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Season 4 of RENO 911! Answers all of last season's unanswered questions with even more unanswered questions and new answers to unasked questions that may never be answered. Patrols are anything but routine as the force deals with a crystal meth crime wave, a murdered sheriff and something even more terrifying—a Christian karaoke singles' mixer. A critically acclaimed, hit series which ran for six seasons, 'Reno 911!' let viewers ride shotgun with the courageous men and women of the Washoe County Sheriff's Department as they lay down the law and put their lives on the line. Watch Police Videos, featuring original Police1 training videos, product videos, law enforcement videos and much more.
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The Federalist ^ | May 2, 2020 | Emily Jashinsky
Posted on 05/02/2020 10:18:42 AM PDT by Kaslin
They don't make television comedies like they used to, and few were ever made as brilliantly as 'Reno 911.'
They don't make television comedies like they used to, and few were ever made as brilliantly as 'Reno 911,' the jewel of Comedy Central's glorious mid-aughts lineup. But it's back, and better than pretty much every new comedy on air right now, despite clocking in around seven minutes an episode.
In these trying times, happiness is an elusive sensation. The unbridled joy I felt one minute into the reboot's premiere, having realized 'Reno 911' is returning to us in fine form, defies description. In Quibi's hands, the show is back at its Bush-era peak, a relic from a time when few topics were off limits in comedy, and skillful humorists lampooned every one of them with equal vigor and delight. You can't fully understand the magnitude of this cultural loss until you see Jim Dangle work his way through a PSA on gender pronouns.
The PSAs are only of many gags from the show's original run that return in the reboot, which premieres on Monday, including Junior's universally ill-fated attempts to pull drivers over, and Dangle's bicycle woes. Familiar faces like Patton Oswalt, Toby Huss (Big Mike), and Dave Holmes (Leslie Frost) make appearances as well, furthering the show's ability to channel its singular original spirit.
Speaking of which, 'Reno 911!' left the air in 2009, but more than a decade later, its cultural commentaries hold up remarkably well. Revisit, for instance, the eighth episode of season five, presciently titled 'The Wall,' for a taste of the show's lasting satirical value. Quibi's reboot is similarly fearless, diving straight into the new politics of policing, transgenderism, paper straws, and gun control. Oswalt's character is basically Alex Jones. With the exception, perhaps, of 'It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia,' another holdover from the mid-aughts, there's just nothing like this on television anymore.
'Reno 911' is a good fit for Quibi's experimental model, which is to produce series with episodes under 10 minutes long, in vertical and horizontal formats optimized for smartphone viewing. The show actually used to air 'hodgepodge' episodes with no narrative string at all, basically just a collection of sketches. There's continuity in the 'Quibi' episodes, at least the three made available to press before launch day, which works well for breezy shows like 'Reno.'
There's something odd about watching 'Reno 911!' in 2020, about seeing its unchanged crassness applied to a world where cultural pressures have reined in most satire—even most good satire. Everything is overproduced and overwritten, two qualities that could never be used to characterize 'