House of Cosbys | |
---|---|
Genre | Comic science fiction |
Created by | Justin Roiland |
Voices of | Jeff Davis Justin Roiland |
Theme music composer | Nick Haas, Matias Drago, Amy Metcalf, Justin Roiland |
Composer | Glenn Morrissette |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 4 |
Production | |
Producer | Abed Gheith |
Original release | |
Network | Channel 101 |
Release | January 30 – June 26, 2005 |
Related | |
Rick and Morty Acceptable TV |
House of Cosbys is an American animated sitcom created by Justin Roiland for the film festival Channel 101. The series centers on Mitchell Reynolds (Jeff Davis), who builds a cloning machine to make duplicates of his favorite comedian, Bill Cosby. The show stars Davis, Roiland, and a rotating cast of performers, many of whom were participants at Channel 101. The series premiered January 30, 2005, and was the number one-rated program on the site for three months. Four episodes of the series were created, which debuted at Channel 101 screenings and were posted online thereafter. The series concluded on June 26, 2005 with an "unofficial" fifth installment.
The series garnered media attention when lawyers for Cosby sent Roiland and site administrator Dan Harmon a cease and desist letter in June 2005, which resulted in the series' ending.
The series revolves around Mitchell Reynolds (Davis), a fan of comedian Bill Cosby who, using one of Cosby's hairs, spends a decade crafting a cloning machine to create his dream: a "house of Cosbys". Each duplicate contains random and mild attributes, such as curiosity and dancing. [1] He then begins cloning several more Cosbys to help him around the house, much like in the plot of the 1996 film Multiplicity . However, the quality of the clones seems to deteriorate as the process is repeated, and he decides to stop using the machine; but when one of the clones subversively activates it, he discovers that every tenth Cosby he clones has super powers. At the suggestion of Data Analysis Cosby (the first super-powered Cosby) they decide to continue cloning Cosbys so that their super powers can be used to help the world.
Many participants of Channel 101 gave voices to the series, including Rob Schrab, Steve Agee, and all three members of The Lonely Island.
The following is a list of the Cosby clones.
Number | Name | Voiced by | Powers/notable traits |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Entertainment Cosby | Rob Schrab | Was the first Cosby clone. Closest to the real Bill Cosby in personality and physical attributes. |
2 | House Keeping Cosby | Steve Agee | An excellent duster. |
3 | Moral Support Cosby | Rob Schrab | Treats Mitchell as his son. |
4 | Tattle Tale Cosby | Scott Chernoff | Tattles on others. |
5 | Dancing Cosby | Bennet Webber | Dances all the time. |
6 | Bath Tub Cosby | Scott Chernoff | This Cosby never leaves the bath tub. |
7 | Useless Cosby | Chester Tam | Does nothing but stand around, though he eventually speaks to Bath Tub Cosby. |
8 | Curiosity Cosby | Justin Roiland | This extremely curious clone likes to explore and find things, which causes trouble on multiple occasions. Dies at the end of episode 3. |
9 | Butt Naked Cosby | Abed Gheith | He plays with fire. |
10 | Data Analysis Cosby | Justin Roiland | Super-intelligence and data analysis. |
12 | White Cosby | none | He is a caucasian Cosby clone. |
20 | Carpentry Cosby | none | The ability to create amazing feats of carpentry, as he built the additional barracks and probably most of the buildings in the training facility. |
22 | Suburban Life Cosby | none | This Cosby views the cloning of Cosbyette. He wears the garb of a true family man. |
26 | Art Appreciation Cosby | none | Loves art. |
30 | Weapons Cosby | none | His super power would appear to be the production and use of weapons, particularly guns. |
40 | Country Music Cosby | none | His super power is being a good country music player. |
41 | Mechanics Cosby | none | This Cosby is a mechanic, and he does all the machine work around the compound. |
47 | Mood Swing Cosby | Tim Heidecker | This Cosby has extreme emotional highs and lows. Presumed dead, as he accidentally hangs himself after being convinced not to commit suicide. |
50 | BC-D2 | Abed Gheith | A parody of R2-D2, he is a small, apparently cyborg Cosby who follows Data Analysis Cosby around and communicates by a series of "blips" and "bloo"s. |
60 | Cosbyette | Stephanie Bilberry | Her most obvious super power is the fact that she is female (with a well proportioned body) but she has also exhibited psychic powers (sensing trouble in the compound). |
61 | Preacher Cosby | Justin Roiland | Provides spiritual comfort, for example talking one out of suicide. |
70 | Toothpaste Cosby | Akiva Schaffer | One of the members of Cosby Team Triosby, he has the power to turn into Toothpaste and seep through small gaps, or make things trip. |
80 | Frequency Cosby | Jorma Taccone | One of the members of Cosby Team Triosby, he can absorb TV and Radio waves and turn them into harmful electric blasts. |
