About The State
The State is a sketch comedy group that used to have a show on MTV cleverly titled
"The State." They were on MTV for a few years. Then some sort of conflict
took place between them and MTV, so they went off the air. They now do shows such
as Viva Variety and Stella. They have published a book called "State by State
with The State." They have made an album that Warner Brothers has not published
yet. And, there might be a movie.
History (information submitted by David Wain and Joe LoTruglio)
1988
New York University sophomore Todd Holoubek drops out of the sketch comedy group "Sterile Yak" to form a New Group of mostly freshman. Soon officially named “The New Group,” they start work on their first show. It will include live sketch, film and video. The Original Core members of the group include seven members: Ken Marino, Michael Showalter, Kerri Kenney, Todd Holoubek, Michael Ian Black, Ben Garant, and Joe LoTruglio.
1989
The New Group’s first show of original sketch material is called "I'm Rubber Your Glue," which debuts at the NYU DWP Theatre. The first skit is "Child Linguistics" by Michael Showalter and Joe. The group Sterile Yak performs its last show. The New Group does three more shows of all new material by year's end. In December, David Wain makes his debut in “The New Group Christmas Special,” performed at Brittany Dorm, NYU.
1990
Tom Lennon's debut in another Brittany show. March '90. Kevin Allison makes a thrilling debut in the group's fourth major production, "34 Stuyvesant Place" on April 19, 1990 in a sketch called "Bob, Sparky, and Verbal." He streaks across the stage in a leopard-skin thong.
The New Group performs their first paid gig opening for Dennis Miller at NYU: $1000 for the whole group. Meanwhile, they continue doing original full-scale threatre shows as well as smaller performances in dorms, bars, colleges, the park, NYU events, etc.
1991
"Enough with the Noise" at the Gene Frankel Theatre - the fifth all new
full length New Group show.
1992
Michael Black (then Schwartz) and David Wain meet with an MTV Development assistant to pitch the group for a series. They are rejected. Nevertheless, David enlists the group to create some demo segments for a series being developed at MTV called "You Wrote It, You Watch It." MTV becomes interested in The New Group.
May '92: Michael Patrick Jann comes on board as in-house "director" for any short film projects the group undertakes.
Aug. '92: "The New Group" changes its name to "Medium Head Thing". Two days later, dissatisfied and embarrassed by its choice, the group decides to settle on a new name. Tired, bored of thinking about it, one of them spots a newspaper headline with the word “state” in it. Quick vote. Done. A week later, "Full Frontal Comedy” is dropped.
Oct 8,9,10: The State debuts "Molt" - a three-night showcase at the Theatre Off-Park produced by Jon Bendis and Steven Starr. The show is loosely structured around a "birth to death" theme, and results in signing with the William Morris Agency.
MTV offers The State a contract to create segments for 13 episodes of "You Wrote It, You Watch It", hosted by Jon Stewart. In November, The State begins work on "You Wrote It". It is the first time members of the group earn a living from The State. They produce 28 pieces for no budget, acting as their own cast, crew and staff.
1993
Over the summer, The State (with Bendis and Starr) create a series concept for MTV.
They recruit "Almost Live" producer Jim Sharp for the pilot episode of
"The State on MTV". The State theme song is created by Craig Wedren and
Eli Janney.
MTV picks up The State for six episodes.
In September Production begins on The State on MTV: episodes 101-108. (Shows 104
& 105 are not aired but are combined into a new show: 107. 108 is a compilation.)
In December, The State appears on MTV's Jon Stewart Show to promote its new show.
They destroy his set.
1994
In January, the first cycle wraps and airs. Initial reviews are highly negative,
although ratings are good. MTV takes three months to decide to renew for six more
shows.
In April, The State shows 201-207 production begins. The ratings for the first cycle
curiously increase as the shows rerun.
In July, The State makes the "Miserable Crap" promo that advertises the
show's bad reviews.
MTV renews for 13 more shows, which begin production.
1995
In a New York Times article on January 7, The State reveals intentions to go to a
broadcast network.
In February, seven members of The State do "Winter on Wheels 1972" - a
ten college tour of the east coast. The show consists of live performance and video
never before seen on MTV. All the shows are sold out.
In March, Shows 307-313 begin production.
The State notifies MTV that they will not return after the current cycle.
Some Statemembers pull down their pants at a William Morris TV party. It is published
in Variety.
On July 15, the final MTV production period wraps, and shows 307-313 are delivered.
On July 18, Variety and New York Magazine simultaneously announce the deal for The
State to do a series of specials on CBS, then go up against SNL in the fall of 1996.
On Aug 7, The State begins work in an office in Chelsea for the Halloween and New
Years specials at CBS. Much of the MTV production team returns. Founder Todd Holoubek
leaves The State, the first personnel change in over four years. The group now numbers
ten.
The Halloween Special gets a glowing four-star review from Michele Greppi of the
New York Post, who originally gave the MTV series one of the most harshly negative
reviews. The review ends "That was then, this is wow." Aside from the Post
review, however, there is almost no promotion of any kind for the show.
The State's 43rd Annual All-Star Halloween Special is broadcast on CBS. It gets a
low (6.5) share which causes the CBS programming chief (who has not seen the show
or the reviews) to decide to cancel the New Year's special, ending any further relationship
with CBS.
1996
Details Magazine publishes "They Died Laughing" a article by David Lipsky
that tells the story of The State's difficult experience doing the special for CBS.
On January 15, The State begins two weeks at Compass Point studios in Nassau, Bahamas
to record a comedy record for Warner Brothers. Eli Janney produces.
After the album, the group starts focusing on individual projects, while developing
ideas for a State movie.
The State performs "Hard On Shakespeare" at MTV's Spring Break in Panama
City, FL.
Writing begins on the State book for Hyperion Press - a fictional travel guide to
the United States.
The group sells out Caroline's comedy club for two barely rehearsed "unplugged"
shows, consisting of material from the series, tour, and collegeshows. Craig Wedren
plays music.
1997
The State's book is released April 17.
On May 23, The State performs a full length live stage show at the Big Stinkin' International
Improv Festival in Austin, Texas.
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