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Sports Night

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Sports Night
File:Sportsnight.jpg
Sports Night Complete Series DVD Cover. The Cast of Sports Night as featured on the cover (from left to right): Sabrina Lloyd, Peter Krause, Robert Guillaume, Felicity Huffman, Joshua Malina, and Josh Charles)
Created byAaron Sorkin
StarringRobert Guillaume
Felicity Huffman
Peter Krause
Josh Charles
Sabrina Lloyd
Joshua Malina
Country of originUSA
No. of episodes45
Production
Running time22 Minutes
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseSeptember 22, 1998 –
May 16, 2000
This article is about the American television series. For the BBC TV program of a similar name, see Sportsnight.

Sports Night was an American television series about a fictional sports news show (also named Sports Night) and the people who worked there. It focused on the friendships, pitfalls, and ethical issues they face while trying to produce a good show under constant network pressure. Created by Aaron Sorkin, the half-hour prime time comedy aired on ABC for two seasons, from 1998 to 2000.

The show starred Robert Guillaume as managing editor and executive producer Isaac Jaffe, Felicity Huffman as producer Dana Whitaker, Peter Krause as anchor Casey McCall, Josh Charles as anchor Dan Rydell, Sabrina Lloyd as senior associate producer Natalie Hurley, and Joshua Malina as associate producer Jeremy Goodwin. Regular guest stars included William H. Macy as ratings expert Sam Donovan and Brenda Strong as Sally Sasser, the producer of Sports Night's West Coast Update and rival of Dana Whitaker.

Overview

The fictional Sports Night is a sports news program in the style of ESPN's SportsCenter. It broadcasts from the fictional Continental Sports Channel (CSC), a subsidiary of Continental Corp, owned and run by Luther Sachs. (Some believe Continental Corp is loosely based on Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, which owns Fox Sports Net.)

Sports Night struggled to find an audience. Its dialogue-based humor did not play very well in situation comedy–oriented America, and ABC cancelled it after two seasons. Although it had the opportunity to move to several different networks, including HBO, Showtime and USA, Sorkin decided to let the show pass so that he could focus on his popular drama The West Wing.

Although the first season of Sports Night is a sitcom, it oftentimes is portrayed as more of a comedy-drama representative of some of Sorkin's later work on The West Wing. Sorkin intended for the series' humor to be drier and more realistic than typical sitcoms. He initially wanted the show to be recorded without a laugh track, but ABC network executives insisted on including one. The volume of the laugh track faded as Season One continued and was abandoned at the beginning of Season Two. The dialogue is often delivered at a rapid-fire pace and uses a technique of exposing many aspects of communication that go beyond the words that are chosen. For example:

Dan: I need a favor.

Jeremy: Is this about Rebecca?
Dan: Rebecca?
Jeremy: Yes.
Dan: No.
Jeremy: I'm rooting for you, Dan, but I really can't get involved in things like this.
Dan: It's not about Rebecca.
Jeremy: Bad things happen to people when they get involved in other people's business, a lesson I'm trying to teach Natalie. I'd like to set a good example.
Dan: It's not about Rebecca.
Jeremy: What's the favor?
Dan: It's about Rebecca.

The show's main focus are the relationships that occur between the characters. These including an off-again on-again flirtation and romance between Dana and Casey, the oil-and-water passion between neurotic Natalie and nerdy Jeremy, and Dan's ongoing problems with relationships in general. The character of Isaac Jaffe hovers over his staff as a benevolent but uncompromising father-figure.

Guillaume suffered a stroke midway through the first season, and this event was worked into his character and the season's story arc. The show was released on DVD in 2003.

Cast

File:Sport Night.jpg
Clockwise from upper left: Josh Charles as Dan Rydell, Joshua Malina as Jeremy Goodwin, Felicity Huffman as Dana Whitaker, William H. Macy as Sam Donovan, Sabrina Lloyd as Natalie Hurley, and Peter Krause as Casey McCall

Recurring Guest Cast

Awards

In addition to numerous awards and nominations from various guilds, the show was nominated for eight Emmies and one Golden Globe. It also won three Emmies

  • Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series - "Cut Man" (2000), Janet Ashikaga
  • Oustanding Director for a Comedy Series - "Pilot" (1999), Thomas Schlamme
  • Outstanding Multi-Camera Editing for a Series - "Small Town", Janet Ashikaga

Additional airings

  • After its cancellation, the rerun rights to the show were briefly picked up by Comedy Central. Though their airing of the show was brief, the series did extremely well ratingswise and brought the cancelled show many new fans.
  • In 2004, ABC1, a British offshoot of ABC, began broadcasting Season 1 of Sports Night in the United Kingdom for the first time, although the second season did not air until January 2006. It was also aired briefly in Latin America on Sony Entertainment Television.
  • Australia's Foxtel cable network aired Sports Night on The Comedy Channel in 2005.

