Really Big Shrimp: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Film |
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{{Infobox television episode |
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| starring = [[Drake Bell]]<br />[[Josh Peck]]<br />[[Miranda Cosgrove]]<br />[[Nancy Sullivan]]<br />[[Jonathan Goldstein (actor)|Jonathan Goldstein]] |
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| series = [[Drake & Josh]] |
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| director = [[Drake Bell]] (Pt. 1) |
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| season = 4 |
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[[Steve Hoefer]] (Pt. 2) |
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| episode = 17 |
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| country = [[United States]] |
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| director = [[Drake Bell]] <small>(Part 1)</small><br />[[Steve Hoefer]] <small>(Part 2)</small> |
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| language = [[English language|English]] |
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| writer = Dan Schneider<br />George Doty IV |
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| preceded_by = ''[[Drake & Josh Go Hollywood]]'' |
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| story = |
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| folowed_by = ''[[Drake & Josh In New York!]]'' |
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| airdate = {{Start date|2007|08|03}} |
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}} |
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'''''Drake & Josh: Really Big Shrimp''''' is an hour long episode of the [[Nickelodeon (TV channel)|Nickelodeon]] [[sitcom]] [[Drake & Josh]] and the sequel to [[Drake & Josh Go Hollywood]]. It premiered on [[August 3]], [[2007]], during the ''Drake vs. Josh Weekend'' [[Drake Bell]] performed [[Makes Me Happy]] from his CD [[It's Only Time]]. |
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"'''Really Big Shrimp'''" is a television special for the [[Nickelodeon]] [[sitcom]] ''[[Drake & Josh]]''. The episode first aired on August 3, 2007, and was Nickelodeon's highest-rated television event at that time, with 5.8 million viewers.<ref name="ratings">{{Cite web|url=https://variety.com/2007/scene/markets-festivals/nick-catches-big-shrimp-1117969812/|title=Nick catches big 'Shrimp'|last=Schneider|first=Michael|date=2007-08-07|website=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|language=en|access-date=2016-03-11}}</ref> |
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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At a music showcase at the Premiere [[movie theater]], Drake ([[Drake Bell]]) performs his new song "[[Makes Me Happy]]" for a music deal from record producer Alan Krim (mentioned in the series' [[Drake & Josh Go Hollywood|first television film]]) and he succeeds. While at Spin City Records, they agree to put Drake's song in a commercial for the Daka Shoe Company's "Air Puffs" line that will air during the [[Super Bowl]]. Meanwhile, theater manager Helen Dubois ([[Yvette Nicole Brown]]) is getting married and, with many of her family members staying in her apartment, her grandmother Lula comes to stay at the Parker-Nichols house for a week, forcing Drake and Josh ([[Josh Peck]]) to share their room with their sister, Megan ([[Miranda Cosgrove]]), due to Lula staying in hers instead of the guest room (since Walter has a train set in the guest room as mentioned in the episode, "The Great Doheny"). In retaliation for this, Megan redecorates her brothers' room to her liking, confines them to a single mattress in a corner with only a lamp and a football accompanying it, threatens to accuse them of vandalizing their neighbors' [[gazebo]] if they complain about this to their parents and invites her friends to hang out with her in the room. To save money for her upcoming honeymoon, Helen makes a deal with Craig and Eric to videotape her wedding. |
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As the episode opens, Drake performs his new song, [[Makes Me Happy]] live at The Premiere in front of Alan Krimm from Spin City Records. The representative is amazed at Drake's song, and asks him to come to Spin City Records HQ tomorrow to sign a record deal. They go, and Drake is given a deal. The recording studio then says that Drake's song will be shown during a [[Super Bowl]] commercial, seen by 50,000,000 people around the world. While Drake is recording the song, Josh is told that he must sign a "standard" contract. Josh doesn't read the contract at all, mesmerized by massive shrimp. So Josh mindlessly signs the contract and ends up signing away all creative rights to Drake's song(s). The recording studio ends up completely ruining Drake's song, turning it into, as Drake puts it, "[[crap|horrible bubblegum pop garbag-y badness]]", and Drake fires Josh. |
