All That was an American live-action comedy-variety show on Nickelodeon, that featured sketches in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Saturday Night Live and an earlier Nick show You Can't Do That on Television.All That's IMDb entry The show had guest actors and musical performances each episode. The theme song for All That was performed by TLC.
The show was first aired on April 16, 1994 featuring mainly young adults, but around the turn of the millennium (more specificially, the 2001-2002 television season) it made a big switch to feature only teens/young adolescents.
Some of the former cast members got their own spin-offs including Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell (Kenan & Kel), Amanda Bynes (The Amanda Show), Nick Cannon (The Nick Cannon Show), and Jamie Lynn Spears (Zoey 101). In 1997, Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell starred in a big screen version of the popular sketch Good Burger. Also, Kenan Thompson went on to work on Saturday Night Live, where he (like on All That) has provided his comedic personality and Bill Cosby impersonation.
Typically, the cast would randomly film a bunch of different sketches in a day's work. Eventually, the production staff edited them together into full, individual episodes.
Kevin Kopelow and Dan Schneider ran All That together in the first four seasons. Kopelow then ran the show with the help of Heath Seifert in Seasons 5-6. And Schneider, who briefly left All That to work on The Amanda Show, produced the show by himself from Season 7 onward. Schneider was supposedly absent from the 100th episode special, and Kopelow was supposedly absent from the 10th anniversery special.
The pilot episode of All That, which featured musical guest TLC performing the hit song "What About Your Friends", and the first appearances of Baggin' Saggin' Barry, Earboy, Mavis & Clavis, Miss Fingerly among others first aired as a Nickelodeon special (or sneak preview) on April 16, 1994. It would debut as a weekly series on December 24, 1994. The official series debut featured (besides musical guest Da Brat performing "Fa All Y'all") the first appearances of Randy & Mandy, Vital Information, and Ed from Good Burger. The pilot episode was not reaired on Nickelodeon until the end of the first season and aired as a "lost episode."
In the first five seasons, All That exclusively used urban contemporary music (i.e. hip-hop and R & B), but in later seasons, All That aimed for more mainstream, pop and/or modern rock oriented, "flavor of the month" acts (thus, lessening the show's original edge). Some fans believe that the shifting taste in music coincided with end of the so-called "golden age" of All That (after Season 6).
The earlier episodes were considerably more diversified in terms of the ethnic backgrounds of cast members. In return, the music and overall vibe usually had a more urban-influenced feel to it (as opposed to a pop feel). Some believe that when All That relaunched in Season 7, the show primarily featured Middle American, suburban whites (Bryan Hearne and Giovonnie Samuels were the only African American cast members at the start of the relaunch).
An urban legend maintains that Aaliyah, who tragically died in a plane crash at the age of 22 in August 2001, was scheduled to be a musical guest in the seventh season of All That. This would have made Aaliyah one of only a handful of artists to be a musical guest on both the old and new eras of All That. The urban legend even went as far as to say that just prior to her death, Aaliyah's presumed performance was recorded but ultimately replaced by a different musical guest.
The special was essentially a precursor or companion piece to the 10th Anniversary Reunion Special. Besides a slate of brand new sketches (along with a backstage tour), the live special also featured clips from memorable characters like Randy & Mandy, Coach Kreeton, the Loud Librarian, Leroy & Fuzz, Miss Pidlin, Detective Dan, and Superdude.
Special guest stars on the 100th episode special included Melissa Joan Hart, who had starred on Nick's Clarissa Explains It All, Larisa Oleynik, who starred on Nick's The Secret World of Alex Mack, and musical guests Lauryn Hill, who performed "Doo-Wop (That Thing)" and Busta Rhymes, who performed "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Can See" and "Gimme Some Mo'." Britney Spears appeared in a taped segment apologizing to viewers for her knee injury that prevented her from performing and led to her being replaced by Hill.
Original cast members (all of whom had since left All That) Angelique Bates, Katrina Johnson, Alisa Reyes, and Lori Beth Denberg appeared on the episode. Denberg even reprised her Vital Information role when her successor Danny Tamberelli was unavailable. The running gag of the entire special was Tamberelli's struggle to make it to the special in time.
To date, this was the only time that All That has produced a live episode. Incidentally, Kenan Thompson would eventually become a cast member on Saturday Night Live. Nickelodeon has subsequently cut the special down to 30 minutes for rebroadcasts.
It has also been suggested that the vastly maturing young stars' (especially Amanda Bynes) hearts were no longer fully into performing. By the time the sixth season rolled around, Bynes was so busy working on another show for Nick (The Amanda Show), that she only made very sporadic appearances (thus, leaving the load to fellow female cast member Christy Knowings) in the already abbreviated season. Also leaving at the end of Season 6 were writer/producer Kevin Kopelow, who was best known for his on-camera role as Kevin, the much-abused stage manager, and announcer Soup. Soup was the one who said at the beginning of the opening credits "Fresh out the box! Stop, look, and watch! Ready yet? Get set! It's all that!" At the end of the day, Josh Server, who was the only remaining original cast member in the sixth season, became the longest serving All That cast member not counting Kevin Kopelow.
By the time the sixth season for All That had begun, there were many other new shows starting (most of them now defunct) and Nick executives wanted to make room for the programs in the schedule. Rumor has it that Nick briefly cancelled All That before having a last minute change of heart.
