Impractical Jokers
Impractical Jokers | |
---|---|
File:Impractical jokers logo (pressroom).jpg | |
Genre | Reality |
Directed by | P.J. Morrison |
Starring | Brian "Q" Quinn James "Murr" Murray Joseph "Joe" Gatto Salvatore "Sal" Vulcano |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 21 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Charlie DeBevoise Mark Hickman Brian Quinn James Murray Joe Gatto Sal Vulcano Dave Wechter Mark Anstendig (for truTV) Jon Crowley (for truTV) |
Camera setup | Hidden camera |
Running time | 21 minutes |
Production company | NorthSouth Productions |
Original release | |
Network | TruTV |
Release | December 15, 2011 present | –
Impractical Jokers is an American hidden camera-practical joke reality television series that premiered on TruTV on December 15, 2011. It follows the four members of the comedy troupe The Tenderloins as they coerce one another into doing public pranks while being filmed by hidden cameras. The show differs from other prank television programs in that the stars of Impractical Jokers do not know the details of the prank until the moment they are performing it on strangers. While one cast-member performs the prank, the other three comedians in the troupe are behind the scenes feeding lines to their friend via microphone (with an earpiece). The lines fed to the prankster are meant to create a humorous & awkward exchange between the prankster and the stranger being pranked.
On June 21, 2012, TruTV announced that Impractical Jokers had been renewed for a second season consisting of 15 episodes, and will premiere in December 2012.[1]
On August 15, 2012, It was announced that there will be 4 brand new episodes, airing from September 6, 2012. [2][3] Series 2 would then continue onwards from the 13th December. [4]
Development
In 1999, four high school friends, from Staten Island, NY, formed the live improv comedy troupe, The Tenderloins. After a long and successful history, including winning the $100,000 grand prize in the NBC's It’s Your Show competition, the group went into television. In 2008, they filmed a pilot episode for a scripted sitcom for Spike TV, but the show did not go to series. TruTV announced the series Impractical Jokers on April 12, 2011, 8 months before the show's debut. One of the show's stars, James Murray, explained how the hidden camera format made sense based on their skills. "We needed to find the right format...thing is, we've been doing this for years, but when it's on camera, the embarrassment is amplified."[5]
Rules
Before every challenge, the four comedians outline the rules of the challenge. Challenges are often simply for one member to say whatever line is fed to him, although some challenges include more complex rules, such as successfully convincing a random stranger to say or do a certain thing. After the challenge is established, each member of the troupe takes a turn performing the challenge while the other three members watch and listen via a hidden camera and mic on the cast-member performing the prank. The location in which the challenge takes place is usually a public area such as a city park or a boardwalk. Although the criteria of each challenge is the same for each of the four comedians, the outcome is often very different depending on what lines are fed to them from the others.
Throughout each episode, a tally is kept for each time one of the comedians fails at his task. After three to five challenges, depending on the episode, a loser is determined based on number of challenges failed. The loser is forced to complete a punishment task at the end of the episode which is often far more embarrassing than the previous challenges. The punishment task is generally performed in front of an entire audience or group of people, unlike some of the challenges.[6]
Episodes
Season 1 (2011–2012)
# | Episode Name | Original Airdate | Synopsis | Losing Joker |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Episode 100 | December 15, 2011 | The comedians pretend to be eccentric White Castle cashiers, Times Square tour guides, and Costco store employees. | Sal |
2 | Episode 101 | December 15, 2011 | The group is challenged to apply the most sunblock to unwitting tourists, survey amusement park goers at Six Flags Great Adventure, grab as many groceries from other customers at a grocery store, and pay the least at a frozen yogurt shop. | Sal |
3 | "Unmotivational Speaker" | December 22, 2011 | The guys try off-color techniques at impressing women while speed-dating. Later, they act as fortune tellers at a boardwalk and ask surprising questions to customers in the hygiene aisle of a pharmacy. | Sal |
4 | "Boardwalk of Shame" | December 29, 2011 | The troupe jokes with strangers in New York City, plays a humorous word game with customers at a grocery store, and acts as salesmen to unwitting car shoppers at a dealership. | Joe |
5 | "Drawing a Blank" | January 5, 2012 | The jokers act as reporters preparing an interview, caricature artists in a mall, oddball apartment dwellers looking for roommates, and cut in line for Broadway Show tickets. | Sal |
6 | "Panty Raid" | January 12, 2012 | The comedians provide massages to boardwalk pedestrians, broadcast the news from Times Square, and make an attempt to teach a martial arts karate class. | Murr |
7 | "Out of TP" | January 19, 2012 | The guys analyze hand-writing at the mall, steal food from buffet plates, teach foreign languages to potential students, and dance with strangers at the park. | Joe |
8 | "Who Arted" | January 26, 2012 | The guys pose as bakery salesmen, focus group analysts, and shoe salesmen. They also teach classes at a local gym. | Q |
9 | "Joker's Choice" | February 2, 2012 | The guys go over their favorite challenges from the season and tell each other personal thoughts. | None |
10 | "A Loser Presents" | February 16, 2012 | The guys return to White Castle, pose as bouncers at a night club, and read fake horoscopes to patrons at Jersey Gardens Mall. | Murr |
