Canadian comedy duo portrayed by Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas
Fictional character
Bob and Doug McKenzie
|
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Promotional still from
Strange Brew
with Bob (left) and Doug McKenzie (right)
|
First appearance
| SCTV
(September 19, 1980)
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Created by
| Rick Moranis
and
Dave Thomas
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Portrayed by
| Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas
|
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|
Nickname
| "Hoser", "Hosehead", "Knob"
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Occupation
| Television hosts, bottling line inspectors, garbage men
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Nationality
| Canadian
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Bob and Doug McKenzie
are a pair of fictional Canadian brothers who hosted "Great White North", a
sketch
which was introduced on
SCTV
for the show's third season when it moved to
CBC Television
in
1980
. Bob is played by
Rick Moranis
and Doug is played by
Dave Thomas
. Although created originally as
filler
to both satisfy and mock network
Canadian content
demands, the duo became a
pop culture
phenomenon in both Canada and the
United States
. The characters became the focus of a bestselling comedy album,
The Great White North
, in 1981 and starred in a feature film,
Strange Brew
, in 1983. They were later revived for an animated series,
Bob & Doug
, which premiered on
Global
in 2009.
[1]
History
[
edit
]
"Great White North"
(originally known as "Kanadian Korner") is a panel show that played upon
Canadian stereotypes
. Bob and Doug, two dim-witted
beer
-swilling brothers wearing heavy winter clothing and
tuques
, would comment on various elements of
Canadian life and culture
, frequently employing the
interjection
"
Eh
?" and derisively calling each other "
hoser
." Among the topics discussed were snow routes, the
Canadian-built robot arm
on the
Space Shuttle
, the inappropriateness of bedtime stories about dog fights, flat tires, and "why there aren't enough parking spaces at
take-out donut shops
."
[2]
The sketch was conceived when
SCTV
moved to the CBC television network. Due to the difference in the amount of time allocated for commercials, each episode to be broadcast on that network was two minutes longer than those
syndicated
to the United States. The CBC network heads asked the show's producers to add specifically identifiably
Canadian content
for those two minutes, in line with government broadcast regulations.
Rick Moranis
and
Dave Thomas
thought that this was a ridiculous request, given that the show had been taped in Canada, with a mostly Canadian cast and crew, for two years.
[2]
The request inspired them to create a
parody
that would incorporate every aspect of the humorous stereotype of Canadians.
[3]
[4]
The segments were videotaped at the end of a day's shooting, with just Thomas and Moranis and a single camera operator. The sketches were for the most part improvised on the set, after which they would select the best ones for use on the program.
[5]
Moranis recalled, "We went on the stage with no preparation, and did 15 [sketches]. Two of them were lousy, in three we cracked up and fell apart... maybe six were keepers."
[3]
Added Dave Thomas in a 2000 interview, "Rick and I used to sit in the studio, by ourselves ? almost like happy hour ? drink real beers, cook
back bacon
, literally make hot snack food for ourselves while we improvised and just talked. It was all very low key and stupid, and we thought, 'Well, they get what they deserve. This is their Canadian content. I hope they like it.
'
"
[6]
To their shock, the comedians found that this filler material had become the most popular part of the show. Though initially intended for Canadian TV only, some of the two-minute "Great White North" segments would find their way into U.S. versions of the 30-minute shows due to a shortage of content that week. When NBC ordered the 90-minute shows for the 1981 season, they specifically cited good affiliate feedback on the "two dumb Canadian characters" and requested that the characters be included in every program.
[6]
They rode the crest of a fad, peaking in 1982?83, that produced one comedy album,
The Great White North
, and a movie,
Strange Brew
. The album released by
Anthem Records
in Canada and
Mercury Records
in the US, went platinum in sales, won a
Grammy
nomination and broke the Top 10 on
Billboard's
Top LPs and Tapes list in March, 1982. It is noted for the song "Take Off" which featured fellow Canadian
Geddy Lee
of the rock group
Rush
chorusing between the McKenzies' banter. On this album, they also sing their own improvised version of "
The Twelve Days of Christmas
", which is frequently played on the radio around the holidays in both Canada and the United States. While hugely popular in the U.S., the album was also #1 in Canada for six weeks, suggesting that Canadians appreciated the duo as an affectionate self-parody.
The complete story of how Anthem's Perry Goldberg fought to get the "Great White North" album made, can be read at Billboard Canada.
https://ca.billboard.com/fyi/how-gut-feeling-made-million-bob-doug-mckenzie
The
Strange Brew
movie was released by
MGM
in 1983. While receiving only minimal praise from critics, it performed fairly well at the box office ? earning $8.5 million in the U.S. alone to cover its $4 million budget. After its theatrical release,
Strange Brew
remained a popular home-video title with a strong college cult following.
A
second album
, a "soundtrack" to their movie
Strange Brew
, was released in 1983. The album featured dialogue and music from the film, as well as new skits made specifically for the album that centered around the movie. The lead off track was appropriately entitled "This Isn't Our Second Album". The album sold poorly and was out-of-print soon after.
[2]
[7]
[8]
The sketch's signature "Coo loo coo coo, coo coo coo coo" theme, according to Dave Thomas in an interview on
CBC News: The Hour
, is an exaggeration of the
flute
music used in 60-second Canadian television nature vignettes, such as
Hinterland Who's Who
.
[9]
In 2023, Thomas and Moranis revived the characters for a
Beer Canada
commercial advocating for a freeze on new federal taxes on beer.
[10]
Appearances on
SCTV
[
edit
]
The duo had a total of 41 original segments on SCTV. Presumably filmed several at a time, most "Great White North" segments featured one two-minute sketch per SCTV episode. 25 segments were aired in the third season (1980?81).
Most of Season 4, Cycle 1 (1981) was made up of "Great White North" repeat segments. The only new appearances were in episodes 4/1-2 and 4/1-9, the final episode of the cycle. The final episode included a wraparound storyline which heavily featured the characters.
Growing in popularity, the characters returned for nine new segments in the second cycle of season 4. Cycle 2 (1981?82) featured a new "Great White North" segment in each episode.
Season 4, Cycle 3 (1982) was the last season to feature the characters. The first episode's plot revolves around the growing popularity of Bob and Doug, and they are given their own variety show on
SCTV
, which turns into a catastrophe. The characters returned in the next episode for a new segment in their traditional studio set, but it had been cut to one minute (the episode's storyline owing the reduced air time to their disastrous variety show). The two are then featured in three more new segments, each back to two minutes long, before Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas left
SCTV
to film
Strange Brew
.
Legacy
[
edit
]
The duo revived the act in two award-winning
television commercials
for
Pizza Hut
in 1984 and 1986 and a two-year campaign for the
Molson
Brewing Company in 1999 and 2000 consisting of more than a dozen television and radio commercials which aired nationally in the U.S.
[11]
McFarlane Toys
produced
Bob and Doug McKenzie action figures
in September 2000.
[12]
In 2003, the fastest computer in Canada, which is used by the Department of
Astronomy
and
Astrophysics
at the
University of Toronto
, was named after Bob and Doug. The $900,000 computer is being used to simulate supermassive black holes and collisions of galaxies. The machine, nicknamed McKenzie, has 268 gigabytes of memory and 40 terabytes of disk space, and consists of two master nodes (Bob and Doug), 256 compute nodes, and eight development nodes.
[13]
They played a variant of the act for the
Walt Disney Pictures
animated
feature film
Brother Bear
and its
sequel
, with their characters being the voices of a pair of goofy bull
moose
named Rutt and Tuke. They also recorded a commentary for the movie that is seen on the
DVD
.
[14]
A new special,
Bob & Doug McKenzie's Two-Four Anniversary
, aired on May 20, 2007, on
CBC Television
. It is a retrospective on the history of the characters and their popularity, featuring interviews with various celebrities, classic clips, and new material featuring the pair. It includes an introduction by former Canadian
Prime Minister
Paul Martin
and a cameo appearance by
Rush
lead singer
Geddy Lee
. On November 20, 2007, the special was released on DVD. The DVD, re-edited by Thomas himself, was twice as long as the broadcast and featured several classic McKenzie sketches from SCTV in their entirety, new footage filmed on the Great White North set and an hour's worth of bonus features. A Bob and Doug McKenzie bottle opener was included with every DVD.
[15]
In 2007, on
Rush
's
Snakes & Arrows Tour
, a short film of Bob and Doug McKenzie was shown as an intro to the song "
The Larger Bowl
".
[16]
Animax Entertainment
, whose interactive division is currently headed by Dave Thomas, began producing a new animated series for the
Global Television Network
based on the characters debuting on April 19, 2009, simply entitled
Bob & Doug
. Thomas reprised the character of Doug in the new series. Moranis chose not to voice the character of Bob. The part was instead voiced by
Dave Coulier
. Moranis was, however, involved in the series as an executive producer.
[17]
The show aired 15 episodes.
They returned to the Great White North at a charity event held in Toronto in 2017 to help raise money for patients with spinal cord injuries. Jake Thomas, son of musician
Ian Thomas
and Dave's nephew had been in a snowmobile accident that paralyzed him from the waist down. Raising money for the family was reason enough to convince Moranis, known for keeping a low profile, to reprise his role as Bob for the first time in 10 years. With celebrity friends such as Dan Aykroyd, Martin Short, Eugene Levy and Catherine O'Hara performing skits, the gig was sold out.
[18]
Over $325,000 was raised and will go towards the Jake Thomas's Road to Recovery GoFundMe campaign and the Spinal Cord Injury Ontario, in order to help others who have sustained spinal cord injuries.
[18]
The
SYFY
network show
"Z-Nation" Season 4, Episode 8
- 'Crisis of Faith', featured the main characters entering Canada, and running into RCMP officers, a Hockey team bearing the Canada logo and of course, zombies very reminiscent of Bob & Doug McKenzie. The cast members who confront the look-alikes used the GWN catch phrases "eh", and "hoser" among others.
