Featured Show:
Dohar strutted into 2nd place in July of 2006, a powerful effort from Willy Roberts, Mike Manasewitsch, and resident 101 composer Ryan Elder. Loincloths, Taxidermy, and Dragonforce may not sound like a recipe for success, but the clever writing and intense action sequences made the live audience wild.
60 shows • Page 3 of 3
Dohar strutted into 2nd place in July of 2006, a powerful effort from Willy Roberts, Mike Manasewitsch, and resident 101 composer Ryan Elder. Loincloths, Taxidermy, and Dragonforce may not sound like a recipe for success, but the clever writing and intense action sequences made the live audience wild.
Blood Oath marked the arrival of some cool new young dudes that we hope stick around and make more shit. If their show suffered from anything, it was an intimidating and unrelenting sharpness. Like about half of all prime time shows, Blood Oath was exaguinated one month after it got voted back.
A show about sexy, heroic, firefighters saving lives and doing well with the ladies.
I don't have any time right now to write a long goodbye for Lunatic. I feel bad about that fact because it was a very good show. The performances were stellar and the writing was fresh and funny. It got cancelled on its second episode. Why? How can we ever be sure. Let's all have a moment of inner torture for Lunatic. There, I kind of pulled off a long goodbye anyway.
Roots of Justice was the first show in 101 history to achieve prime time status through the disqualification of another pilot that otherwise would have been #5. The second episode provided its fans with more of what they wanted, but, as with the first episode, there weren't enough fans to keep this tree cop from being chopped down.
Bruce lives with The Wastelander in a strictly kill-or-be-killed environment.
The Wright Brothers go on adventures.
Citizens and cops follow the path of their leader, Gary.
Handicapped private investigator, Gregory Shitcock, fights crime with his partner, Warren.
Dick Richards made history when it became the first "Chauncey" (a pilot unsanctioned by the selection panel) to go Prime Time. The Audience was charmed by its sophisticated look, and kept coming back for the story until finally, in June of 2005, Dick Richards' case was forever closed.
Tyler Spiers and Joe Davidson's show about a Korean boy and his insanely American adoptive family.
Dave Hartman's second Prime Time show's unspoken premise was simple: Vote for me, and every month, I will bust my ass on mind-blowing visuals, channeling the resultant sleep-deprived schizophrenic breakdown into the story and characters. The result was a truly magickal blend of refined technical expertise and stream of conscious mythology. As with all of Hartman's stuff, Magick Haus was a particular favorite among internet viewers, but the live audience foreclosed on the property in February of 2005, perhaps feeling free to do so because of their knowledge that the creatively addicted Dave Hartman will always be back for more abuse.
Three best friends, Peter, Rodney, and Alice, only have six months to live.
An award-winning series from Channel 101's short film contest in the early 2000s. It mocks the soap opera television genre and satirized life in Malibu, California. There were seven episodes filmed, with an eighth episode "apology" also submitted after the creators decided to end the series. The original run was created by The Lonely Island; and starred Andy Samberg, Jorma Taccone and Sarah Chalke.
A reality show about an actor that doesn't work.
The show that will make you think twice about banning 83 year old women from your comedy troupe.
Rob Schrab's cardboard and hot glue universe wowed audiences for five straight months, right up to the end of the 2003 season, when it was cancelled by ONE vote - a vote withheld by its own creator. Ringwald and Molly is a must-download and will forever occupy a space in Channel 101 history as one of the original five Prime Timers.
Casey Thard pretends to be a student in order to win the heart of the pedophile, Miss Dawson.
Time Belt is a science fiction/comedy series created by Chris Tallman that ran from 2003-2004 on Channel 101. The series followed the adventures of Dr. Bloom, a nerdy scientist who, after his girlfriend is killed in a lunar shuttle explosion, creates a belt that allows the wearer to travel through time. With intentionally poor production values, the series served as one of Channel 101's many homages to low-budget science fiction films.
Eugene Murzowski unknowingly creates Computerman, a powerful but naive cyborg, when a drop of his blood hits his computer keyboard.