IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Follows a boy who has come to live with his cousin and his family. Both of them get into all sorts of funny situations.Follows a boy who has come to live with his cousin and his family. Both of them get into all sorts of funny situations.Follows a boy who has come to live with his cousin and his family. Both of them get into all sorts of funny situations.
- Awards
- 8 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Oh! i remember this show...
WOW it seems like it was more than 6 years ago..i was 10 or ll at the time and i remember my brother and i rushing through last minute homework and scrubbing dinner dishes to get to the t.v and catch this show. Even though the main character was a ~~puppet~~ (: That didn't matter after watching the show and it was just funny to see how cousin skeeter did things as if he were no different from anyone else and how the cast treated him as a regular teenager. That alone used to make me laugh for the half hour. Granted the show wasn't the best show that was on Nickelodeon, it is a definite stand out from my childhood and it would be crazy if this series along with "My Brother and Me" was released on DVD (NOW THATS AN IDEA AIN'T IT?)
Why are there so many haters?
I'd like to point a fact out to most adults.This was made for kids for God's sake stop giving it terrible reviews.The plot is aimed at making situations in everyday life look as cheerful as anything to give kids a lighter look at life.The same goes for many other Nick shows e.g Brother's Garcia and my brother and me.So i don't know why most adults and mature tend to be blind at this simple fact and are hell bent on burning down the hard work of hardworking black people like Nick Cannon and Shaq.So the star of the show is a puppet big deal so was the entire cast in Sesame street.Why because it was created to entertain kids.Please people try and understand that not all shows created especially Nick shows are aimed at a more mature audience.
Dumber than Advertised
I once liked this show. But one day, I got smart(er). Cousin Skeeter isn't one of Nickelodeon's better sitcoms. It stars Skeeter, a short puppet from Atlanta, who ALWAYS expects to have it HIS way. His cousin is Bobby, a Los Angeles native who strives to do well in whatever he participates in, but has some trouble along the way. Along with Bobby's parents, both moves to the overrated city of New York, where living together proves to be bad chemistry.
In most episodes, Booby strives to succeed in whatever he participates in (as mentioned above). But almost every time, he has Skeeter chained to him, and--uh-oh!--Skeeter wants to do everything HIS way! Skeeter likes to make Bobby look like a total loser at home, but his independent streak usually squanders Bobby's hopes of doing well in something, as well as getting him blamed for much of the havoc Skeeter creates. For the sake of optimism, the two usually works things out by the end. They also know Nina (their apartment neighbor), who's sometimes involved in their mishaps. As if Bobby having a crush on Nina isn't enough (what has now become more than tiring in today's shows), Skeeter and Nina are almost always fighting with each other, which drives Bobby bonkers. The pair-up of Bobby and Skeeter is bad enough, but having Nina tossed in doesn't make much better.
When I started watching Cousin Skeeter when it was first shown in 1998, I originally found much of it funny. But around 2000, I lost interest. The holiday specials are lame and unfunny, and the made-for-TV movie shown in Summer 2000 was totally disastorus. Even for a show as bad as Cousin Skeeter, the movie was awful. I'd rather not explain in detail.
The main thing about the show that bugged me was Skeeter. Up until the made-for-TV movie, Skeeter was the ONLY puppet on this show. Why was this so? And why did nobody on the show see this? Much of what Skeeter displayed usually works in a regular cartoon (depending on whether or not it happens to be funny), but that's the kind of thing that can been quickly forgotten if shown on ABC, CBS, FOX, or NBC. And most of what Skeeter did was terribly unfunny. From the made-for-TV movie forward, Cousin Skeeter got another puppet on the show; Nicole. She's somewhat like Skeeter, but not as annoying. Skeeter has a crush on Nicole, which runs parallel to Bobby having a crush on Nina. This character addition only made the show worse than it already was.
By the time Cousin Skeeter was thankfully yanked off Nick's schedule in 2001, it was being shown on TeeNick; most (the key word is MOST) of the shows there are horrible, and, if anything seldom appeals to the average teen. MTV sounds like a better choice for teen entertainment, that's if they can (literally) cease with the liquid television (which is to say, constant schedule changes). But Cousin Skeeter came back just recently on SNICK. Status: Bad as it was before it was pre-empted.
