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  • Cast & Crew
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  • this is the list of people who have worked on squidbillies
  • Allison Singer ... Neighbor #4 Alton Brown ... USDA Inspector #2/French Oil Vendor/Maître D'/FDA Agent #2/B.A. Brown/Napoleon/Pennsylvania Dutchman/Roman Legionnaire/WWII Soldier Cody Collins ... Ice Cream Churn Kid #1 Daniel Pettrow ... Chuck Jaime Grey ... Mummy James Govsie ... Neighbor #2 John Gregario ... Mime/Juggler John Crow ... Caesar Salad Date #1/Waiter Matthew Brady ... Neighbor #1 Scarlet Yarbrough ... Ice Cream Churn Kid #2'
  • In September 1988, Joel Hodgson enlisted Twin City-area comedians Trace Beaulieu and Josh Weinstein to help him shoot a pilot for the show. The robots and the set, in their crudest format, were built overnight by Hodgson. The next morning, shooting commenced on the 30-minute pilot. Joel watched the movie by himself, with Trace playing Crow T. Robot and Josh playing Gypsum (an early version of Gypsy) during the host segments. Camera work was by Kevin Murphy, who also created the first "doorway sequence" and theater seat design.
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abstract
  • this is the list of people who have worked on squidbillies
  • Allison Singer ... Neighbor #4 Alton Brown ... USDA Inspector #2/French Oil Vendor/Maître D'/FDA Agent #2/B.A. Brown/Napoleon/Pennsylvania Dutchman/Roman Legionnaire/WWII Soldier Cody Collins ... Ice Cream Churn Kid #1 Daniel Pettrow ... Chuck Jaime Grey ... Mummy James Govsie ... Neighbor #2 John Gregario ... Mime/Juggler John Crow ... Caesar Salad Date #1/Waiter Matthew Brady ... Neighbor #1 Scarlet Yarbrough ... Ice Cream Churn Kid #2'
  • In September 1988, Joel Hodgson enlisted Twin City-area comedians Trace Beaulieu and Josh Weinstein to help him shoot a pilot for the show. The robots and the set, in their crudest format, were built overnight by Hodgson. The next morning, shooting commenced on the 30-minute pilot. Joel watched the movie by himself, with Trace playing Crow T. Robot and Josh playing Gypsum (an early version of Gypsy) during the host segments. Camera work was by Kevin Murphy, who also created the first "doorway sequence" and theater seat design. Once the show moved to The Comedy Channel, its format was changed: instead of ad-lib riffs in the theater, each show was carefully scripted ahead of time. Writer/performer Weinstein did not care for this new format, and subsequently left after the first season. Murphy replaced him as the voice of Tom Servo and Frank Conniff came on as Weinstein's replacement in Deep 13. At the same time, Michael J. Nelson was promoted to head writer. When Joel Hodgson decided to leave the show halfway through season five, Nelson took on the role of host from 1993 until the end of the series. Debates (sometimes heated) raged in fan forums about who was the better host for quite some time, but in more recent years a consensus has developed among the fanbase that acknowledges that each performer had his merits. Also distressing to fans was the departure of Frank Conniff, who left after completion of the show's sixth season. Trace Beaulieu later left the series as well, between seasons seven and eight, also to many fans' dismay. When The Sci-Fi Channel picked up the show, Mary Jo Pehl took over the lead "Mad" role as Dr. Forrester's mother, Pearl Forrester, who had been featured as a regular in season seven. Her sidekicks were the idiotic, Planet of the Apes-inspired Professor Bobo (Murphy) and the highly evolved, supposedly omnipotent Observer (AKA Brain Guy), played by writer Bill Corbett. Corbett also took over Crow's voice and puppetry. In the middle of the the eighth season, Jim Mallon handed over the voice and puppetry work for Gypsy to BBI staffer Patrick Brantseg.