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The Zit Remedy, later known as The Zits, are a fictional rock band who appear in the Degrassi television franchise. A three-piece group with no live drummer, they are known in the show for their single song "Everybody Wants Something", of which they are shown performing on numerous occasions throughout the series. The band consists of Joey Jeremiah (Pat Mastroianni) on keyboards, Archie "Snake" Simpson (Stefan Brogren) on guitar, and Derek "Wheels" Wheeler (Neil Hope) on bass, with all three sharing lead vocals. For a brief period, Wheels is forced to give up the band for extra tutoring and is replaced by Simon Dexter (Michael Carry). The band is also referenced several times in Degrassi: The Next Generation .
The Zit Remedy first appear as a band in "Parent's Night", the twelfth episode of the first season of Degrassi Junior High. At this point, "Everybody Wants Something" was not performed, and the band are seen excitedly creating tuneless noise, much to the amusement of some and chagrin of others. [ep 1] The song makes its debut in the following episode, "Revolution!". [ep 2] Early in the second season, Wheels' parents and Ms. Avery (Michelle Goodeve) decide he must concentrate on improving his marks, and he is forced to give up on the band in the meantime. [ep 3] During this time, they replace him with new student Simon Dexter (Michael Carry), [1] who they discover playing bass in the school auditorium, though he is never seen performing with them. [ep 3] By the time Wheels is able to perform with the band again, Snake's mom makes him take classical guitar lessons after school. [ep 4] In the second-season finale, Joey is informed he is being held back, which makes him depressed and prompts him to withdraw from the band. He returns in time to perform "Everybody Wants Something" for the graduation dance. [ep 5]
In the third-season premiere, Wheels decides to record a demo with the band instead of seeing a movie with his parents. When returning home from recording the demo, he discovers his parents were killed in a collision with a drunk driver. Angry and withdrawn, he rejects a copy of the demo tape from Joey by throwing it against the wall. Throughout the third season, Joey tries in vain to promote the tape, The Zit Remedy: LIVE!, [1] to other students and eventually the local radio station CRAZ. Joey's girlfriend Caitlin Ryan, also owns a copy of the tape and listens to it, but throws it in the trash when he stands her up at the school dance. Later on, Wheels says he sold his bass and tells Joey that the band is a "joke" that will "never go anywhere".
The band resumes activity in Degrassi High, where they change their name to The Zits [1] and eventually film a music video for "Everybody Wants Something". Later in Degrassi High, Joey says he got a community television channel to air the video. The band is no longer mentioned after this, as Wheels' friendship with Joey and Snake continues to deteriorate. Wheels is sent to prison following his deadly drunk-driving crash in School's Out. "Everybody Wants Something" is mentioned and sung multiple times in Degrassi: The Next Generation, including in the episode "Should I Stay Or Should I Go?", where Wheels briefly reunites with Joey and Snake.
In his book Rocklopedia Fakebandica , T. Mike Childs describes the Zit Remedy as a "new wave-y trio". [1]
"Everybody Wants Something", the only song performed by the band, is based on three chords. [2] According to Kathryn Ellis' Degrassi Generations: The Official 411, the show's main composers Lewis Manne and Wendy Watson had sought a song that would be realistically written by a teenager, and received the lyrics, written by their nephew, on the back of a school permission slip. [3] However, Pat Mastroianni, who played Joey Jeremiah, has claimed that he, Brogren, and Hope wrote most of the song themselves. [4] According to Ellis, the three actors were musically inexperienced, and were taught by Manne the fundamental chords for the song. [3] Mastroianni has stated that he and the other two disliked filming the scenes, [5] recalling in 2017: "I was sick of it in the ’80s. … Every time we’d have a read-through and the director’s notes would say ‘and then The Zit Remedy busts out into their song,’ and everybody would be like ‘ugghh,’ we'd moan and groan. And then when we were filming, the crew would be like ‘ugh, not again.’". [6]
While only one song is explicitly named and shown in the series, it is implied in the very beginning of "A Helping Hand" that they have a second song when Snake mentions that "we only have two songs". [ep 3] Likewise, in the novel Exit Stage Left, they are described as performing another song titled "I Don't Want To Be A Porcupine With Anyone Else But You, Baby", which Joey claims will "revolutionize the pop music industry". [7]
In 2011, Sydney Morning Herald 's Kylie Northover remarked that "a quick Google search reveals a wide affection for - and hundreds of covers of - their "hit" "Everybody Wants Something", and said that the Zit Remedy were "firmly imprinted on the cultural psyche of the decade". [5] Junkee listed the band in their "8 Of The Most Iconically Awkward Degrassi Moments Of All Time" list, saying "the infectious ‘Everybody Wants Something’ engraved itself on the memories of many ‘80s kids" and joked that if it were released commercially, it would have overtaken Roxette's "Listen To Your Heart" at number one on the Canadian charts. [2] Mastroianni opined in 2017: "I think people related to The Zit Remedy because we were so bad as a group, but we had passion and people related to the passion." [6]
Degrassi Junior High is a Canadian teen drama television series created by Linda Schuyler and Kit Hood. It is the second entry of the Degrassi television franchise after The Kids Of Degrassi Street and aired on the CBC from 18 January 1987 to 27 February 1989, and on PBS in the United States starting from September 1987. The series follows those who attend the titular fictional school and the issues they face.