[19]
On March 24, 2020, a statue of Bob and Doug McKenzie was erected in
Edmonton, Alberta
, where the SCTV series was taped during most of the early 1980s. It depicts Bob and Doug enjoying a beer on a bench, and is located near the
Rogers Place arena
. The statue was the result of a collaboration between local sculptor Ritchie Velthuis, the non-profit SCTV Monument Committee, and Calgary's Bronzart Casting. Actors Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas provided input throughout the process.
[20]
Astronauts
Robert L. Behnken
and
Douglas Hurley
are likened to the McKenzies because of their friendship when they participated in the first commercial astronaut launch on 30 May 2020, SpaceX
Crew Dragon Demo-2
.
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
Opinions of the creators
[
edit
]
In Dave Thomas's behind-the-scenes book on
SCTV
, he reports that he and Moranis disliked the characters because they felt the network forced the characters on them and that they, as actors, were overly identified with the dimwitted, beer-drinking duo. However, in an interview accompanying the
Two-Four Anniversary
premiere, Thomas credited the McKenzie Brothers as a successful comedic creation of which he was quite proud.
[15]
Discography
[
edit
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Von Riedemann, Dominic. "Global Television Show Reunites SCTV's Dave Thomas, Rick Moranis." Article at Suite101.com on July 17, 2008.
- ^
a
b
c
"With Beer, Back Bacon and Banter, 'SCTV's Bob & Doug Mine Comedy Gold in the 'Great White North'." Article in
People
magazine, February 1, 1982.
[1]
- ^
a
b
Murphy, Ryan.
"SCTV Skits"
.
AskMen
.
- ^
"Interview with Dave Thomas (Part 1 of 5)"
. 10 February 2000.
- ^
Second City Television (SCTV) at The Museum of Broadcast Communications website
[2]
Archived
2009-10-10 at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
a
b
Plume, Kenneth. "Interview with
Dave Thomas
(Part 1 of 5)" at movies.img.com, February 10, 2000.
- ^
"RPM 50 Albums"
.
RPM
. 19 December 1981. Archived from
the original
on 3 May 2009
. Retrieved
2008-10-27
.
- ^
"RPM 50 Albums"
.
RPM
. 30 January 1982. Archived from
the original
on 3 May 2009
. Retrieved
2008-10-27
.
- ^
Hinterland Who's Who website
Archived
May 4, 2010, at the
Wayback Machine
.
- ^
"Radio & Podcast News ? CRTC finds Yellowknife can’t support additional station"
.
Broadcast Dialogue
, February 16, 2023.
- ^
"YouTube - Molson Ice commercial with Bob and Doug McKenzie and Guy Lafleur"
.
YouTube
. 24 February 2011. Archived from
the original
on 24 February 2011.
- ^
">> Toys >> Movies >> The Mckenzie Brothers"
. Spawn.Com. Archived from
the original
on 2010-06-23
. Retrieved
2010-06-04
.
- ^
"BobNET - Bob and Doug McKenzie News"
.
www.execulink.com
.
- ^
Genzlinger, Neil (July 6, 2004).
"These Two Talking Moose Let Their Antlers Down (Published 2004)"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
December 13,
2020
.
- ^
a
b
"Take off, eh?" Review of
Two-Four Anniversary
special at www.macleans.ca
"Take off, eh! Eh? | Macleans.ca - Culture - Entertainment"
. Archived from
the original
on 2009-02-14
. Retrieved
2008-11-01
.
- ^
"Rush out for latest Rush Concert DVD Snakes & Arrows." Review at www.epinions.com on December 5, 2008.
- ^
Rob Salem,
"Bob & Doug taking off again"
.
Toronto Star
, April 19, 2009.
- ^
a
b
Shivji, Salimah (July 19, 2017).
"
'How's it going, eh?' Bob and Doug McKenzie help raise $325K in special show"
.
CBC
. Retrieved
2019-03-26
.
- ^
McLevy, Alex (November 17, 2017).
"Z Nation proves that Canadian zombies can be much more polite"
.
The A.V. Club
.
- ^
Griwkowsky, Fish (March 25, 2020).
"Bob and Doug McKenzie return to Edmonton as statues during COVID-19"
.
Edmonton Journal
. Retrieved
May 13,
2020
.
- ^
Chang, Kenneth (27 May 2020).
"Meet Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, SpaceX's First NASA Astronauts"
.
The New York Times
.
- ^
Ivan Couronne (30 May 2020).
"Bob and Doug: best friends on historic SpaceX-NASA mission"
. CTV News. AFP.
- ^
Yeung, Lisa (30 May 2020).
"Bob And Doug, SpaceX Astronauts, Remind Canadians Of Iconic SCTV Duo"
.
Huffington Post
. Canada.
- ^
Chad Pawson (30 May 2020).
"Canada's Bob and Doug take off ? eh! ? on social media with SpaceX rocket launch"
.
CBC News
. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
External links
[
edit
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Television
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Films
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Albums
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Related articles
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