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RetroWeb Classic Television
About Freaks & Geeks | The Episodes
Freaks and Geeks is Copyright © Dreamworks Television. |
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About Freaks & Geeks
The universal experience of teenagehood as lived by the regular old
freaks and geeks in a Michigan high school, circa 1980, is the subject of this
wistful comedy-drama executive-produced by Emmy-winner Judd Apatow
and series creator Paul Feig.
Revolving around the lives of freak and geek siblings Lindsay and Sam
Weir (Linda Cardellini, John Daley), the show studies the everyday fears,
humiliations and little triumphs of adolescents past, present and, no doubt,
future,too.
(from Dreamworks Television's Series Description)
Linda Cardellini as Lindsay Weir |
John Daley as Sam Weir |
For sophomore Lindsay, life is getting difficult. Jolted by the death of her grandmother, she dons her dad's old Army jacket and fights the one-girl battle of McKinley High. The allure of being a champion "mathlete" is losing its appeal, and her goals of college and career feel somehow irrelevant. She's alienated. Luckily, though, she's not really alone. Drifting away from her studious friends, she finds herself increasingly drawn to others like her, the "freaks" who refuse to accept the status quo.
Among them are Daniel (James Franco), a friendly but dangerous guy who seems to like Lindsay, as does his bud Nick (Jason Segel), who dreams of stardom as a rock-and-roll drummer a la Led Zeppelin's Jon Bonham. Then there's Ken (Seth Rogen), an acerbic rebel, and Kim (Busy Philipps), a tough girl who doesn't go easy on Lindsay.
James Franco as Daniel Desario |
Jason Segel as Nick Andopolis |
Seth Rogen as Ken Miller |
Busy Phillips as Kim Kelly |
Meanwhile, Lindsay's freshman brother Sam navigates high school like a mouse in a maze. Threatened at every turn, and attracted to an unattainable cheerleader, Sam faces his own set of obstacles. But he has good friends. Sure, they're "geeks," but so is Sam. There's Neal (Samm Levine), a wise-acre, sci-fi loving geek, and bespectacled Bill (Martin Starr), a classic looking nerd who's unfortunately not as brainy as he appears.
Samm Levine as Neal Schweiber |
Martin Starr as Bill Haverchuck |
On the homefront, Lindsay and Sam suffer through the good intentions of their overbearing mom (Becky Ann Baker) and their hardwired dad Joe Flaherty), who tums every teen issue into a matter of life and death.
Joe Flaherty as Harold Weir |
Becky Ann Baker as Jean Weir |
Judd Apatow (The Larry Sanders Show) is the executive producer for the series from Apatow Productions in association with DreamWorks Television. Paul Feig is the creator and supervising producer. Jake Kasdan is the director.
Dave "Gruber" Allen as Guidance Counselor Jeff Russo |
Steve Bannos as Mr. Kowchevski |
Sarah Hagan as Millie Kentner |
Natasha Melnick as Cindy Saunders |
Stephen Lea Sheppard as Harris |
Tom Wilson as Coach Fredricks |
The Episodes
Eighteen episodes of Freaks and Geeks were produced, twelve of which aired on
NBC during the 1999-2000 TV season before the network cancelled the series due to low
ratings. Despite its cancellation, the series received widespread critical acclaim,
and NBC was harshly criticized both by the media and by fans for its neglect of the
series, including constant reshuffling and postponements as the network struggled to
compete with ABC's runaway hit "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire." In late April, the
Museum of Television and Radio hosted a screening of the entire series, including
the six unaired episodes. Fans of the series also united to save the series and
seek its renewal by another network, but these efforts ultimately proved unsuccessful.