This review was longer than I intended it to be, but this is how I feel about Cousin Skeeter. It was made by the same people who gave us All That, Kenan & Kel, and the Amanda Show. They're not real geniuses when it comes to making comedy shows (the only one that ran without completely falling apart was Kenan & Kel, that's if you can forget about their own TV movie, and that one crossover with Cousin Skeeter). Cousin Skeeter was one of those shows in general that SHOULDN'T have been made. With the very little live-action Nickelodeon gives us nowadays, they really need to cook up something more appealing than this stuff.
In most episodes, Booby strives to succeed in whatever he participates in (as mentioned above). But almost every time, he has Skeeter chained to him, and--uh-oh!--Skeeter wants to do everything HIS way! Skeeter likes to make Bobby look like a total loser at home, but his independent streak usually squanders Bobby's hopes of doing well in something, as well as getting him blamed for much of the havoc Skeeter creates. For the sake of optimism, the two usually works things out by the end. They also know Nina (their apartment neighbor), who's sometimes involved in their mishaps. As if Bobby having a crush on Nina isn't enough (what has now become more than tiring in today's shows), Skeeter and Nina are almost always fighting with each other, which drives Bobby bonkers. The pair-up of Bobby and Skeeter is bad enough, but having Nina tossed in doesn't make much better.
When I started watching Cousin Skeeter when it was first shown in 1998, I originally found much of it funny. But around 2000, I lost interest. The holiday specials are lame and unfunny, and the made-for-TV movie shown in Summer 2000 was totally disastorus. Even for a show as bad as Cousin Skeeter, the movie was awful. I'd rather not explain in detail.
The main thing about the show that bugged me was Skeeter. Up until the made-for-TV movie, Skeeter was the ONLY puppet on this show. Why was this so? And why did nobody on the show see this? Much of what Skeeter displayed usually works in a regular cartoon (depending on whether or not it happens to be funny), but that's the kind of thing that can been quickly forgotten if shown on ABC, CBS, FOX, or NBC. And most of what Skeeter did was terribly unfunny. From the made-for-TV movie forward, Cousin Skeeter got another puppet on the show; Nicole. She's somewhat like Skeeter, but not as annoying. Skeeter has a crush on Nicole, which runs parallel to Bobby having a crush on Nina. This character addition only made the show worse than it already was.
By the time Cousin Skeeter was thankfully yanked off Nick's schedule in 2001, it was being shown on TeeNick; most (the key word is MOST) of the shows there are horrible, and, if anything seldom appeals to the average teen. MTV sounds like a better choice for teen entertainment, that's if they can (literally) cease with the liquid television (which is to say, constant schedule changes). But Cousin Skeeter came back just recently on SNICK. Status: Bad as it was before it was pre-empted.
This review was longer than I intended it to be, but this is how I feel about Cousin Skeeter. It was made by the same people who gave us All That, Kenan & Kel, and the Amanda Show. They're not real geniuses when it comes to making comedy shows (the only one that ran without completely falling apart was Kenan & Kel, that's if you can forget about their own TV movie, and that one crossover with Cousin Skeeter). Cousin Skeeter was one of those shows in general that SHOULDN'T have been made. With the very little live-action Nickelodeon gives us nowadays, they really need to cook up something more appealing than this stuff.
Great show and guest stars
I love most of the guest stars on the show they bring in so much talent and it is just so funny Robert Rashard is a brilliant young man, Bill Bellamy is great as Skeeter are used to laugh so hard watching the show that was an episode where the guy Doc from Lampo in the chop shop worke Bill Bellamy is great as Skeeter are used to laugh so hard watching the show that was an episode where the guy Doc from Love Boat and his cohort the chop shop worker, stole Bobby and Nina's bikes and Skeeter caught them I've probably seen that episode at least 10 times it's hilarious and the guest actors are just awesome !! I don't know why this show did not run for like three more years at least ????
NYC 400 - #343 - "Cousin Skeeter"
We have a couple of "kid" fish out of water in this series. Bobby, (Robert Ri'chard) and his family The Walkers, moved to New York City from Los Angeles because Dad, Andre (Rondell Sheridan) was a music producer and needed to be in The City for his clients. His wife Vanessa (Angela Means) was a successful lawyer. Bobby, being an only child and in a new location, felt pretty much alone, but was trying to take everything in stride.
Cousin Skeeter (performed by Muppeteer Drew Massey and voiced by Bill Bellamy) was a puppet boy who originally lived in Georgia, but who moved up north to New York City stay with his cousins, to help tutor Bobby in Algebra, since he was a nerd and a math whiz.