The first episode of the "new" All That (with special guests Frankie Muniz and Aaron Carter) was the 121st overall—counting the "Best of..." episodes—airing on January 19, 2002. In this particular episode, Muniz is seen running around the streets grabbing random people to be the new cast members.
Also appearing during this period were Kenan Thompson and Amanda Bynes, who were brought in likely to help bridge the gap between the golden age of All That and the on-going relaunch.
Some viewers didn't appreciate the intensified emphasis on special guest stars since All That (unlike the 90 minute long Saturday Night Live or even the 60 minute long MADtv) was only a 30 minute program (including commercials). Some feared that the guest stars (with the possible exception of the likes of Kenan Thompson and Amanda Bynes) were seriously overshadowing the young cast or even hampering the proceedings.
A theory is that the golden age of All That was more edgy, risqué, cohesive, pure, natural, innovative, and/or inspired with its humor, while the later episodes were often too juvenile, forced, clichéd (or based on stupid stereotypes), crude, boring, contrived, dependent on special effects, slapstick and gross-out comedy for gags, and/or even derivative of older, better executed All That sketches. Another theory has been fronted that the declining quality of All That was merely due to the long-time audience's maturing comedic tastes. In addition, there's a general feeling that the newer (and immature according to some) cast members weren't as well tuned in the art of sketch comedy and characterization.
Some of these dares included singing the National Anthem in a diaper, bobbing for apples in a toilet, taking a bath in a tub of raw eggs, eating a couple gallons of bleu cheese, having buckets of worms dumped on your head, or even shaving your teacher's legs.
Even though popular past cast members like Kel Mitchell, Kenan Thompson, Josh Server, and Danny Tamberelli reprised some of their most memorable characters on the special, many older fans were disappointed that past cast members like Katrina Johnson, Alisa Reyes, Mark Saul, Angelique Bates, and Leon Frierson were in attendance but had no speaking parts. In addition, Nick Cannon, who started off as a stand-up to warm up the audience of All That before becoming a cast member, appeared on the special but only via satellite. Television promos for the special said or hinted that Amanda Bynes (arguably the most recognizable cast member in All That history besides Kenan and Kel) was going to be there only to prove to be a no show (Bynes was busy filming a movie at the time); Bynes only appeared via archive footage of her playing her Ask Ashley character.
The reunion special was criticized by some for giving too much airtime to the current (and supposedly vastly inferior) cast. In addition, many of the sketches from the older episodes were ruined by the fact that the new season cast members and characters were present in them. Older viewers were also outraged that a sketch from the new cast (i.e. The Unreal World) was voted the funniest moment in All That history. The Unreal World sketch went up against the likes of such 1990s sketches as Kenan Thompson's Ishboo character and a classic Good Burger sketch.
In conjunction to the start of the tenth season, a rumor began floating around that original cast members Lori Beth Denberg and Josh Server would return in the form of writers. This rumor would prove to be false by the time of the tenth season premiere on April 30.
According to Lisa Foiles on her official Yahoo! group* the rumors of the impending cancellation of All That were in fact, true. This is the message posted on Lisa's club by Lisa Foiles (as of September 5, 2005):
Finally, in January 2006, Nickelodeon and creator/producer of the show Dan Schneider officially decided to cancel All That after ten seasons. According to Schneider, Nickelodeon said the that show was cancelled because of the "lack of writing."
Supposedly, had Nickelodeon allowed All That to continue with an eleventh season, then Kevin Kopelow would've likely returned as a writer and on-screen performer. In addition, All That would have returned to its old format (such as the return of the Big Ear of Corn for instance), except they would've kept the Know Your Stars segment. They also, had supposedly planned to remake more sketches like Good Burger in Season 9 and Vital Information in Season 10.
Defenders of the newer episodes felt that it was rather unfair to some of the younger cast members (i.e. Ryan Coleman, Christina Kirkman, Kianna Underwood, and Denzel Whitaker), whom they feel didn't get enough of chance to shine. In addition, some gave praise to the efforts and overall enthusiasm of the newer cast members (particularly, Lisa Foiles) despite the considerable level of adversity (or arguable lack of strong material). As a matter of fact, some viewers aren't willing to single out the post-Season 6 cast members. There are those who believe that the real "decline" of All That began around Seasons 4-5 (1998-1999). Seasons 4-5 in some eyes, was not pure (where as Seasons 1-3 had an undescribable freshness to it) due to the lack of the departed cast members (Lori Beth Denberg, Katrina Johnson, Alisa Reyes, and to a lesser extent, Angelique Bates) and the presence of the newer cast members (Nick Cannon, Leon Frierson, Christy Knowings, Mark Saul, and Danny Tamberelli). Some have also argued that around Seasons 5-6, All That started resorting to more "racial stereotypes" as sources of humor (especially with cast members like Nick Cannon and Gabriel Iglesias).
But in April 2006, reports surfaced that Nickelodeon had decided to scrap the Best of... plans for Seasons 7-10. As of April 2006, Nickelodeon reportedly, plans on airing Season 10 reruns into the following year, and then, All That would be off the air period. Nickelodeon is however, considering the 10th aniversary reunion special down to 30 minutes and use it as part of the Season 10 rerun cycle.
Television sketch shows | Variety television series | Children's television series | Nickelodeon shows | 1990s TV shows in the United States | 2000s TV shows in the United States | All That | Kids' Choice Awards winners | Children's Comedy series | Family Channel shows
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