| Episode # | Title | Orig. Air Date |
|---|---|---|
| 100 | Freaks and Geeks (Pilot) | 9/25/99 |
| 101 | Beers and Weirs | 10/2/99 |
| 102 | Tricks and Treats | 10/30/99 |
| 103 | Kim Kelly is My Friend | 9/5/00 on Fox Family |
| 104 | Tests and Breasts | 11/6/99 |
| 105 | I'm With The Band | 11/13/99 |
| 106 | Girlfriends and Boyfriends | 1/17/00 |
| 107 | We've Got Spirit | 1/24/00 |
| 108 | The Diary | 1/31/00 |
| 109 | Looks and Books | 2/7/00 |
| 110 | Carded and Discarded | 1/10/00 |
| 111 | The Garage Door | 3/13/00 |
| 112 | Chokin' and Tokin' | 3/20/00 |
| 113 | Discos and Dragons (intended as first season finale) | 7/8/00 |
| 114 | Dead Dogs and Gym Teachers | 10/10/00 on Fox Family |
| 115 | Noshing and Moshing | 10/17/00 on Fox Family |
| 116 | Smooching and Mooching | 7/8/00 |
| 117 | The Little Things | 7/8/00 |
Freaks and Geeks: Not Quite Totally '80s
What's up with kids today? Don't ask Freaks and Geeks creator Paul Feig and executive producer Judd Apatow. Although Feig is an honored graduate of the prestigious USC Film School, and Apatow is a prolific Emmy-winning writer-producer, when it comes to delineating the details of life in a modern-day high school, the two are kind of, well, clueless.
"The more we talked about it," says Apatow of developing Freaks and Geeks, "the more we realized that we don't know anything about what high school's like in 1999. If we tried to write it, it would certainly come across as false." To make an honest show, the producers chose to draw from their own youthful experiences. So welcome to suburban Michigan's McKinley High School, circa 1980, a world full of freaks and geeks that series creator Feig knows all too well.
"The world is definitely the world I'm from," notes Feig, a 1980 alumnus of Chippewa Valley High School in the suburbs east of Detroit. "The burnouts are into cars and rock-and-roll, and the geeks are into sci-fi and cartoons. Those are all my friends and people I knew." Adds Apatow, who went to high school on New York's Long Island. "I saw a lot of myself in the world he created. It was very easy for me to get inspired and say, 'Oh, I could tell you a thousand stories'."
The stories they tell are the ones shared by anybody who has lived
through - or is living through - the teenage years, regardless of time or place.
"The experience of people who went to school even in the '60s is very similar
to this show," says Apatow. "High school is universal. I don't think it's
much different today. It just might be a little worse."
Yet the '80s setting does affect the structure of Freaks and Geeks. Was there ever a time before e-mail and cell phones? Yes, there was. 1980. 'Back then there was no call waiting, there weren't answering machines, there was no Star 69," says Apatow. "So if you had a problem with someone, you were more likely to actually speak with them about it directly."
"I also wanted it to be pre-AIDS," Feig says, "because a lot of the show is about the politics of being afraid of the opposite sex, and dating and all that entails. If you were a kid who was afraid of sex in 1980, you were weird. If you're afraid of sex today, you're smart."
As for the day's national politics, the era of Reaganomics forms a backdrop for the show, as it did in Feig's youth. "In Detroit when I grew up, all the auto workers were being laid off like crazy," he recalls. "At the same time in our community there were people whose dads were lawyers or they were auto executives, so there were really the haves and the have-nots in the school. A lot of the outsider freaks and geeks were from the lower income families."
Even during the '80s, Feig admits he wasn't really tuned in to the '80s.
"When I was in high school the hostages were going on and all that," recalls
Feig. "You'd kind of see it on the news, but you were so much into your own
world of being an adolescent." And adolescence, notes Feig, "is such an
egocentric time of your life."
For Apatow and Feig, then, 1980 was less about Ronald Reagan and Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini, and more about Wacky Packs, Pop Rocks, and a healthy fear of girls and gym class. Their points of reference are more personal, filtered into the show's look, characters and stories.
"Much of the detail work is very specific to our experience," says
Apatow, who began finding his comic voice as the teen host of a high school
radio show called "Club Comedy." His obsession with the rebellious
comedians of the late '70s is reflected in the show. "Sam has this big Steve
Martin poster in his room, and that love of people like that, who are very
anti-establishment, whether it be Steve Martin or Groucho Marx, showed you
another way of looking at the world. Because in high school you thought,
'This entire system sucks.'"
