The Baseball Bunch

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The Baseball Bunch
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Genre Educational, sports, comedy
Starring Johnny Bench
Tommy Lasorda
The San Diego Chicken
Opening theme "The Baseball Bunch"
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 5
Production
Executive producer(s) Geoff Belinfante
Larry Parker
Producer(s) Rich Domich
Jody Shapiro
Gary Cohen
Production location(s) Tucson, Arizona
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) Major League Baseball Productions
Release
Original network Syndicated
Picture format Color
Original release Pilot / Special
August 23, 1980
Series
May 2, 1981 –
Fall 1985

The Baseball Bunch is an American educational children's television series that originally aired in broadcast syndication from August 23, 1980 through the fall of 1985. Produced by Major League Baseball Productions, the series was a 30-minute baseball-themed program airing on Saturday mornings, which featured a combination of comedy sketches and Major League guest-stars, intended to provide instructional tips to Little League aged children. Throughout its five season run, the series starred Johnny Bench, Tommy Lasorda and The Famous San Diego Chicken alongside a group of eight children (boys and girls ranging in age from 8–14) as "The Bunch".

Production

Produced by Major League Baseball Productions, and starring Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny Bench, and Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda, the series was envisioned as a fun, but informative way for Little League aged children to learn the fundamentals of baseball.[1] The original pilot for what would become The Baseball Bunch was filmed at Pepperdine University in Los Angeles in 1980, and did not originally include The San Diego Chicken (Ted Giannoulas).[1] In a 2007 interview with JustMyShow.com, Giannoulas recounted how he became part of the series, saying "The producers called me up and they said 'We want to shoot this again. We think it's a little dry for kids to be watching this. A lot of good baseball information, but not enough color to it, so can you come in and just improvise around what we've done, and we'll re-shoot the whole thing.' I did that, and suddenly they had magic in the can, and they sold the show."[1] The pilot, starring Bench, Lasorda, and Major League guest-star Steve Garvey, aired as a "special" presentation on Saturday August 23, 1980 (Sunday August 24, 1980 in some local markets).[2][3][4]

As preparations for the first full season began, production for the series was moved to Tucson, Arizona to begin filming in February 1981.[5] According to several cast-members, the location and time of year were selected for two main reasons; citing the ideal weather (70° temperatures in February), and Tucson's proximity to the Major League's spring training camps, which accommodated the Major League stars who could come in and film an episode during the month of February, then head directly over to their camps for spring training.[1] Youngsters auditioned to be part of the original "Bunch" were selected from the Tucson, Arizona Little League as well as some brought in from talent agencies as far away as Phoenix, Arizona and Las Vegas, Nevada.[1] The eight children ultimately chosen, boys and girls of varying ages and ethnicities, were selected for their "boy/girl-next-door" appeal, and to reflect the diversity of the intended audience,[6] rather than for extraordinary athletic prowess or singing abilities (contrary to popular belief, the eight children who made up "The Bunch" did not sing the show's theme song).[1] In his interview with JustMyShow.com, Giannoulas added, "I think they kinda were looking for kids that didn't have that polished 'Hollywood' look to them, that seemed more real and (would) come across as free and easier that way."[1]

Filming each entire season within a three-week period during the month of February would become the standard production practice throughout the five season run of the series.[5][7] Erik Lee ("Rick", seasons 1–4) recalled, "Each 30-minute episode took basically a day, so we would start early in the morning and just go all day. [...] We would film for a couple weeks at a time and (while filming) we would get out of school for a couple weeks at a time. It was glorious."[1] While the Tucson location was selected specifically to accommodate the Major League players just prior to spring training, segments featuring Lasorda ("The Dugout Wizard") were filmed without him. Linda Coslett ("Kate", season 1) recalled, "We would pretend. We would look at this chalk-board that was blank, and then they would go back to Los Angeles and film it separately with Tommy and then plug him into the show. So Tommy Lasorda was never on the set.", with Erik Lee adding, "We never met (Lasorda), unfortunately."[1] Departing from the traditional fall-through-spring television season, the first official season of The Baseball Bunch debuted in broadcast syndication on Saturday May 2, 1981,[8] with new episodes airing throughout the summer months on Saturday mornings and/or early afternoons, usually either right before or right after the networks' line-ups of Saturday morning cartoons.[8] Although airing in reruns year-round, the format of debuting each new season in the spring (April or May) and airing new episodes throughout the "summer vacation" season was used for all five seasons of the show's original run.[6][9][10]