11 | "What Did I Eat?" | March 29, 2012 | The jokers pretend to be very unwelcoming members of a boardwalk welcoming committee, pose as furniture salesmen, sell jewelry to couples, and pitch some whacky memoirs to potential readers. | Q |
12 | "Starfart Macchiato" | March 29, 2012 | The lads play another round of "Don't I know you?" with complete strangers, pose as driving school instructors and later shampoo boys at a women's hair salon, and share embarrassing text messages in a waiting room. | Murr |
13 | "Bellydancer" | April 5, 2012 | The pranksters take jobs at a garden center, try their luck as CPR instructors and see if they can cut it as deli-counter workers. | Joe |
14 | "Charity Case" | April 12, 2012 | The guys have to get donations for a play, pose as puppy dog salesmen, teach golf, and hold the remote control to a car they can't control. | Murr |
15 | "Theater del Absurdo" | April 19, 2012 | The guys raise donations for over-the-top charities at a donut shop, sit down with diners at a Chinese restaurant and provide unsolicited advice to random shoppers in a mall. | Joe |
16 | "Pick a Loser" | April 26, 2012 | The jokers try to kiss various strangers on a Manhattan, New York street, play word games with random shoppers and attempt to pose as professional photographers. | Q |
17 | "Supercuts" | May 3, 2012 | The guys utilize a variety of strange sex objects to mess with candy store customers, attempt to nose and behave inappropriately while inside of an elevator. | Q, Murr, Sal, Joe (Tie) |
Season 2 (2012–2013)
# | Episode Name | Original Airdate | Synopsis | Losing Joker |
---|---|---|---|---|
18 | "Elephant in the Room" | September 6, 2012 | The joker's work inside a dentist's office, annoy patrons at a movie theater and participate in a wild and crazy photography shoot at a public park for their blogs. | Sal |
19 | "The Stoop Sessions Part 1" | September 13, 2012 | The guys review their favorite moments from the past season, and they reveal the most surprising occurrences, the best overall reactions and never-before-seen footage. | None |
20 | "Art Attack" | September 20, 2012 | The guys try get strangers to hold their Hands in a park, annoy the patrons at a comic book shop and participate in a competitive race through the aisles at a grocery store. | Murr |
21 | "The Stoop Sessions Part 2" | September 27, 2012 | The guys review their favorite moments from season one, and they reveal the most surprising occurences, the best overall reactions and never-before-seen footage. | None |
Reception
Impractical Jokers has been generally well received by critics, with Linda Stasi of the New York Post calling it "possibly the funniest, most ridiculous show I’ve seen in years."[7]
While it has been compared to earlier hit prank shows such as Candid Camera and Jackass, critics have offered praise for its unique twist on the genre, wherein the stars' reactions to the pranks are often equally as humorous as those of the public strangers. Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times stated that "the gag pays off twice: once in the reaction of the unsuspecting passer-by, once in the discomfort of the fellow doing the asking." He later wrote that the cast-members' occasional integrity [kept] these four clowns a little bit lovable."[8] Dean Robbins of The Daily Page echoed this sentiment, stating that "the friends are jovial rather than Jackass-obnoxious, even rejecting some dares as too offensive."[9]
The series has also been well received by audiences, garnering 1.5 million viewers during its December 15, 2011 premiere.[10]
The review of the show by Variety's Brian Lowry was much more mixed, ending with this statement: "Nobody will ever confuse "Impractical Jokers" with high art, certainly, but as low-brow, micro-cost comedy in the context of TruTV's programming resources, it's actually quite practical—and occasionally funny."[11]
International versions
- A UK version will be broadcast on BBC Three. The pilot will be filmed and placed online as part of "The Comedy Kitchen" in 2012. It will be produced by Yalli Productions.[12]
- A Belgian version will be broadcast on Vlaamse Media Maatschappij in fall 2012.[14]
References
- ^ "Turner Newsroom: truTV Orders Second Season of Hit Series Impractical Jokers". truTV. 21 June 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
- ^ Quinn, Brendan. "truTV Impractical Jokers Page". truTV.
- ^ Quinn, Brendan. "Impractical Jokers Facebook Page". Facebook.
- ^ http://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=351329581620214&id=202549086498265&comment_id=1999448&ref=notif¬if_t=comment_mention
- ^ Moye, David. "'Impractical Jokers': TruTV's New Hidden Camera Program (VIDEO)". HuffPost Weird News. TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Stasi, Linda. "Jokers' on you". New York Post. NYP Holdings, Inc. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Stasi, Linda. "Jokers' on you". New York Post. NYP Holdings, Inc. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Genzlinger, Neil. "Four Pranksters, Giving as Good as They Get". New York Times Television. The New York Times Publishing Company. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Robbins, Dean. "Impractical Jokers wallows in embarrassment". Isthmus The Daily Page. Isthmus Publishing Company, Inc. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Seidman, Robert. "Thursday Cable Ratings: Jaguars/Falcons Top Nigh". Renew/Cancel Index. TVbytheNumbers. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ Lowry, Brian. "Impractical Jokers". Variety TV Review. Reed Business Information. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
- ^ http://www.comedy.co.uk/news/story/00000696/bbc_three_comedy_kitchen_pilots/
- ^ http://www.c21media.net/archives/77057
- ^ http://www.c21media.net/archives/77057
External links
- Official website of Impractical Jokers
- Impractical Jokers at IMDb