85 | April Fool's Cosby | Bennett Webber | The desire to play April Fools jokes. |
90 | Humming Bird Cosby | Andy Samberg | One of the members of Cosby Team Triosby, he can fly and hover like a humming bird, and also create small explosives in his stomach which he can then defecate on land-based targets. |
100 | Evil Cosby | Abed Gheith | His super powers are unknown, although being "evil" would appear to be one of them. |
??? | Droopy Cosby | Abed Gheith | This Cosby most likely isn't a super Cosby, however his number is unknown. He is a depressed Cosby. |
??? | Scared Cosby | none | This Cosby is shaking with fear in the corner of the room Curiosity Cosby was dismembered in. His number is unknown. |
??? | Transgender Cosby | none | Is dressed in drag, and also appears to be white. Her number is unknown. |
Other characters
Name | Voiced by | Synopsis |
---|---|---|
Mitchell Reynolds | Jeff Davis | He is the creator of the Cosbys. |
Alien 1 | Justin Roiland | A yellow, dragon-like alien that attacked the Cosby Compound. He communicates in "yeps" and "uh-huhs". |
Alien 2 | ??? | A green, dragon-like alien who is partners with Alien 1. |
Alien Game Show Host | ??? | A turquoise alien who hosts a game show. |
?Homo? | ??? | A big-headed, purple alien who was a competitor in the alien game show. He was killed by a gnome with a machine-gun when he got a question wrong. |
Unicorn Alien | Nobody | A unicorn-like alien who was a competitor in the alien game show. |
Moro | ??? | A big, fleshy looking alien who has a TV show with Toro. It is very similar to "Terrance and Phillip" from South Park. |
Toro | ??? | A big, pea-green coloured alien who has a TV show with Moro. |
Alien News Reporter | ??? | A raisin-headed alien who hosts the news. |
Joyce | ??? | An alien with her brain on the outside of her head. She speaks in creepy whispers. |
Alien Singer | ??? | A singer who loves the Xacoflaxians and their god, Jibbody Libbody. |
Jibbody Libbody | ??? | A giant toad in royal clothes. He is the god of the Xacoflaxians. |
? Will ? | ??? | A pea-green alien who is lost. All his friends are trapped inside the rectum (or as they call it, the "greasy asshole") of a red alien who looks exactly like them but about three times the size of them. |
Justin Roiland first began working in television in the early 2000s, mainly producing reality television programs. He and his close friends, Sevan Najarian and Abed Gheith, were more interested in creating comedic short films, and would work on them at his apartment in spare time. In 2003, they began submitting their projects to Channel 101, a non-profit monthly short film festival in Los Angeles, in which participants submit a short film in the format of a pilot under five minutes in length. After submitting several films, he began working on House of Cosbys, which originated between him, Gheith, and another close friend Steven Chunn, doing poor impressions of Bill Cosby. While the original idea was similar in setup to the sitcom The Brady Bunch —consisting of multiple Cosbys together in a home—it eventually evolved into its final form with more development. Roiland deemed the concept " Multiplicity meets The Smurfs meets the original concept." [2]
He wrote the first episode and began working on it alongside Gheith, Najarian, and Chunn. Roiland and Chunn would design and draw characters and scan them into a computer, where they could be further manipulated in Adobe Photoshop. From there, Najarian would digitally animate the drawings using Adobe After Effects. [2] As the series progressed, he enlisted friends Myke Chilian to help with character design and background art, respectively. Roiland later likened it to "our own little animation studio." [2] The first episode debuted at a screening on January 30, 2005, and received a wildly supportive reaction from the audience. Two more episodes were created over the following two months, where it remained the most popular show at each screening. [3] By the fourth episode, Roiland fell ill with bronchitis, which resulted in what they felt was a subpar installment. Following this, a "perfect storm" of things helped lead to the ending of the series: Roiland had a close friend die in a car accident, which was "traumatizing" for him, he and his small team grew exhausted with making the series, and he and Channel 101's site administrator Dan Harmon received a cease and desist letter from Bill Cosby's attorney in June 2005:
Dear sirs,
we are lawyers for Mr. William H Cosby, Jr. We have just learned that you offer a deeply offensive animated film that you created, entitled House of Cosbys. [...] As you are certainly aware, none of you are licensed or in any way authorized to use Mr. Cosby's voice, name, or likeness. [...] Therefore, we demand that you immediately cease and desist from any use of our client's name, voice, and likeness, including the development and distribution of the House of Cosbys series.