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Helen then promotes the Premiere's latest employee and Josh's ex-girlfriend, Mindy Crenshaw ([[Allison Scagliotti]]), as its new assistant manager for fixing a corn dog rotisserie that Josh was unable to. Josh is distraught over not getting the position and accuses Mindy of constantly trying to do better than him, which she denies. Earlier, at the recording studio for Drake's song, Josh is given a contract from Krim to sign that he fails to read, as the company's served [[prawn]]s distract him, and he inadvertently signs the creative rights to Drake's song away. An auto-tuned remix of the song that Drake is not pleased with is soon developed. Learning about the contract and Josh's involvement in it, a furious Drake bitterly fires him as his manager for his blundering and attempts to retaliate against Krim as well as acting cold to Josh. While criticizing Josh for always playing by the rules, Drake tells him that, "when people play dirty, sometimes you have to play dirty back". |
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Attempting to rectify his mistake, Josh returns to Spin City Records. After being told Daka Shoes will use the song's remix over the original version, Josh take Drake's advice to heart and makes a last minute switch to the song as it is being picked up. The plan succeeds and the original plays on the commercial, much to the delight of Drake, who finally forgives his brother, but it comes with a price. Right after the commercial airs, Josh receives a call from Krim, who informs him that his switching of the songs has violated the contract and Spin City plans to sue the duo for five million dollars with the possibility of a prison sentence. |
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While at work as Drake gets a call, Mindy panics as Crazy Steve has gone insane, having been mistakenly scheduled on a Monday, which, according to Helen, is "his bad day". Josh manages to calm him down by singing "[[She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain]]" and telling him to have some milk, for which a hesitant Helen finally appreciates his good work. In spite of how Josh managed to handle this situation better than her, Mindy then confesses to Josh that she did not take the assistant manager job because she needed extra money or to do better than him at all; she did it because she wanted to spend more time with him, having always regretted breaking up with him. Drake and Josh then go to Spin City Records for a stern talking-to with Krim about the contract's violation, but as they are prepared to face the consequences, company president Nick Mateo says that Drake's song has become a number one hit and extremely popular with thirty-thousand emails and phone calls from fans wishing to buy it and dozens of downloads of it crashing their website's server. The duo are then freed of the charges and an outraged Krim is fired by Mateo for his actions. |
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During Helen's wedding at the Premiere, Craig mistakenly plugs his equipment into a faulty plug after Eric tells him to, causing it to spark a building-wide inferno. As Helen expresses disappointment at her wedding being ruined, Josh convinces her that weddings are about a pair of people who love each other getting together surrounded by the people who love them. The wedding soon resumes in the parking lot, where Josh and Mindy get back together. Mindy has quit her job and Helen finally gives Josh the assistant manager position as his reward for his years of hard work. Drake then performs his song to the crowd, dedicating it to the newlyweds as well as Josh, rehiring him as his manager in the process. |
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Drake and Josh later return home to find their room restored to its former state as Lula finally moved as well as prawns sent over from Mateo. Megan and her friends have eaten all but one, which causes the duo to fight over it, mirroring a popular scene from ''[[The Amanda Show]]'', featuring their portrayers fighting over a piece of shrimp, thus ending the series with the same way that Bell and Peck had their first great success together. |
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==Cast== |
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* [[Drake Bell]] as Drake Parker: the stepbrother of Josh and brother of Megan. He is working on his debut album in this episode. |
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* [[Josh Peck]] as Josh Nichols: the stepbrother of Drake and Megan and also Drake's manager. |
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* [[Miranda Cosgrove]] as Megan Parker: the sister of Drake and the stepsister of Josh. She moves into Drake and Josh's room while Helen's grandmother, Lula, is staying in hers. She takes up most of the room by redecorating it to her liking. |
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* [[Nancy Sullivan (American actress)|Nancy Sullivan]] as Audrey Parker-Nichols: the mother of Drake and Megan, the stepmother of Josh and the wife of Walter. |
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* [[Jonathan Goldstein (actor)|Jonathan Goldstein]] as Walter Nichols: the stepfather of Drake and Megan, the father of Josh and the husband of Audrey. |
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* [[Allison Scagliotti]] as Mindy Crenshaw: Josh's ex-girlfriend and the assistant manager at the premiere. She takes the job because she wanted to spend more time with Josh, having always regretted breaking up with him. She later quits and the assistant manager position is given to Josh. |
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* [[Jerry Trainor]] as Crazy Steve: A crazy employee at the Premiere known for shouting. He is taking anger management in this episode. |
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* [[Yvette Nicole Brown]] as Helen Dubois: A bride-to-be and the manager of the Premiere. She gets married later in the episode and gives Josh the assistant manager position. |
