| Anne Bloom | ... | Frosty Kimelman (60 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Lucy Webb | ... | Helen St. Thomas (60 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Danny Breen | ... | Steve Casper (59 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Rich Hall | ... | Rich Hall (53 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Mitchell Laurance | ... | Pete Kimelman (53 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Stuart Pankin | ... | Bob Charles (46 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Audrie Neenan | ... | Jacqueline Pennell (28 episodes, 1982-1985) | |
| Jan Hooks | (24 episodes, 1983-1984) |
Series Directed by | |||
| Hoite C. Caston | (32 episodes, 1983-1985) | ||
| John Moffitt | (20 episodes, 1984-1988) | ||
| David Grossman | (4 episodes, 1988-1990) | ||
| Tom Kramer | (2 episodes, 1982-1990) | ||
| Paul Miller | (2 episodes, 1987) | ||
Series Writing credits | ||
| Larry Arnstein | (60 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Matt Neuman | (60 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| David Hurwitz | (59 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Rich Hall | (52 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| John Moffitt | (49 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Lane Sarasohn | (46 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Elaine Pope | (29 episodes, 1982-1988) | |
| Tom Kramer | (27 episodes, 1983-1990) | |
| Ron Richards | (26 episodes, 1982-1988) | |
| Jeff Zimmer | (21 episodes, 1984-1988) | |
| Ian Maxtone-Graham | (20 episodes, 1983-1987) | |
| Billy Kimball | (19 episodes, 1984-1989) | |
| Al Jean | (17 episodes, 1983-1985) | |
| Mike Reiss | (17 episodes, 1983-1985) | |
| Conan O'Brien | (13 episodes, 1983-1987) | |
| Mike Lupper | (11 episodes, 1983-1985) | |
| Jame Wendell | (11 episodes, 1983-1985) | |
| David Castro | (10 episodes, 1984) | |
| Daphne Pollon | (10 episodes, 1984) | |
| Greg Daniels | (8 episodes, 1985-1987) | |
| Sam Haam | (7 episodes, 1983-1985) | |
| George Meyer | (6 episodes, 1983-1986) | |
| Tom Schiller | (4 episodes, 1986-1988) | |
| Steve Barker | (4 episodes, 1988-1990) | |
| Warren Scarren | (2 episodes, 1984-1985) | |
| Merrill Markoe | (2 episodes, 1990) | |
| Rod Ash | (1 episode, 1982-1988) | |
| Glenn Rabney | (1 episode, 1987-1990) | |
| Adam Barr | (unknown episodes, 1987-1988) | |
| Rob LaZebnik | (unknown episodes, 1987-1988) | |
| David Sacks | (unknown episodes, 1987-1988) | |
Series Produced by | |||
| John Moffitt | .... | executive producer / producer (62 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Pat Tourk Lee | .... | executive producer / producer / ... (62 episodes, 1982-1990) | |
| Christie Stentz | .... | associate producer (16 episodes, 1982-1989) | |
| Matt Neuman | .... | producer (10 episodes, 1987-1990) | |
Series Original Music by | |||
| Tom Rizzo | (unknown episodes) | ||
Series Film Editing by | |||
| Mark West | (unknown episodes) | ||
| Danny White | (unknown episodes) | ||
Series Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Troy Miller | .... | first assistant director (unknown episodes) | |
Series Art Department | |||
| Marc Karzen | .... | print designer (1 episode, 1982) | |
Series Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Larry Kaster | .... | gaffer (1 episode, 1982) | |
| Carl Gibson | .... | lighting designer (unknown episodes) | |
| Ed Maloney | .... | electrician (unknown episodes) | |
Series Other crew | |||
| Steve Kozak | .... | production assistant (unknown episodes, 1983) | |
| Bill Cohen | .... | production assistant (unknown episodes) | |
| Roger Eschbacher | .... | researcher (unknown episodes) | |
| Troy Miller | .... | location supervisor (unknown episodes) | |
| Scott Weitz | .... | production assistant (unknown episodes) | |
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| "The Colbert Report" | The Onion Movie | "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" | "The Day Today" | "Monday Report" |
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| External reviews | News articles | IMDb TV section |
| IMDb Comedy section | IMDb USA section |
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So argued Stuart Pankin and Lucy Webb about Certs, a sponsor for a "Crossfire"-type show hosted by these two obstreperous jabber-jaws who were too busy lambasting each other's opinion to allow their guest (a meek Washington insider played by Danny Breen) to get a single word in.
