce Springsteen or Dana Carvey singing the "Choppin' Broccoli" song. It also had some short foreign language slapstick comedy sketches. There were also strange music videos like Commander Cody's "Two Cheeseburgers Side Order of Fries" Barnes and Barnes' "Fish Heads" (also staples of Dr. Demento's occasional MTV specials) and Gerard Blanchard's "Rock Amadour."
Did you know
- TriviaIt was created for Nickelodeon by Roger Price and Christine McGlade, creator and host respectively of You Can't Do That on Television, and had four cast members from that show: McGlade, Adam Reid, Kevin Kubusheskie, and Les Lye.
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- Runtime
- 30m
- Color