Very truly yours,
John P. Schmitt
Although he scripted a fifth installment of the series, a mockumentary about receiving the letter, he decided to end the series. Roiland attributed much of his reluctance to continue not on the prospect of potential legal action, but the passing of his friend. He gave the script to friends Chester Tam, and Chris Romano and Eric Falconer, who produced an "unofficial" fifth episode of House of Cosbys. [2]
Despite no longer making the series, Cosby's lawyers insisted that the online distributors of the episodes—Channel101.com and Roiland's own site, ComicSacrifice.com—take them down. Harmon initially pulled the episodes from the site, but re-uploaded them shortly thereafter upon realizing their requests were unreasonable. [4] He was forced to take them down when Cosby's lawyers went to the company that maintained the server for the site, CI Host. [5] Harmon noted that the shorts were widely available on other video sites in a post on his site, commenting, "The actions of Cosby's legal team are somewhat laughable, somewhat sad and ultimately symbolic of a quantum shift in the business of entertainment." [6] Blogger Andy Baio made the series available via his website, waxy.org, beginning in November 2005, though he was also sent a letter from Cosby's attorney the following March. [7] "I'm sure he despised it, which is sort of sad because we're all fans," said Roiland at the time. [5]
The series received media attention upon the cease and desist letter, which resulted in Roiland—then "an unemployed 23-year-old"—gaining a talent agent and being signed to the United Talent Agency. [1]
No. in series | No. in season | Title | Written by | Directed by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Episode 1" | Justin Roiland | Justin Roiland and Sevan Najarian | January 30, 2005 | |
Mitchell creates a House of Cosbys. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Episode 2" | Justin Roiland | Justin Roiland and Sevan Najarian | February 28, 2005 | |
The next generation of super Cosbys complete training at the Cosby compound. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Episode 3" | Justin Roiland | Justin Roiland and Sevan Najarian | March 28, 2005 | |
The Cosby compound falls under attack by aliens. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Episode 4" | Justin Roiland | Justin Roiland and Sevan Najarian | April 24, 2005 | |
Cosby 10 and Mitchell watch alien television. |
Before ending the series, Roiland enlisted friends Chester Tam, Chris Romano, and Eric Falconer to create an "unofficial" fifth episode of the series.
No. in series | No. in season | Title | Written by | Directed by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | 5 | "Episode 5" | Justin Roiland | Chester Tam, Chris Romano, and Eric Falconer | June 26, 2005 | |
Bill Cosby's lawyer performs fellatio on Bill Cosby. |
Erik Adams of The A.V. Club called it a "hilarious" show that "ended too soon, [and] proved to be as versatile as its clones." [3]
Channel 101 is a non-profit monthly short film festival in Los Angeles, which has a sister festival in New York City, Channel 101 NY. Channel 101 is a creation of Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab in which participants submit a short film in the format of a pilot under five minutes in length. The event is structured such that a panel of previously successful submitters choose what pilots are shown, and a live audience at The Downtown Independent decides which pilots continue as a series for the next screening in much the same way TV programs are rated and managed. According to the Channel 101 website, "Channel 101 is a chance to sit in the worn-out chair of the fat network exec, drunk on the blood of lowly artists whose right to exist is given in exchange for their ability to nourish... You run the network. You pick the programming."
Robby Christopher Schrab is an American comic book creator, screenwriter, director, and producer. He is the creator of the comic book Scud: The Disposable Assassin, co-writer of the feature film Monster House, co-creator of the competitive film festival Channel 101, and the co-creator of Comedy Central's The Sarah Silverman Program. He has directed three seasons of The Sarah Silverman Program and episodes of Childrens Hospital, Blue Mountain State, Community, Parks and Recreation, The Mindy Project, Workaholics, Creepshow, and the second revival season of Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Daniel James Harmon is an American screenwriter and producer. He is best known as the creator and producer of the NBC sitcom Community (2009–2015), creator and host of the comedy podcast Harmontown (2012–2019), co-creator of the Adult Swim animated sitcom Rick and Morty (2013–present) and its subsequent franchise along with Justin Roiland, and co-founder of the alternative television network and website Channel 101 along with Rob Schrab.
