Casey McCall and Dan Rydell are sports anchors and best friends on "Sports Night", a nightly cable program.Casey McCall and Dan Rydell are sports anchors and best friends on "Sports Night", a nightly cable program.Casey McCall and Dan Rydell are sports anchors and best friends on "Sports Night", a nightly cable program.
- Won 3 Primetime Emmys
- 13 wins & 37 nominations total
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This is another example of how the executives who rule tv are total mindless idiots, and I mean that in the harshest way possible. The networks leave so much garbage on, ABC itself airs Who Wants to Be A Millionaire (a horrible excuse for a show) 800 times a week, they leave crap like Dharma and Greg on, yet they axe Sports Night? Sports Night is by far one of the best shows on tv...ever. Ever! A show with such brilliant writing is rare, but Sports Night had it right on the money. There wasn't one bad thing about this show. It's smart, it's funny, it's dramatic, it's beautifully shot, the casting is perfect..I could go on for days. I never saw the show on ABC, and have just recently discovered it on Comedy Central (shocking, they DO play something besides Saturday Night Live 10 times a day!) I am amazed at the end of every new episode I see. This show is just packaged so nicely, and I must add, the chemistry between the cast members on the show is unbelievable...this show is in my top 3 of best shows on television, and it only goes to further my disgust with the network tv powers that be...shame on you for running garbage season after season after season, and tossing aside a jewel like this. The head of NBC tv programming was named one of the biggest losers of 2000 by TV Guide for cutting Freaks and Geeks (another brilliant show)..I definitely think the head of ABC programming for 2000 should be added to the list as well. Sports Night- a definite 10 out of 10.
You were wrong. It's 20 years later. And it's still wrong.
Please quit the TV business, because you're awful at it.
Dickhead...
Please quit the TV business, because you're awful at it.
Dickhead...
Too bad we can't rate TV shows on IMDB, eh? I wonder what this one would get; I'm sure it would be very high.
Like practically everyone else, it seems, I ran across SN after it had been canceled and was in reruns on cable. It took about 15 seconds to fascinate me, because it was obviously a show about a sports show that somehow wasn't about sports (which naturally made me wonder what it _was_ about), and because the writing was so excellent. Oh, and the acting was good too ;-).
Given all the comments already posted, there seems to be nothing left to say about this program so I'll close by ranking it alongside Babylon 5 and Northern Exposure as one of my all-time favorite shows ever aired on television (the similarities to NE are possibly worth exploring). Really enjoyable stuff; terrible that it only lasted such a short time.
Like practically everyone else, it seems, I ran across SN after it had been canceled and was in reruns on cable. It took about 15 seconds to fascinate me, because it was obviously a show about a sports show that somehow wasn't about sports (which naturally made me wonder what it _was_ about), and because the writing was so excellent. Oh, and the acting was good too ;-).
Given all the comments already posted, there seems to be nothing left to say about this program so I'll close by ranking it alongside Babylon 5 and Northern Exposure as one of my all-time favorite shows ever aired on television (the similarities to NE are possibly worth exploring). Really enjoyable stuff; terrible that it only lasted such a short time.
If you can only spend a half hour a week in front of the tube, spend 9:30 - 10:00 (eastern, 8:30 central) watching "Sports Night", the best written show on television. If you have unlimited time to watch any and every show on, start here and begin weeding out the rest.
Aaron Sorkin is the David Mammet, Billy Wilder or Cameron Crowe of the small screen. (And let's not forget his big screen credits, including the screenplays for "The American President" and "A Few Good Men".) His scripts are crisp, clever and funny as can be.
Add the fantastic pacing of a group of talented directors, and you have the one show on TV that compels you to tune everything else out so that you can savor every second of wondrous activity.
To that we can add a great cast. Josh Charles becomes your best friend. Peter Krause and Felicity Huffman create the greatest romantic tension you will find. Joshua Molina is brilliant. Sabrina Lloyd chews scenery with pure joy and a wink. And Robert Guillaume gives consistently spectacular performances, both before and since his stroke.
Don't miss this show! If you do, you'll never get your wasted 30 minutes back.
Aaron Sorkin is the David Mammet, Billy Wilder or Cameron Crowe of the small screen. (And let's not forget his big screen credits, including the screenplays for "The American President" and "A Few Good Men".) His scripts are crisp, clever and funny as can be.
Add the fantastic pacing of a group of talented directors, and you have the one show on TV that compels you to tune everything else out so that you can savor every second of wondrous activity.
To that we can add a great cast. Josh Charles becomes your best friend. Peter Krause and Felicity Huffman create the greatest romantic tension you will find. Joshua Molina is brilliant. Sabrina Lloyd chews scenery with pure joy and a wink. And Robert Guillaume gives consistently spectacular performances, both before and since his stroke.
Don't miss this show! If you do, you'll never get your wasted 30 minutes back.
Shows on the lowly art form that is Television, that have the audacity to engage one's brain-- from "My So-Called Life" to "Homicide: Life on the Street"-- never, ever last very long. Or long enough.
I kick myself every time I see this show on Comedy Central, because I never once watched it on ABC-- it's all my fault it was canceled. Well, not really-- what the heck would ANYONE be doing watching ABC in the first place? Especially a show as great as this, sandwiched between what was probably a lame 30-minute sitcom, and a lamer 60-minute pretend-drama?
"Sports Night" is neither of these things-- never have television characters been so real, never have I just sat riveted in front of the TV, taking such wonderful joy and happiness in the dialogue and the way the actors loved to speak it. Knowing there will never be another "Sports Night" episode is like coming to the end of a really great novel-- you carry the story with you, but the characters are gone forever. You miss them, but it is, alas, beyond your control.
Aaron Sorkin, who writes such great dialogue (see also "A Few Good Men," and later, "The American President") created a good and wonderful thing, and I only wish more people had had the courage to follow him. For now, we're stuck with the ridiculously preachy and self-absorbed (but high-rated; go figure) "The West Wing," but that can't go on forever.
If Sorkin CAN go on (and we're rooting for him)-- then I know I, for one, will follow him anywhere.
I kick myself every time I see this show on Comedy Central, because I never once watched it on ABC-- it's all my fault it was canceled. Well, not really-- what the heck would ANYONE be doing watching ABC in the first place? Especially a show as great as this, sandwiched between what was probably a lame 30-minute sitcom, and a lamer 60-minute pretend-drama?
"Sports Night" is neither of these things-- never have television characters been so real, never have I just sat riveted in front of the TV, taking such wonderful joy and happiness in the dialogue and the way the actors loved to speak it. Knowing there will never be another "Sports Night" episode is like coming to the end of a really great novel-- you carry the story with you, but the characters are gone forever. You miss them, but it is, alas, beyond your control.
Aaron Sorkin, who writes such great dialogue (see also "A Few Good Men," and later, "The American President") created a good and wonderful thing, and I only wish more people had had the courage to follow him. For now, we're stuck with the ridiculously preachy and self-absorbed (but high-rated; go figure) "The West Wing," but that can't go on forever.
If Sorkin CAN go on (and we're rooting for him)-- then I know I, for one, will follow him anywhere.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Robert Guillaume suffered a stroke, it was added to the storyline. His character, managing editor Isaac Jaffe, also had a stroke.
- Quotes
Isaac Jaffe: Let me start by saying that: Dana, what I say in my office stays in my office.
Dana Whitaker: Natalie's my number 2, she's the only one I told.
Natalie Hurley: Jeremy's my boyfriend, and he's the only one I told.
Jeremy Goodwin: I told many many people.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Spin City: Internal Affairs (1999)
- How many seasons does Sports Night have?Powered by Alexa
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