Similarities with The West Wing

The West Wing emulated Sports Night in many ways, including many of the same cast and crew members. The shows even share many similar storylines in the years when Aaron Sorkin acted as head writer. [1][2][3]

  • Most notably, creator and head writer Aaron Sorkin went on to develop The West Wing.
  • Both the dialogue style and the steadicam tracking shots used in Sports Night are also used in The West Wing.
  • Joshua Malina starred on The West Wing as White House staffer Will Bailey.
  • Clark Gregg, Teri Polo, Timothy Davis-Reed, Ted McGinley, Nina Siemaszko, Ron Ostrow and director Timothy Busfield have all appeared on The West Wing.
  • Janel Moloney guest starred as Monica Brazelton, a wardrobe assistant, in Season 1's "The Six Southern Gentlemen of Tennessee." Sorkin was so impressed with her performance that he brought her in to audition for The West Wing, where she became a series regular.
  • Lisa Edelstein guest starred in two episodes of Sports Night as fill-in anchor, Bobby Bernstein. In the first episode, she was depicted as slightly deranged for thinking that she and Dan had had an affair. In the second appearance, it is revealed that Dan is the one who is wrong and had forgotten her. She also figured prominently in the first season of West Wing as a prostitute that Sam Seaborn accidentally slept with.
  • Cress Williams, Nadia Dajani, John de Lancie and Alanna Ubach have all guest starred on both shows.
  • Ross Deane and Stuart Goetz worked in the sound departments of both shows.
  • Alex Graves has worked as director on episodes of both shows.
  • Paul Redford has worked as writer for Sports Night and is credited as being part of "miscellaneous crew" on both shows
  • W.G. Snuffy Walden acted as composer for the score of both shows.
  • The character Sam Donovan has a name very similar to a character who appeared in several episodes of The West Wing named Simon Donovan.
  • Kayla Blake, who played associate producer Kim on the show has also been credited as Elsie Sniffen. Former "Wonder Years" actress Danica McKellar played the role of Elsie Snuffin (The sister of Joshua Malina's character in several "The West Wing" episodes.
  • Felicity Huffman guest starred in a second season episode of The West Wing as Ann Stark, the chief of staff for a Republican presidential candidate. During the episode, Ann presents Toby with a jar of New Hampshire maple syrup (after Bartlet expresses his disgust that the maple syrup being served at the leadership breakfast is from Vermont and not his home state). This is a reference to a Sports Night episode in which Dana is going to Vermont for the weekend and offers to bring back maple syrup for her friends.
  • Season 1 episode 23: "What Kind of Day Has It Been" is also the title of the season 1 finale of The West Wing. Also in this episode, Casey tells his son that "the only thing you have to do to make me and your mom happy is to come home at the end of the night"; a line President Bartlet paraphrases to his daughter Ellie (played by Nina Siemaszko) in The West Wing. Nina Siemaszko also guest-stars in this episode.
  • Season 1 episode 18: The Sword of Orion was written almost identically in theme to the episode of West Wing entitled Somebody's Going to Emergency, Somebody's Going to Jail in season 2. In the Sports Night episode, Jeremy's father and mother are getting divorced after the revelation by his father that he has been having an affair for Jeremy's whole life. Jeremy takes it hard and becomes fixated on a specific thing at work: a boating disappearance during the America's Cup. In the West Wing episode, Sam's dad reveals exactly the same thing, Sam takes it hard and becomes fixated on finding out the truth about an espionage case in the 1950's involving a White House staffer.