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* Anthony Holiday as Buzz Baxter: Helen's fiancé. |
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* [[Scott Halberstadt]] as Eric Blonnowitz: Craig's best friend who is frequently mistaken for the former by Drake. He and Craig videotape Helen's wedding. |
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* Alec Medlock as Craig Ramirez: Eric's best friend. He and Eric videotape Helen's wedding. |
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* Cathy Shim as Leah: an employee at the Premiere. She is frequently scared of Crazy Steve due to his outbursts. |
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* Alysse Cepeda as Molly: a friend of Megan and Janie who hits on Josh, much to her other friends' disgust. |
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* Brenda Vivian as Collete: an employee at Spin City Records. |
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* [[Joseph Will]] as Alan Krim: The [[vice president]] of Spin City Records who plans to profit off of Drake's song via a remix of it that Drake is not pleased with. When Josh switches the remix with the original version, Krim threatens to have him and Drake incarcerated for this, but the song becomes a number one hit and he is fired for his actions by the company's CEO, Nick Matteo, much to his chagrin. |
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* [[Jay Bontatibus]] as Nick Mateo: the CEO of Spin City Records. He wants to make Drake's song a hit and later fires Krim for his attempts at profiting off it. |
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==Production== |
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Meanwhile, Mindy has become the new assistant manager at The Premiere because Helen is getting married in a few days, with Craig and Eric as her cameramen. Josh is outraged that Mindy got the job, but as time goes on, Mindy tells Josh that she only took the job so she could spend more time with him. Josh is flattered, and Mindy and Josh are on the verge of getting back together again. Helen needs a place for her grandmother Lula to stay, so Walter offers their house. Lula comes, and turns out to be a crazy old lady. Megan must now live in Drake and Josh's room for a week. Horrified, [[Greedy|she takes over her brothers' room for herself, redecorating it to be more "girly" and forcing Drake and Josh to share an old air mattress in a corner of the room]]. |
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The episode aired on August 3, 2007 during ''Drake vs. Josh'' weekend and was intended to be the series finale. However, Nickelodeon did not air the final episodes chronologically and aired the episodes ''Helicopter'' and ''Dance Contest'' after the airing of the finale. They were aired in the wrong order with no stated reason. Promotion for Really Big Shrimp included a live competition between Drake Bell and Josh Peck in 5 shrimp-based challenges; Drake won with 3 out of 5 challenges. |
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==Music== |
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Drake attempts to plant a tank of [[fruit flies]] in the trunk of Alan's car, saying, "[[revenge|When people play dirty, sometimes you just gotta to play dirty back]]". Josh, unfortunately, takes this to heart and switches the awful song with the original recording and gives the original to the Super Bowl commercial deliverer. So the original song is heard on [[FCC|National TV]] and the recording studio calls to tell the boys that giving the original song to the company was illegal, a violation of their contract, that they could sue them for $5,000,000 and that they could end up in prison for two years. |
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[[Drake Bell]] made a music video to "[[Makes Me Happy]]", and it became the single for the episode. |
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==Reception== |
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They go the next day, and end up finding out that the song was a huge hit, and that they've gotten thousands of e-mails and phone calls since the commercial debut. They put the song up for sale on the Spin City Records website, and they had so many downloaded purchases that it crashed the server. So, Nick Matteo (the president of Spin City Records) gives him a multi-record contract. Alan objects to this, but is fired by Nick. |
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Laura Fries of ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' was mostly positive on ''Really Big Shrimp'', stating that "...Drake and Josh perfectly embody the goofy, unabashed fun that too few remember..." and complimented the two leads on their appeal, but complained that "...[Miranda] Cosgrove's sister Megan is an immensely irritating character."<ref name="Fries">{{Cite web|last=Fries|first=Laura|date=2007-08-02|title=Drake & Josh: Really Big Shrimp|url=https://variety.com/2007/tv/reviews/drake-josh-really-big-shrimp-1200557450/|access-date=2016-03-11|website=Variety|language=en|quote=Framed like a supersized episode, the show’s second primetime pic...}}</ref> |
