Super Dave Osborne: Difference between revisions
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'''Super Dave Osborne''' (born [[November 20]], [[1940]], in [[Los Angeles, California]]) is the [[stage name]] of '''Bob Einstein''' (brother of [[actor]] [[Albert Brooks]]), a [[comedian|comedic]] [[stuntman]] whose persona is modeled after [[Evel Knievel]]. |
'''Super Dave Osborne''' (born [[November 20]], [[1940]], in [[Los Angeles, California]]) is the [[stage name]] of '''Bob Einstein''' (brother of [[actor]] [[Albert Brooks]]), a [[comedian|comedic]] fictional [[stuntman]] whose persona is modeled after [[Evel Knievel]]. |
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Super Dave made his first appearance on ''[[The John Byner Comedy Hour]]'', a [[1972]] [[television series|TV series]], and was a regular on the [[1980]] TV series ''[[Bizarre (TV series)|Bizarre]]''. In [[1987]] he got his own variety show named ''Super Dave'', followed in [[1992]] by the [[animated series]] ''Super Dave's All Stars'' that aired on [[FOX Network|FOX]]. Super Dave starred in a [[film|movie]] released in 2000, ''The Extreme Adventures of Super Dave''. |
Super Dave made his first appearance on ''[[The John Byner Comedy Hour]]'', a [[1972]] [[television series|TV series]], and was a regular on the [[1980]] TV series ''[[Bizarre (TV series)|Bizarre]]''. In [[1987]] he got his own variety show named ''Super Dave'', followed in [[1992]] by the [[animated series]] ''Super Dave's All Stars'' that aired on [[FOX Network|FOX]]. Super Dave starred in a [[film|movie]] released in 2000, ''The Extreme Adventures of Super Dave''. |
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Super Dave's signature performance is to perform outrageous daredevil stunts which invariably go awry and result in his grievous injury. The ''Super Dave'' show usually ended each episode with him performing such a stunt. These included such things as riding inside the hub of a giant [[yo-yo]] suspended from a crane (the yo-yo broke free of its string and rolled off a cliff into a ravine) and being flung inside a giant football (the catapult malfunctioned and "spiked" the football instead of throwing it). Super Dave would sometimes instead perform non-daredevil feats for charity or unveil new inventions his organization had supposedly developed, which would also invariably result in just as bad an injury to himself as the stunts would. |
Super Dave's signature performance is to perform outrageous daredevil stunts which invariably go awry and result in his grievous injury. The ''Super Dave'' show usually ended each episode with him performing such a stunt. These included such things as riding inside the hub of a giant [[yo-yo]] suspended from a crane (the yo-yo broke free of its string and rolled off a cliff into a ravine) and being flung inside a giant football (the catapult malfunctioned and "spiked" the football instead of throwing it). Super Dave would sometimes instead perform non-daredevil feats for charity or unveil new inventions his organization had supposedly developed, which would also invariably result in just as bad an injury to himself as the stunts would. After a injury has occured, Super Dave's limbs or body would be torn apart, broken, stretched, and more. |
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Super Dave was accompanied by several recurring characters including the barely-comprehensible stunt coordinator Fuji Hakayito ([[Art Irizawa]]), the fashion-impaired announcer Mike Walden, and the Super Dave Band (which was invariably unable to appear on the show when scheduled, making them an [[unseen character]]. They always sent as their replacement a Jamaican [[steel drum]] band that only knew how to play ''[[Copacabana (song)|Copacabana]]''). Safety equipment frequently included "genuine [[Saskatchewan]] [[Pinniped|seal]]-skin bindings", which was peculiar considering Saskatchewan is landlocked. |
Super Dave was accompanied by several recurring characters including the barely-comprehensible stunt coordinator Fuji Hakayito ([[Art Irizawa]]), the fashion-impaired announcer Mike Walden, and the Super Dave Band (which was invariably unable to appear on the show when scheduled, making them an [[unseen character]]. They always sent as their replacement a Jamaican [[steel drum]] band that only knew how to play ''[[Copacabana (song)|Copacabana]]''). Safety equipment frequently included "genuine [[Saskatchewan]] [[Pinniped|seal]]-skin bindings", which was peculiar considering Saskatchewan is landlocked. |
Revision as of 01:38, 2 September 2005
Super Dave Osborne (born November 20, 1940, in Los Angeles, California) is the stage name of Bob Einstein (brother of actor Albert Brooks), a comedic fictional stuntman whose persona is modeled after Evel Knievel.
Super Dave made his first appearance on The John Byner Comedy Hour, a 1972 TV series, and was a regular on the 1980 TV series Bizarre. In 1987 he got his own variety show named Super Dave, followed in 1992 by the animated series Super Dave's All Stars that aired on FOX. Super Dave starred in a movie released in 2000, The Extreme Adventures of Super Dave.
Super Dave's signature performance is to perform outrageous daredevil stunts which invariably go awry and result in his grievous injury. The Super Dave show usually ended each episode with him performing such a stunt. These included such things as riding inside the hub of a giant yo-yo suspended from a crane (the yo-yo broke free of its string and rolled off a cliff into a ravine) and being flung inside a giant football (the catapult malfunctioned and "spiked" the football instead of throwing it). Super Dave would sometimes instead perform non-daredevil feats for charity or unveil new inventions his organization had supposedly developed, which would also invariably result in just as bad an injury to himself as the stunts would. After a injury has occured, Super Dave's limbs or body would be torn apart, broken, stretched, and more.
Super Dave was accompanied by several recurring characters including the barely-comprehensible stunt coordinator Fuji Hakayito (Art Irizawa), the fashion-impaired announcer Mike Walden, and the Super Dave Band (which was invariably unable to appear on the show when scheduled, making them an unseen character. They always sent as their replacement a Jamaican steel drum band that only knew how to play Copacabana). Safety equipment frequently included "genuine Saskatchewan seal-skin bindings", which was peculiar considering Saskatchewan is landlocked.