Why only two other user comments so far? Nobody else remembers this program, the "Daily Show" of its time? I have about a half-dozen episodes of "NNTN" I taped years ago off HBO. I was just a kid then so I didn't really get the political satire (what were the Iran-Contra hearings all about? What's so funny about Margaret Thatcher?) but loved the commercial parodies: An aspirin spot, with the shaky-cam, zoom-crazy, A.D.D.-edited style of early MTV; a travelogue promoting Middle East tourism, featuring bombed-out cities and a jingle called "Come to Lebanon"; a promo for a Lifetime-esqe domestic drama about some way-obscure illness (poly-malabsorption?), with Anne Bloom and Mitchell Laurance reciting banal, melodramatic dialogue ("Dammit, Brad! You know I can't eat butter!"); a PSA featuring Webb as a mother so frustrated with the risks inherent with seemingly healthy foods that she goes back to the basics ("Lard: It's what's for dinner") and concoctions she's read nothing negative about (like marshmallows soaked in blue food coloring); and one poking fun at the countless, minutely different types of sanitary napkins flooding the market ("Here's an Ultra-Regular-Thin-Maxi-Thin-Lite-Lite, for jury duty"). One risqué skit hawked a condom carrying case to eliminate telltale "Ring Around the Rubber" from a man's wallet. And another ad recommended one pharmaceutical after another to curb the side effects of the drug you were taking to curb the side effects of another. ("Doesn't Stamforex cause night blindness and fever blisters?" "Of course it does, that's why you need Glycane D...") And so on. (Don't forget to use Washital to swallow all those pills.) Then there was Backseat Driving School, which needs no explanation.
Its "interview" segments were clever, too. One edited quotes from a Marilyn Quayle Q&A session with Larry King (the dotted background reveals the source) to make it appear she was answering questions from Webb about an adulterous affair. (What ever happened to her, anyway? She was hilarious! Lucy, I mean, not Marilyn.) Another had Henry Kissinger pitching a political drama to Pankin's movie exec, who tosses the script in the wastebasket and suggests adding more sex and violence next time. Every episode found plenty of fodder in the Reagan-Bush era (though I can just imagine what the writers would have done with Clinton), and even if a lot of it went over my head, "NNTN" was probably the root of my aversion to the Republican party. For which I'm grateful.
And then there were Sniglets, words that should be in the dictionary but aren't. Like "destinesia," which is when you forget what you came into a room for, and "cinemuck," the sticky combination of cola, candy, and popcorn on the floors of movie theatres. I suppose Rich Hall was, in a way, a proto-Seinfeld, since "spongeworthy" and "double-dipping" are more recent and popular examples.
Rarely does a comedy series remain funny to the end, so "NNTN" wasn't the same when it went live and the original cast (Bloom, Breen, Pankin, and Webb) was replaced with Tom Parks, Annabelle Gurwitch and a couple others who've never been heard from again. I've got one of these eps but can't remember a thing about it. Not good.
That's about all I can recall now. Would like to watch all the episodes I've got -- some titles are "Not Necessarily the Year in Review" and "NNTN Inside Entertainment," which are from '87 or '88 -- but I'm between VCRs right now. The tapes aren't gonna last much longer, so a DVD set, please, HBO.
(And now that I'm old enough to appreciate it, I want to rent "Tanner '88" ['cause we all know the time is always right to mock politicians]...too bad it's not on DVD, either.)