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It was the most watched television event on Nickelodeon up to that time, with 5.8 million viewers.<ref name="ratings" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.tvguide.com/news/drake-joshs-big-12411/|title=Drake & Josh's Big Shrimp Nets Really Big Audience|last=Mitovich|first=Matt|date=2007-08-07|website=[[TV Guide]]|language=en|access-date=2016-03-11}}</ref> It was the most watched Nickelodeon program until the ''[[iCarly]]'' film, ''[[iGo to Japan]]'', broke the record.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} The record was later broken again by ''[[Merry Christmas, Drake & Josh]]''.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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At Helen's wedding, Craig plugs in some extra lights for the wedding filming, and he ends up lighting The Premeire, where Helen gets married, on fire. So, Josh delivers a heartfelt speech to Helen, and so she gets married in her soon-to-be-husband Buzz's truck bed. [There is a possibility that the Premiere was rebuilt, as being seen in "Helicopter"]. Josh and Mindy get back together, Drake has become a huge recording artist, Helen is married, Lula moved out, Josh is now the assistant manager for the Premiere, Megan gets her room back, and everyone is happy. |
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==References== |
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Back at home, Megan and her friends are moving out of Drake and Josh's room, saying that a Nick Matteo dropped off around 3 dozen shrimp for them. Unfortunately for Drake and Josh, Megan and her friends have eaten all of the shrimp except one. The episode ends with Drake and Josh fighting over the shrimp as they flashback to the 1st appearance of Drake and Josh in The Amanda Show. |
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{{wikiquote|Really Big Shrimp}} |
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{{Reflist}} |
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==External links== |
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* {{IMDb title|0836100}} |
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* At the Premiere, Helen becomes impressed with Mindy after she fixes a [[Corn dog]] [[rotisserie]] that Josh couldn't fix, and gives Mindy the job as assistant manager. This infuriates Josh because he has been working to acquire that position for three years. When Crazy Steve goes berserk due to the fact that Mindy assigned him to work on Monday (which is Crazy Steve's "Bad Day") Josh calms him down with a song after Mindy fails to calm him down. After that, Mindy confronts Josh and reveals that she only took the assistant manager job because she wanted to spend more time with Josh. During the wedding they kiss and decide to get back together. |
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* Helen is marrying Buzz Baxter, and her whole family is staying at her home, and she simply doesn't have enough space, so Helen's grandmother, Lula, stays at the Parker-Nichols home for a week. Lula stays in Megan's room, while Megan shares Drake and Josh's room. She completely feminizes it, only leaving Drake and Josh with an air mattress for two, a lamp, and a football. Megan's friends come over and the boys are furious. One of Megan's friends, Molly, likes Josh, which all the other girls think is disgusting. Despite the family having a guest room, Megan moves into the boys' bedroom. In a previous episode it was explained that Walter keeps a train set in the guest room. |
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* Josh accidentaly eats Crazy Steve's enchilada. Afterwards, Crazy Steve surprisingly stays relatively calm. When Josh asks him why, it is revealed that Crazy Steve is only allowed to get angry at four different times of the day. Soon, Crazy Steve pulls an old man's cane from under him, stating it's time, screaming "'''YOU ATE MY ENCHILADA!'''" It happens again soon after. |
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{{Drake & Josh}} |
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==Trivia== |
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{{Trivia|date=August 2007}} |
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* When Josh and Mindy agree to get back together, Mindy says, "I get to be the girlfriend." This is a reference to the Season 3 episode, "Mindy's Back", when they first started dating and Josh said, "I get to be the boyfriend!" |
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* The bathroom that Lula enters at the beginning of the movie is the bathroom on the bottom floor, but in the episode [[Steered Straight]], that room is a closet. |
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* Unlike the previous movie, [[Drake & Josh Go Hollywood]], this movie is treated more like a regular episode of the show; it is not in widescreen, has the usual camera angles, has a laugh track, begins like all other episodes, and features the theme song. |
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* The reason why Lula didn't sleep in the guest room is because in the episode The Great Dohini Josh's dad had a train set. |
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* The beginning of this episode is almost exactly like the beginning of [[Pilot (Drake & Josh)|the first episode of the series]]. |
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* Drake Bell not only co-starred in this movie but also directed the first half of the episode, making his directoral debut. |
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* In the song Drake plays [[Makes Me Happy]] the lyrics are almost completely different as they are on his album [[It's Only Time]], due to licensing reasons. |