Episode List

Season 1

No. Title Original Airdate Writer(s) Director
1 "Pilot" September 22, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
2 "The Apology" September 29, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
3 "The Hungry and the Hunted" October 6, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
4 "Intellectual Property" October 13, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
5 "Mary Pat Shelby" October 20, 1998 Tracey Stern, Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
6 "The Head Coach, Dinner and the Morning Mail" October 27, 1998 Matt Tarses, Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
7 "Dear Louise" November 10, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
8 "Thespis" November 17, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
9 "The Quality of Mercy at 29K" December 1, 1998 Bill Wrubel, Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
10 "Shoe Money Tonight" December 8, 1998 Aaron Sorkin Dennie Gordon
11 "The Six Southern Gentlemen of Tennessee" December 15, 1998 Aaron Sorkin, Matt Tarses, David Walpert, Bill Wrubel Robert Berlinger
12 "Smoky" January 5, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
13 "Small Town" January 12, 1999 Paul Redford, Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
14 "Rebecca" January 26, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
15 "Dana and the Deep Blue Sea" February 9, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
16 "Sally" February 23, 1999 Rachel Sweet, Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
17 "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" March 9, 1999 Rachel Sweet, Aaron Sorkin Marc Buckland
18 "The Sword of Orion" March 23, 1999 David Handelman, Mark McKinney, Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
19 "Eli's Coming" March 30, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
20 "Ordnance Tactics" April 6, 1999 Aaron Sorkin, Paul Redford (story) Alex Graves
21 "Ten Wickets" April 13, 1999 Aaron Sorkin, Matt Tarses (story) Robert Berlinger
22 "Napoleon's Battle Plan" April 27, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
23 "What Kind of Day Has It Been" May 4, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme

Season 2

No. Title Original Airdate Writer(s) Director
24 "Special Powers" October 5, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme
25 "When Something Wicked This Way Comes" October 12, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
26 "Cliff Gardner" October 19, 1999 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
27 "Louise Revisited" October 26, 1999 Miriam Kazdan (also story), Aaron Sorkin Marc Buckland
28 "Kafelnikov" November 2, 1999 Matt Tarses , Bill Wrubel Robert Berlinger
29 "Shane" December 7, 1999 Kevin Falls, Matt Tarses, Bill Wrubel Robert Berlinger
30 "Kyle Whitaker's Got Two Sacks" December 14, 1999 Tom Szentgyorgyi, Aaron Sorkin Dennie Gordon
31 "The Reunion" December 21, 1999 Kevin Falls, Aaron Sorkin Dennie Gordon
32 "A Girl Named Pixley" December 28, 1999 David Walpert Dennie Gordon
33 "The Giants Win the Pennant, the Giants Win the Pennant" January 11, 2000 Matt Tarses, Aaron Sorkin Pamela Dresser
34 "The Cut Man Cometh" January 18, 2000 Bill Wrubel, Aaron Sorkin Alex Graves
35 "The Sweet Smell of Air" January 25, 2000 David Handelman, Kevin Falls, Matt Tarses, Aaron Sorkin Alex Graves
36 "Dana Get Your Gun" February 1, 2000 David Walpert Alex Graves
37 "And the Crowd Goes Wild" February 8, 2000 Tom Szentgyorgyi, Aaron Sorkin Alex Graves
38 "Celebrities" February 29, 2000 Aaron Sorkin Robert Berlinger
39 "The Local Weather" March 7, 2000 Aaron Sorkin (also story), Pete McCabe (story) Timothy Busfield
40 "Draft Day: Part I – It Can't Rain at Indian Wells" March 14, 2000 Matt Tarses, Aaron Sorkin Bryan Gordon
41 "Draft Day: Part II – The Fall of Ryan O'Brian" March 21, 2000 Aaron Sorkin, Kevin Falls (story) Danny Leiner
42 "April is the Cruelest Month" March 28, 2000 Bill Wrubel, Matt Tarses Don Scardino
43 "Bells And A Siren" April 4, 2000 Chris Lusvardi, David Walpert, Aaron Sorkin Don Scardino
44 "La Forza Del Destino" May 9, 2000 Aaron Sorkin Timothy Busfield
45 "Quo Vadimus" May 16, 2000 Aaron Sorkin Thomas Schlamme

Trivia

Both season finales ended with metaphors for the fate of the show, and the way ABC failed to promote it properly. In the 1st season, Jeremy is obsessed with a baseball game where one team is going down to defeat. He thinks they'll have a 9th inning rally, very similar to the unknown fate of the show. A major plot point of the second season involved the sale of CSC. The eventual purchaser of the network tells Dana "If you can't make money with "Sports Night," you need to get out of the money-making business." This is an obvious jab at ABC's failure to make the show a hit.

See also