Acceptable.TV is a television program created by Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab that aired on VH1 from March 23 to May 11, 2007. Each show was composed of several mini-episodes created by the Acceptable.TV staff, with one mini-episode that was submitted by a viewer. After each episode viewers would be able to vote online for their two favorites. The two that received the most votes will be continued in the following episode, and the remaining three would be cancelled and replaced by new mini-shows. The show was adapted from Harmon and Schrab's Channel 101 screenings, and the cast was composed of various Channel 101 contributors.
Andy Baio is an American technologist and blogger. He is the co-founder of the XOXO Festival, founder of Upcoming.org, a former CTO of Kickstarter and the author of the Waxy.org blog.
Mark Justin Roiland is an American voice actor, animator, writer, and producer. He co-created the Adult Swim animated sitcom Rick and Morty, for which he voiced the protagonists Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith in seasons 1 through 6 from 2013 to 2022, as well as Hulu's Solar Opposites, in which he voiced the main character, Korvo, in seasons 1 through 3 from 2020 to 2022, until both networks severed ties with him in 2023. He had also voiced Earl of Lemongrab in Adventure Time, Blendin Blandin in Gravity Falls, and Oscar in Fish Hooks. He founded the animation studio Justin Roiland's Solo Vanity Card Productions! and the video game studio Squanch Games, though he resigned from the latter in 2023.
Rick and Morty is an American adult animated science fiction sitcom created by Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon for Cartoon Network's nighttime programming block Adult Swim. The series follows the misadventures of Rick Sanchez, a cynical mad scientist, and his good-hearted but fretful grandson Morty Smith, who split their time between domestic life and interdimensional adventures that take place across an infinite number of realities, often traveling to other planets and dimensions through portals and on Rick's flying saucer. The general concept of Rick and Morty relies on two conflicting scenarios: domestic family drama and a misanthropic grandfather dragging his grandson into hijinks.
Mortimer Chauncey "Morty" Smith Sr. is one of the eponymous characters from the American animated television series Rick and Morty. Created by Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon, and voiced by the former for the first six seasons of the series, followed by Harry Belden beginning with the seventh season. Morty is a 14-year-old boy loosely inspired by Michael J. Fox's Marty McFly from Back to the Future. Morty is known for his awkward, anxious, second-guessing, doubtful personality, and low sense of self-esteem; the character has been critically well-received. He is the good-natured and impressionable grandson of Rick Sanchez, the son of Jerry and Beth Smith, the younger brother of Summer Smith, and the father of Morty Jr. and Naruto Smith, who can be easily manipulated. In September 2021, Jaeden Martell portrayed Morty in a series of promotional interstitials for the series.
The third season of Rick and Morty, an American animated television series created by Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland, originally aired on Cartoon Network's late night programming block, Adult Swim. It premiered with "The Rickshank Rickdemption", which aired unannounced on April 1, 2017, as part of Adult Swim's annual April Fools' prank. As a result of production delays, the remaining episodes began airing weekly nearly four months later, on July 30, 2017. The season comprised ten episodes but it originally was supposed to be fourteen episodes, and its initial airing concluded on October 1, 2017.
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"Morty's Mind Blowers" is the eighth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Rick and Morty. It follows the two titular characters, both voiced by Justin Roiland, as they experiment with Morty's lost memories. The episode was directed by Bryan Newton and written by various screenwriters, including Mike McMahan, who would later serve as a producer on the fourth season, and both series creators Roiland and Dan Harmon. "Morty's Mind Blowers" originally aired on Adult Swim on September 17, 2017, and was watched by 2.51 million viewers. A comic sequel of the same name, written by Kyle Starks, Tini Howard, Sarah Graley, Benjamin Dewey, and Josh Trujillo, with designs by Angie Knowles and Roiland's personal approval, was published by Oni Press in Rick and Morty #50 on May 29, 2019.
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"Pilot" is the television pilot of the Adult Swim television series Hot Streets, which premiered on December 4, 2016. It was written and directed by Brian Wysol, who previously created the Channel 101 animated shorts Hot Cross Buns and We Solve the Crime.
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