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* Alan Krimm is mentioned in [[Drake & Josh Go Hollywood]]. |
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* "Crazy" Steve has a criminal record. In the episode, [[The Storm]], this was implied when "Crazy" Steve slashed the tires off everyone's cars when he wasn't invited to Helen's niece's Bat Mitzvah. |
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* In [[The Storm]] Helen mentioned her niece's Bat Mitzvah, showing that she's Jewish. This is also shown in this movie, as she is married by a rabbi. The wedding also ends with the traditional smashing of the glass. |
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* This episode serves as the series finale of Drake and Josh, but there were still two episodes aired after it: [[Helicopter]] and [[The Dance Contest]]. |
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* This episode depicts the fourth wedding to happen on the show, with the other three being Drake and Josh's parents, their Aunt Katherine in "[[The Wedding (Drake & Josh episode)|The Wedding]]" and Drake and Yooka's temporary marriage in "[[We're Married]]". |
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* At the end of the movie, Drake & Josh fight over the last shrimp. A [[flashback]] from a segment on [[The Amanda Show]] is shown where Drake and Josh fight over a shrimp on the ground. The segment was the first appearance of the two together on The Amanda Show (Drake had been on the show since the beginning, while Josh was a new addition at the time.) This was said to be the inspiration for the show, Drake & Josh. |
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* The original version of Drake & Josh's fight was a little longer, but due to time restraints it had to be cut shorter. In part that was cut, Drake says to Josh, "Back off Miss Nancy!". Josh then replies, "Why bring up the past?!". This is a reference to the episode "Pilot", in which Drake discovers that Josh is the school paper's advice giver, "Miss Nancy". This can be seen in behind-the-scenes footage from the movie. |
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* At the end, the Premiere burns down, but in [[List of Drake & Josh episodes|The Helicopter]] the Premiere is still standing. This is because this episode is chronologically after the episode "Helicopter". |
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* At the end of the movie, it shows Helen offering Josh the assistant manager job. At the beginning of the episode "Helicopter", Josh is wearing a red vest while working behind the counter, countering the previous note. This is also because this episode chronologically took place after "Helicopter". |
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* Accourding to Walter, he and Helen met five times, when in actuality, they only met three times ( Once in [[Blues Brothers]], once in [[The Great Doheny]], and once in [[The Storm]] ). |
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* Lula calls Drake and Josh "Drink and Juice" once in the movie. |
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* Right after the usual opening of Drake and Josh trading lines, the camera zooms in on the Premiere where Josh works. The third movie down on the right side has the title, "Now She's Carly," a reference to [[Miranda Cosgrove]] and her new show, iCarly. |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Really Big Shrimp}} |
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[[Category:2007 American television episodes]] |
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Latest revision as of 06:09, 4 January 2025
"Really Big Shrimp" | |
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Drake & Josh episode | |
Episode no. | Season 4 Episode 17 |
Directed by | Drake Bell (Part 1) Steve Hoefer (Part 2) |
Written by | Dan Schneider George Doty IV |
Original air date | August 3, 2007 |
"Really Big Shrimp" is a television special for the Nickelodeon sitcom Drake & Josh. The episode first aired on August 3, 2007, and was Nickelodeon's highest-rated television event at that time, with 5.8 million viewers.[1]
Plot
[edit]At a music showcase at the Premiere movie theater, Drake (Drake Bell) performs his new song "Makes Me Happy" for a music deal from record producer Alan Krim (mentioned in the series' first television film) and he succeeds. While at Spin City Records, they agree to put Drake's song in a commercial for the Daka Shoe Company's "Air Puffs" line that will air during the Super Bowl. Meanwhile, theater manager Helen Dubois (Yvette Nicole Brown) is getting married and, with many of her family members staying in her apartment, her grandmother Lula comes to stay at the Parker-Nichols house for a week, forcing Drake and Josh (Josh Peck) to share their room with their sister, Megan (Miranda Cosgrove), due to Lula staying in hers instead of the guest room (since Walter has a train set in the guest room as mentioned in the episode, "The Great Doheny"). In retaliation for this, Megan redecorates her brothers' room to her liking, confines them to a single mattress in a corner with only a lamp and a football accompanying it, threatens to accuse them of vandalizing their neighbors' gazebo if they complain about this to their parents and invites her friends to hang out with her in the room. To save money for her upcoming honeymoon, Helen makes a deal with Craig and Eric to videotape her wedding.
