TV 101 (TV Series 1988–1989) Poster

(1988–1989)

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9/10
Background actor that was featured in an unusual way
dpercent5 December 2012
Ever since I was featured as a background actor in an episode (never aired)I was curious as to the reason this show only aired 14 episodes. I was working out of "central casting" at the time and holding down a job in another industry. The producers of this show wanted my image in an episode and central pleaded with me to do the show...at my convenience none the less. I was supposedly caught in a secret romantic encounter with the character played by actress Brit Thayer which was captured by one of her students with a still camera. What was unusual I was featured in a "silent Bit" that most background extra's never get a chance to do. However the episode never aired because the show was canceled a couple of weeks after I appeared in this episode.

I always wondered if I got screen credit....although it doesn't really matter anymore because that show aired more than 20 years ago.

I always liked the show even before my bit part. It was unusual and ahead of its time for sure.
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8/10
Ahead of its time
safenoe27 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I became an instant fan of TV 101 when it debuted in 1988, and it was way ahead of its time, with a teacher (played by Sam Robards) returning to teach a class about TV production, so with social media and all, TV 101 was way ahead of its time. Is it possible for TV 101 to be rebooted please, because the cast was energetic and some had big things awaiting them. Alex Desert ended up starring in Becker, and a young unknown actor by the name of Matt LeBlanc ended up starring with a bunch of other unknowns in a sitcom about a bunch of New York City friends. I would love to see TV 101 again for sure.
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9/10
It was very well done...
mrd-813271 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I loved this show. The characters were well developed and well portrayed. I remember there being controversy about this show because one of the main characters finds herself in a family way and they dealt with it realistically. There's a lot of teenaged emotional drama before and after, but in the end the girl's mother takes her to a doctor to nip it in the bud and things go back more or less to normal. Aside from the emotional turmoil of going through the experience no one suffered any consequences for their actions in the end. This offended some people's moral sensibilities enough for it to be criticized and all of a sudden the show was gone.
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Imaginative late 80's teen drama.
gavmaster7 August 2000
TV 101 stood out from many of its contemporaries as an intelligent, culturally aware, and hip document of teenage life in the 80's. Sam Robards played Kevin Keegan, a journalist who returns to his Californian alma mater to teach an unusual journalism class: a class based around a weekly student-produced TV show. The students are what made the show: instead of the usual "cookie-cutter" thirty-year-olds playing Middle American high-school types of say "Saved By The Bell" or "90210", this show's characters were smart, stylish, ethnically diverse, and intellectually, technologically, and morally aware; not afraid to "face the issues" in their reporting, sort of a teenaged "Lou Grant", with cutting edge home video equipment. Especially interesting to me was "Holden Heinz" (Alex Désert, lately of the show "Becker"), the scooter-riding 'mod' African American student: he was an archetype of myself and my friends at the time: we liked him even though he wasn't quite as cutting-edge as we were. Also notable was Matt LeBlanc of "Friends" as "Bender". The only other kid from the series I've seen lately was Stacey Dash doing the old Thirty-Year-Old-Playing-A-Teenager thing in "Clueless".To top it all of the show's theme was written by composer Stewart Copeland, best known as the drummer for 80's #1 hitmakers "The Police. Alas, the show lasted only one season: I guess the masses couldn't relate to a cast that ethnically varied and cool. Hell, they still can't.
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It was a rare gem
unitedbro12 June 2003
Not many people caught this show but, it was a treat. First of all it was the debut of Stacey Dash to the entertainment world which in and of itself was worth praise. It was a smart witty show with a cutting edge theme and production style. I would like to see this show again in reruns or on DVD.
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It is, indeed, a shame
jwas2 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I, too, feel bad that this series did not last more than one season. In fact, TV 101 dealt with an issue that is at the forefront in people's minds today, but not during the time of which it was on the air (1988 - 1989) --- homelessness.

Although I do remember bits and pieces of the context of the series, I do remember during the Christmas period of, I believe Alex Desert's character Holden, discovering a schoolmate living in the basement of the school because the student was homeless and did not have a place to stay. This particular issue and many others which were dealt in a mature and dignified way, made this series stand out amongst even some of today's TV series.

It is a shame that it did not live longer and continue to put forward excellent story lines.
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too bad this show didn't last longer
Mattswife9714 July 2002
because it was a good film. it was about some kids in school learning film. i was only 13 when this movie came out so i don't really remember much. I wish they would show repeats of this somewhere. they alwasy take the good shows off. =(
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maybe one of these things that was better at the time?
cherold17 January 2022
Checked out the first episode of this when I saw it was created by Kurt Schaefer, who did great shows like Eerie Indiana and Z-Nation. The few reviews are all ecstatic about it, but seeing it for the first time over 30 years after its debut it seems pretty hockey and conventional. The dialogue and acting are pretty iffy, and I just don't get it.

But maybe if you were an 80s high school student this was amazing. Anyway, I'm not giving it a rating because I don't want to bring down the score of something with so much love, but I can't see watching more of this.
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