Premise

Season 3 cast of The Baseball Bunch

The series starred Johnny Bench as the coach to a fictional baseball team of eight little league aged children known as "The Baseball Bunch". The ninth team-member was "The San Diego Chicken" (played by Ted Giannoulas) who served as a comic foil to Bench as he would attempt to mentor the children. Each episode was divided into two segments. The first segment featured a current or former Major League player demonstrating a baseball fundamental to the children (e.g., learning to pitch within a hitters' strike zone) as well as the children's sometimes humorous attempts to imitate the star. The Major League guest-stars would also serve to steer the children clear of what not to do (e.g., explaining why a growing child should not attempt to throw a curve ball). The second segment featured a skit with "The Dugout Wizard" (played by Tommy Lasorda), a mystical turban wearing "Swami" character who taught a second baseball fundamental (e.g., how to catch a fly ball). This second instructional segment was often accompanied by a music video (a genre then in its embryonic stage), composed of clips of Major League players either performing the act or failing at it. In addition to the technical fundamentals of the game, the series would also touch on some of the psychological challenges youngsters face, including addressing performance anxieties (an adolescent boy's fears of not being "good enough" before a big game) and sportsmanship (a "little league father" criticizing his son unmercifully from the sidelines gently being urged to relax and enjoy the game).[2][6][8][9][11][12][13]

The Bunch

Throughout the show's five-season run, the series featured a rotating cast of eight children who starred as "The Bunch", usually ranging in age from eight to fourteen.[1][6][14] As the youngsters entered adolescence and outgrew their roles, they would be replaced by younger children closer in age to the target audience. Linda Coslett ("Kate", season 1) said of her time on the series, "I was eleven (when the show started). I turned twelve actually during the month of February, during the filming, and I was on (the show) for one year. [...] As you know, women get mature during those years and (by the second season) I didn't look like a little girl anymore, so they wanted to go with somebody that was younger looking."[1] Erik Lee ("Rick", seasons 1–4) said of his run on the series, "I was all of twelve years old when I started with The Baseball Bunch. I stayed with The Bunch for four incredible years, until my voice changed and I was taller than Johnny Bench."[1] With a rotating cast that included new children every season, only three youngsters appeared as "Bunch" team-members for all five seasons; Stacy Blythe ("Michelle"), Jared Holland ("Sam") and Danny Santa Cruz ("Louie", sometimes credited as "Luis"). The children who appeared as "The Bunch" team-members at one time or another during the show's five-season run are, in alphabetical order:[1][14][15][16][17]

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  • Stacy Blythe as Michelle
  • Linda Coslett as Kate
  • Lance Crawford as Ossie
  • Rolon Culver as Zack
  • Hurst Dorman as Harold
  • John Fordney as Sherman
  • Priscilla Hassel as Debbie
  • Jared Holland as Sam
  • Erik Lee as Rick
  • Jackie Masei as Jessie
  • Tom McCabe as Andy
  • John Podesta as Billy
  • Danny Santa Cruz as Louie
  • Eddy Tonai as Freddie

Guest stars

With the rare exception of the occasional "Best Of" episode (which were composed of clips of previous episodes), most every episode featured a well-known guest-star from the Major Leagues brought in to mentor the children in their particular field of expertise. Some of the Major League guest-stars to appear on the series include, in alphabetical order:[1][8][14][15][16][17][18]

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Broadcasting

The Baseball Bunch aired in broadcast syndication, with local stations carrying the original run of the series from the spring of 1981 through the fall of 1985.[14] During this time, the series also aired nationally on the basic cable network WTBS[19] and later, in reruns on ESPN.[20]

Reception

During its run, The Baseball Bunch was well received by both children and adults alike.[6][13][14][21] Throughout its five years on the air, the series was nominated for, and won, multiple Emmy Awards for outstanding achievement in special programming, a gold medal from the International Film and Tape Festival in New York, and an award from Action for Children's Television, as well as receiving an endorsement from the National Education Association.[6][8][22][23] In its time, the series also spawned a fan club, (known as The Baseball Bunch "Fun Club"), which young fans of the show could join for a nominal fee of $4.99. As members, children received a "membership certificate", a Baseball Bunch t-shirt and writst-bands, a full-size color poster of "The Bunch", and The Baseball Bunch "Fun Book", which included color photos and biographies of Bench, Lasorda and the kids, puzzles, sheet music and lyrics for the show's theme song, and a comic strip known as "The Baseball Bunchies".[14]