Helen then promotes the Premiere's latest employee and Josh's ex-girlfriend, Mindy Crenshaw (Allison Scagliotti), as its new assistant manager for fixing a corn dog rotisserie that Josh was unable to. Josh is distraught over not getting the position and accuses Mindy of constantly trying to do better than him, which she denies. Earlier, at the recording studio for Drake's song, Josh is given a contract from Krim to sign that he fails to read, as the company's served prawns distract him, and he inadvertently signs the creative rights to Drake's song away. An auto-tuned remix of the song that Drake is not pleased with is soon developed. Learning about the contract and Josh's involvement in it, a furious Drake bitterly fires him as his manager for his blundering and attempts to retaliate against Krim as well as acting cold to Josh. While criticizing Josh for always playing by the rules, Drake tells him that, "when people play dirty, sometimes you have to play dirty back".
Attempting to rectify his mistake, Josh returns to Spin City Records. After being told Daka Shoes will use the song's remix over the original version, Josh take Drake's advice to heart and makes a last minute switch to the song as it is being picked up. The plan succeeds and the original plays on the commercial, much to the delight of Drake, who finally forgives his brother, but it comes with a price. Right after the commercial airs, Josh receives a call from Krim, who informs him that his switching of the songs has violated the contract and Spin City plans to sue the duo for five million dollars with the possibility of a prison sentence.
While at work as Drake gets a call, Mindy panics as Crazy Steve has gone insane, having been mistakenly scheduled on a Monday, which, according to Helen, is "his bad day". Josh manages to calm him down by singing "She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain" and telling him to have some milk, for which a hesitant Helen finally appreciates his good work. In spite of how Josh managed to handle this situation better than her, Mindy then confesses to Josh that she did not take the assistant manager job because she needed extra money or to do better than him at all; she did it because she wanted to spend more time with him, having always regretted breaking up with him. Drake and Josh then go to Spin City Records for a stern talking-to with Krim about the contract's violation, but as they are prepared to face the consequences, company president Nick Mateo says that Drake's song has become a number one hit and extremely popular with thirty-thousand emails and phone calls from fans wishing to buy it and dozens of downloads of it crashing their website's server. The duo are then freed of the charges and an outraged Krim is fired by Mateo for his actions.
During Helen's wedding at the Premiere, Craig mistakenly plugs his equipment into a faulty plug after Eric tells him to, causing it to spark a building-wide inferno. As Helen expresses disappointment at her wedding being ruined, Josh convinces her that weddings are about a pair of people who love each other getting together surrounded by the people who love them. The wedding soon resumes in the parking lot, where Josh and Mindy get back together. Mindy has quit her job and Helen finally gives Josh the assistant manager position as his reward for his years of hard work. Drake then performs his song to the crowd, dedicating it to the newlyweds as well as Josh, rehiring him as his manager in the process.
Drake and Josh later return home to find their room restored to its former state as Lula finally moved as well as prawns sent over from Mateo. Megan and her friends have eaten all but one, which causes the duo to fight over it, mirroring a popular scene from The Amanda Show, featuring their portrayers fighting over a piece of shrimp, thus ending the series with the same way that Bell and Peck had their first great success together.