Degrassi: The Next Generation is a Canadian teen drama television series created by Yan Moore and Linda Schuyler. It is the fourth series in the Degrassi franchise and a revival of Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High. It premiered on CTV on October 14, 2001 and concluded on August 2, 2015 on MTV Canada.
Degrassi is a Canadian teen drama television franchise created by Kit Hood and Linda Schuyler, that follows the lives of youths attending the eponymous secondary school in Toronto. Each entry since 1987 has taken place in the same continuity. Outside of television, the franchise comprises a variety of other media, such as companion novels, graphic novels, documentaries, soundtracks, and non-fiction works.
The Kids of Degrassi Street is a Canadian children's television series created by Kit Hood and Linda Schuyler. The first entry in the Degrassi franchise and the only one to focus on children instead of teenagers, it follows the lives of a group of children living on De Grassi Street in Toronto. It was produced by Hood and Schuyler's independent company Playing With Time. The series originated as a collection of annual standalone short films that started with Ida Makes a Movie, a live-action adaptation of the Kay Chorao book which premiered on the CBC on December 8, 1979. It became a full series in 1982 when the CBC ordered five more episodes.
Degrassi High is a Canadian teen drama television series created by Linda Schuyler and Kit Hood. It is the third entry in the Degrassi franchise and the direct continuation of Degrassi Junior High, and was broadcast on the CBC from 6 November 1989 to 18 February 1991.
Degrassi Talks is a Canadian non-fiction documentary television miniseries and part of the Degrassi franchise created by Linda Schuyler and Kit Hood. Running six episodes from February 29 to March 30, 1992, it featured actors from Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High taking the role of journalists and conducting interviews with other teenagers and young adults across Canada on various topics addressed by the series such as abuse, substance addiction, homophobia, and teenage pregnancy. It combined candid and man-on-the-street interviews as well as relevant archive footage from the television series and on-screen statistics. Each episode was hosted by an actor whose character had some relation to the focused subject.
Stacie Moana Mistysyn is an American and Canadian actress who is best known for her role as Caitlin Ryan throughout multiple incarnations of the Degrassi teen drama franchise, from Degrassi Junior High through Degrassi: The Next Generation. She previously played Lisa Canard in The Kids of Degrassi Street from 1982 to 1986.
Pasquale Mastroianni, known professionally as Pat Mastroianni, is a Canadian actor who is best known for his role as Joey Jeremiah in the Degrassi television franchise, playing the role as a student in Degrassi Junior High (1987–89) and Degrassi High (1989–91), and reprising the role as an adult on Degrassi: The Next Generation (2001–06). In 1988, he received a Gemini Award for Degrassi Junior High.
Stefan Brogren is a Canadian actor, director, and producer who is best known for his mainstay role as Archie "Snake" Simpson in the Degrassi television franchise. First appearing as a student in the second series Degrassi Junior High (1987-89) and continuing into Degrassi High (1989-91), Brogren played the role of Snake throughout every subsequent entry in the franchise, reprising his role in the revival Degrassi: The Next Generation (2001-15) as a teacher and later principal, and again in Degrassi: Next Class (2016-17).