In his March 1984 review of the series, The Miami Herald Head Sports Writer, Bob Rubin praised the show, writing "'The Baseball Bunch' is a humorous, marvelously creative blend of entertainment and instruction. With the glut of dreck that passes for children's programming on the weekends, it's a breath of fresh air. And you don't have to be a kid or a baseball fan to enjoy it, either. [...] Serving as both participants and pupils is an eight-kid rainbow coalition that represents a typical neighborhood group. There are six boys and two girls, ranging in age from 9 to 14." Rubin would also go on to praise Giannoulas' contribution to the series, writing "The Chicken may be the most gifted physical comic since Curly, Larry and Moe. [...] It's a laugh and a lesson, which is SOP (standard operating procedure) on 'The Baseball Bunch'".[6]

In a March 2001 Sports Illustrated article reminiscing about his younger days, writer, Mark Bechtel looked back fondly on his childhood memories of the series writing, "The first three letters of the word notwithstanding, there's very little fun in fundamentals. Still, the creators of Baseball Bunch, a half-hour TV program that aired in the early 1980s, made learning the game's intricacies a joy. Each week, host Johnny Bench was joined on a sandlot in Anywhere, U.S.A., by one of his big league buddies and a group of preteens. Tommy Lasorda, in his Dugout Wizard get-up complete with absurd turban, competed for laughs with the San Diego Chicken. The result was sublime Saturday-morning fare, equal parts Tom Emanski and Barney. [...] The Bunch didn't make me a major leaguer, but it did make a lasting impression — and I can proudly say that in my days as a Little League catcher, no runner ever absconded with second."[12]

In his 2007 interview with JustMyShow.com, Ted Giannoulas recalled Major League players also secretly enjoying the show, saying "That was a real highlight being on that program [...] During the show's existence, I had professional baseball players tell me that they would sneak a peek at the show and pick up tips because the information that Johnny and our guests would put on the show was very very good inside baseball information. [...] So I took that as a real compliment because it signified how credible and good the advice that Johnny and the players were giving, and that not only were kids picking up good advice, but I can attest that professional ball-players were also tuned in as well."[1]

Home video

After the series' original run ended in the Fall of 1985, Scholastic-Lorimar, along with the show's long-time sponsor Kool-Aid, released three one-hour "Best Of" VHS tapes in April 1986.[24][25] Each tape was dedicated to a particular aspect of the game; "Pitching", "Hitting" and "Fielding", and compiled segments of various episodes from all five seasons. Hosted by Johnny Bench and the only three children to appear on all five seasons of the series; Stacy Blythe as "Michelle", Jared Holland as "Sam" and Danny Santa Cruz as "Louie", the three tapes also included new "Drill" segments, in which Bench would recommend basic drills young viewer's could use to improve their game, while the three children (by that time, teens) demonstrated each exercise. As compilations of previous episodes, no segments of Lasorda as "The Dugout Wizard" were included on the videos, instead, the tapes focused exclusively on segments which had featured The Bunch with Major League guest-stars. The tapes also did not include the show's well-known "The Baseball Bunch" theme song, replacing the opening and closing theme with an alternate instrumental version of the music.[15][16][17]

Revival series

In 2001, 20 years after the original series premiered, Television producer and president of Vine Entertainment, Steve Church had the idea to produce a revival of The Baseball Bunch. A fan of the original show as a child, Church felt a modern-day version of the series could work and, after several years of pitching the idea, produced an 8-minute pilot for a new version of the series for ESPN. The unaired pilot was filmed in Williamsport, Pennsylvania and starred Harold Reynolds as the mentor and Philadelphia Phillies mascot The Phillie Phanatic (selected when the decision was made to use a mascot affiliated with Major League Baseball), as well as cameo appearances by Jimmy Kimmel, J. K. Simmons, Roy Firestone, Scott Rolen, José Lima, Fernando Valenzuela and Bobcat Goldthwait. However, ESPN eventually decided they weren't interested in the show and subsequently "shelved" the project in 2006.[1]

After ESPN passed, Church began production on another Baseball Bunch pilot, this time for Fox Sports Network. In May 2007, Church stated that he was working on a one-hour "special" that would star Roger Clemens as host and John Goodman as the comic relief in a series of family friendly Saturday Night Live type skits, alongside a new cast of kids, which he was hoping would lead to a series run on Fox Sports Network in 2008. In describing his vision for the premise of the show, Church stated "It's a little bit more scripted (oriented) and less educational, (although) we're still going to have that Big League tip in there. We're still going to have the host's friends come on the show and teach the kids how to play the game. Those elements are going to still be there."[1] However, as of 2012, no record has been found of a new Baseball Bunch having aired."

References

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External links

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