Cast
[edit]- Drake Bell as Drake Parker: the stepbrother of Josh and brother of Megan. He is working on his debut album in this episode.
- Josh Peck as Josh Nichols: the stepbrother of Drake and Megan and also Drake's manager.
- Miranda Cosgrove as Megan Parker: the sister of Drake and the stepsister of Josh. She moves into Drake and Josh's room while Helen's grandmother, Lula, is staying in hers. She takes up most of the room by redecorating it to her liking.
- Nancy Sullivan as Audrey Parker-Nichols: the mother of Drake and Megan, the stepmother of Josh and the wife of Walter.
- Jonathan Goldstein as Walter Nichols: the stepfather of Drake and Megan, the father of Josh and the husband of Audrey.
- Allison Scagliotti as Mindy Crenshaw: Josh's ex-girlfriend and the assistant manager at the premiere. She takes the job because she wanted to spend more time with Josh, having always regretted breaking up with him. She later quits and the assistant manager position is given to Josh.
- Jerry Trainor as Crazy Steve: A crazy employee at the Premiere known for shouting. He is taking anger management in this episode.
- Yvette Nicole Brown as Helen Dubois: A bride-to-be and the manager of the Premiere. She gets married later in the episode and gives Josh the assistant manager position.
- Anthony Holiday as Buzz Baxter: Helen's fiancé.
- Scott Halberstadt as Eric Blonnowitz: Craig's best friend who is frequently mistaken for the former by Drake. He and Craig videotape Helen's wedding.
- Alec Medlock as Craig Ramirez: Eric's best friend. He and Eric videotape Helen's wedding.
- Cathy Shim as Leah: an employee at the Premiere. She is frequently scared of Crazy Steve due to his outbursts.
- Alysse Cepeda as Molly: a friend of Megan and Janie who hits on Josh, much to her other friends' disgust.
- Brenda Vivian as Collete: an employee at Spin City Records.
- Joseph Will as Alan Krim: The vice president of Spin City Records who plans to profit off of Drake's song via a remix of it that Drake is not pleased with. When Josh switches the remix with the original version, Krim threatens to have him and Drake incarcerated for this, but the song becomes a number one hit and he is fired for his actions by the company's CEO, Nick Matteo, much to his chagrin.
- Jay Bontatibus as Nick Mateo: the CEO of Spin City Records. He wants to make Drake's song a hit and later fires Krim for his attempts at profiting off it.
Production
[edit]The episode aired on August 3, 2007 during Drake vs. Josh weekend and was intended to be the series finale. However, Nickelodeon did not air the final episodes chronologically and aired the episodes Helicopter and Dance Contest after the airing of the finale. They were aired in the wrong order with no stated reason. Promotion for Really Big Shrimp included a live competition between Drake Bell and Josh Peck in 5 shrimp-based challenges; Drake won with 3 out of 5 challenges.
Music
[edit]Drake Bell made a music video to "Makes Me Happy", and it became the single for the episode.
Reception
[edit]Laura Fries of Variety was mostly positive on Really Big Shrimp, stating that "...Drake and Josh perfectly embody the goofy, unabashed fun that too few remember..." and complimented the two leads on their appeal, but complained that "...[Miranda] Cosgrove's sister Megan is an immensely irritating character."[2]
It was the most watched television event on Nickelodeon up to that time, with 5.8 million viewers.[1][3] It was the most watched Nickelodeon program until the iCarly film, iGo to Japan, broke the record.[citation needed] The record was later broken again by Merry Christmas, Drake & Josh.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Schneider, Michael (August 7, 2007). "Nick catches big 'Shrimp'". Variety. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
- ^ Fries, Laura (August 2, 2007). "Drake & Josh: Really Big Shrimp". Variety. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
Framed like a supersized episode, the show's second primetime pic...
- ^ Mitovich, Matt (August 7, 2007). "Drake & Josh's Big Shrimp Nets Really Big Audience". TV Guide. Retrieved March 11, 2016.