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American sitcom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cousin Skeeter is an American sitcom, that originally aired on Nickelodeon from 1998 to 2002. It starred Robert Ri'chard as Bobby, a young boy whose life is changed when his strange cousin, Skeeter, comes to stay with his family. With Skeeter's help, Bobby learns life lessons and tackles the ups and downs of growing up. The show also included Meagan Good as Bobby's friend Nina, Rondell Sheridan as Bobby's father Andre, and Angela Means as Bobby's mother Vanessa. Skeeter is portrayed by a hand puppet with Bill Bellamy providing his voice,[1] and Drew Massey performing the puppetry, assisted by Alice Dinnean.[1] Within the show, Skeeter is treated like a regular human and no mention of him being a puppet is made. Although the series was shot in a single-camera format, the show used a laugh track.
Cousin Skeeter | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom Puppetry |
Created by | Phil Beauman Alonzo Brown Brian Robbins |
Starring | Robert Ri'chard Rondell Sheridan Meagan Good Angela Means Bill Bellamy |
Composer | Kurt Farquhar |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 52 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Mike Tollin Brian Robbins Joe Davola Brad Kaaya Jerry Perzigian |
Camera setup | Film; Single-camera |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production companies | Tollin/Robbins Productions Nickelodeon Productions |
Original release | |
Network | Nickelodeon |
Release | September 1, 1998 – November 2, 2002 |
Related | |
Kenan & Kel |
The show's theme song is an alternate version of 702's 1996 debut single "Steelo", co-written by and featuring Missy Elliott.
Cousin Skeeter first aired on September 1, 1998, on Nickelodeon, sharing the 8–9 pm programming block with The Wild Thornberrys.[2] Cousin Skeeter was one of many shows at this time to touch on the idea of multicultural themes, with notable shows such as The Brothers García originating around this time as well. Skeeter frequently causes mischief, which is often balanced out by Bobby having to correct the situation.
Cousin Skeeter received mixed reviews. A writer from The Hollywood Reporter described the shows characters as "undeveloped" and "dependent on a one-liner approach".[3] Others note that the contrast between Bobby and Skeeter is meant to act as a kind of role model for children, but the message is lost in the strange behavior of Skeeter. Many viewers found it odd that the fact that Skeeter is an actual puppet is never acknowledged by any other characters, which left them to wonder why he was even a puppet in the first place. Ray Richmond, a writer for Variety, found the content borderline offensive, calling it an "a half-hour entrant in Nickelodeon’s primetime "Nickel-O-Zone" lineup" that sends "TVs view of black culture careening back to the Stone Age".[1] However, Rotten Tomatoes rated it as one of five 1990s children's shows that helped "pave the way for black representation on TV", with the article citing the episode "The Bicycle Thief" which tackled the issue of police interacting with black children.[4]
According to a Variety article from February 1999, Cousin Skeeter was "consistently ranked as the top-rated live-action series for the [Nickelodeon] network".[5]
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