Lindsay Weir's conspicuous Army jacket showcased in the pilot episode is a personal reference for Feig, whose father ran an Army surplus store. He knew the look he wanted Lindsay to have, specifically instructing the costumers to get her a large "o.d. green" Army field jacket. "I wore that all the time when I got to college," recalls Feig.
Looking to his past growing up as an only child, it's the stories
involving Lindsay's little brother Sam that best represent Feig's awkward teen
years. "Lindsay is a total invention of mine," according to Feig. Her character
represents what Feig confesses is "a big heaping dose of me today." On the
other hand, Sam Weir "is definitely based on me when I was that age because
I was a little less mature than all the other kids around me. My friends and I
were that same way."
In Sam's stories, we get a glimpse of Feig's life in the late '70s and early '80s. Feig points to the Halloween episode involving Sam Weir's last outing as a trick-or-treater. "It's basically the nightmare of going out when really you shouldn't have gone out, which happened to me exactly. I remember gathering my next-door neighbors and saying, 'We gotta go out!' I dressed up like C3PO and went out, and it was a disaster. People were like, 'Aren't you guys too old?' And things starting ripping. It was just horrible. You end the night going, 'O.K. Now I'm not a kid anymore."'
Sam's budding love life, or lack thereof, is also inspired by Feig's
experiences. "I hardly dated at all in high school, but the few that I had were
fairly disastrous." He recounts taking a girl to a school dance. "She got drunk
on beer and spent the evening in the bathroom throwing up. Then she
wanted me to kiss her at the end of the night. And I said, 'You just threw
up!"' For Sam Weir, the relationship with cheerleader Cindy Sanders is more
indirectly nightmarish, but familiar to Feig. "He becomes her platonic best
friend. He's trying to nail her down as his girlfriend, and he
overcompensates by being the nice guy so much that she starts talking about
guys she likes." Feig was always the nice guy.
Rummaging through the past is part of Apatow and Feig's method. "I
was the funny kid who hung out with some of the football players," recalls
Apatow. "So I'd like to write a storyline about Neal becoming friends with
the jocks because he's funny, and how the geeks respond to that." He digs
further back, too. "I had another group of friends in seventh grade and we all
rode dirt bikes together. They slowly turned into the school potheads, and
then I couldn't be friends with them anymore because I was terrified of
drugs."
For young Feig and Apatow, sex, drugs and rock-and-roll were way more of a menace than the threat of the Soviet Union. Says Apatow, "There were some kids who not only didn't drink, they were terrified of drinking. There were kids who not only didn't have sex, they didn't want to have sex."
"Those are the stories you never hear," notes Apatow, who, with Feig,
intends to tell them on Freaks and Geeks. After all, the show is about the
truth of being a teen, whether it's the '80s, '70s, '60s or whenever. For the
producers, looking back to their own youths is the only way they could be true
to that common experience. "We all went through it, no matter how cool we
think we are, or were," says Feig. "That's what I hope will be the universal
appeal of the show. The number one thing I want to accomplish with this
show is honesty. It just has to be an honest show."
Of course, we know what became of '80s guys Feig and Apatow, but what about their fictional counterparts on Freaks and Geeks? "I have very definite plans for what will happen with each kid in the future," says Feig. "Some kids are going to be successful. Somebody could end up in jail, somebody's going to end up laid off. Somebody's going to be on welfare." This just reflects reality, according to Feig.
Apatow has a slightly different take on the question of where are they now. "I think the geeks are doing very well," he says. Focusing on Sam Weir's geekiest buddy, Bill Haverchuck, Apatow concludes, "I think that Bill somehow got married and has several kids and lives in Orange, New Jersey ... He works as an analyst on Wall Street."
Gee, how '90s.
Freaks and Geeks Links
Acknowledgements
Many thanks to Paul Feig, Maureen Jennings and Garrett Krnich for their assistance and
support in the development of this web site, which was launched on May 6, 2000.
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