Philip Neil Hope, better known and credited as Neil Hope, was a Canadian actor who was best known for portraying Derek "Wheels" Wheeler on the CBC teen drama series Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High from 1987 to 1991, and Robin "Griff" Griffiths in The Kids of Degrassi Street from 1985 to 1986.
School's Out is a Canadian drama television film based on the Degrassi teen drama franchise created by Linda Schuyler and Kit Hood in 1979. It was directed by Hood and written by Yan Moore, based on a story by Moore, Schuyler and Hood. It aired on CBC Television on January 5, 1992, and served as a finale to the series Degrassi High and its predecessor Degrassi Junior High, which are collectively known as the Degrassi Classic era of the franchise.
Joseph "Joey" Jeremiah is a fictional character from the Degrassi teen drama franchise. He is portrayed by Pat Mastroianni. He debuted in the first episode of Degrassi Junior High and appeared throughout Degrassi Junior High, Degrassi High, and the first five seasons of Degrassi: The Next Generation. As one of the main focus characters of the original two series, his role primarily concerns his friendship with Archie "Snake" Simpson and Derek "Wheels" Wheeler, his on-and-off romantic relationship with Caitlin Ryan, and in The Next Generation, his relationship with his stepson Craig Manning.
Derek Wheeler is a fictional character from the Degrassi teen drama franchise. He was portrayed by Neil Hope. He appears throughout Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High, with two cameo appearances in Degrassi: The Next Generation. His role throughout the former two series primarily concerns his friendship with Joey Jeremiah and Archie "Snake" Simpson, and later the death of his adoptive parents in a traffic collision with a drunk driver. Throughout the series, he plays with Joey and Snake in a band called The Zit Remedy, who are always seen performing one song.
Christine "Spike" Nelson is a fictional character from the Degrassi teen drama franchise. Portrayed by Amanda Stepto, Spike appeared throughout Degrassi Junior High (1987–89), Degrassi High (1989–91), and the first nine seasons of Degrassi: The Next Generation (2001–10). Starting as an unnamed extra before being given a name and storyline, Spike's character largely revolves around her teenage pregnancy and motherhood.
"Mother and Child Reunion" is the two-part pilot episode of the Canadian teen drama television series Degrassi: The Next Generation, which premiered on October 14, 2001 on the CTV Television Network. The episode was written by story editor Aaron Martin and series co-creator/creative consultant Yan Moore, and directed by Bruce McDonald. As with the majority of Degrassi: The Next Generation episodes, "Mother and Child Reunion" takes its title from a pop song, "Mother and Child Reunion", written and performed by Paul Simon.
"It's Late" is the 11th episode of the first season of Canadian teen drama television series Degrassi Junior High. It originally aired on the CBC in Canada on April 5, 1987. After a careless night with Shane at a classmate's party, Spike fears she is pregnant. Meanwhile, Arthur gives continuously bad romantic advice to his friend Yick.
"Showtime" is a two-part episode of the second season of Canadian teen drama Degrassi High. The tenth and eleventh episodes respectively, it aired on the CBC on 28 January and 4 February 1991. In the leadup to a talent show, Claude Tanner commits suicide.
"A New Start" is the two-part premiere episode of the Canadian teen drama series Degrassi High. It aired on CBC in its hour-long form on 6 November 1989, and on PBS in the United States on 13 January 1990. The episode was written by Yan Moore and directed by Kit Hood. It is the first of three episodes of Degrassi that depict abortion, followed by 2003's "Accidents Will Happen" from Degrassi: The Next Generation and 2017's "#IRegretNothing" from Degrassi: Next Class.
"Bye-Bye, Junior High" is the sixteenth episode of the third and final season of Canadian teen drama television series Degrassi Junior High. It originally aired on CBC Television in Canada on February 27, 1989. It was written by Yan Moore and directed by Kit Hood. The episode takes place at the end of the school year as graduation approaches; despite the fallout from the death of his parents at the beginning of the season, Derek "Wheels" Wheeler manages to pass, but Christine "Spike" Nelson, who is raising her daughter Emma, must make up for poor grades over the holidays, something which she does not react well to. At the graduation dance, a fault in the boiler room causes a fire to spread throughout the school, razing it to the ground.
In his autobiography, "The Narbo's Guide to Being a Broomhead," Pat Mastroianni claims that he, Stefan Brogren and Neil Hope wrote most of the catchy tune themselves, which adds another layer of brilliance to the legendary track.