This being a Nickelodeon show, of course the focus was on the two boys, who had the typical scholastic challenges, with schoolwork, bullies and friends, like Nina (Meagan Good), who lives in his high-rise, gets with Bobby and they start a mutual crush thing going on.
One of the unique elements of the program is that even though Cousin Skeeter was a puppet, no one treated or reacted to him any differently than any of the other characters. Eventually another puppet, Nicole (voiced by Tisha Campbell) appeared at school for a few episodes, to give Skeeter someone to play off of as well. That style choice might have helped set the stage for "LazyTown" just a few years later, where a bunch of puppet kids populated that program, and no one ever acknowledged that's who they were, either.
Plots of "Cousin Skeeter" focused on Skeeter's playful, rambunctious but good-natured personality and how that got him and sometimes got Bobby into trouble. Skeeter had a continuing mock feud with the building's doorman Ned (Floyd Levine), and Bobby's parents were counting the days till Bobby and Skeeter go to college so they can have some quiet time on their own. And Skeeter was fine with anyone and everyone, as long as you never commented on his height (or lack thereof).
New York plays a part because Skeeter claimed to be friends with some celebrities, like Shaquille O'Neal, Dennis Rodman and MC Lyte. Plus hanging out in Central Park, attending school, commuting around town, and finding that diner that serves up the best pancakes for breakfast are all key factors.
"Cousin Skeeter" was, for its time, another good example of representation of Black Americans on television, especially for younger kids to see. The show featured all the things you would want in a kids' sitcom, with the elements of fun, reason, intelligence, morality and understanding. And it featured a roster of guest stars, like Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell who turned up at a Dude Ranch that the kids attended, Downtown Julie Brown who played herself, and Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, who was another student in school.
This show deserved a lot more attention than the standard viewers on Nick gave it. It was popular with the demographic, but it probably would have been a fun watch for the parents and maybe some who weren't parents!
Cousin Skeeter (performed by Muppeteer Drew Massey and voiced by Bill Bellamy) was a puppet boy who originally lived in Georgia, but who moved up north to New York City stay with his cousins, to help tutor Bobby in Algebra, since he was a nerd and a math whiz.
This being a Nickelodeon show, of course the focus was on the two boys, who had the typical scholastic challenges, with schoolwork, bullies and friends, like Nina (Meagan Good), who lives in his high-rise, gets with Bobby and they start a mutual crush thing going on.
One of the unique elements of the program is that even though Cousin Skeeter was a puppet, no one treated or reacted to him any differently than any of the other characters. Eventually another puppet, Nicole (voiced by Tisha Campbell) appeared at school for a few episodes, to give Skeeter someone to play off of as well. That style choice might have helped set the stage for "LazyTown" just a few years later, where a bunch of puppet kids populated that program, and no one ever acknowledged that's who they were, either.
Plots of "Cousin Skeeter" focused on Skeeter's playful, rambunctious but good-natured personality and how that got him and sometimes got Bobby into trouble. Skeeter had a continuing mock feud with the building's doorman Ned (Floyd Levine), and Bobby's parents were counting the days till Bobby and Skeeter go to college so they can have some quiet time on their own. And Skeeter was fine with anyone and everyone, as long as you never commented on his height (or lack thereof).
New York plays a part because Skeeter claimed to be friends with some celebrities, like Shaquille O'Neal, Dennis Rodman and MC Lyte. Plus hanging out in Central Park, attending school, commuting around town, and finding that diner that serves up the best pancakes for breakfast are all key factors.
"Cousin Skeeter" was, for its time, another good example of representation of Black Americans on television, especially for younger kids to see. The show featured all the things you would want in a kids' sitcom, with the elements of fun, reason, intelligence, morality and understanding. And it featured a roster of guest stars, like Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell who turned up at a Dude Ranch that the kids attended, Downtown Julie Brown who played herself, and Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, who was another student in school.
This show deserved a lot more attention than the standard viewers on Nick gave it. It was popular with the demographic, but it probably would have been a fun watch for the parents and maybe some who weren't parents!
Did you know
- TriviaThe show's theme song was an alternate version of 702's 1996 hit "Steelo."
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best '90s Shows with Black Casts (2022)
- How many seasons does Cousin Skeeter have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
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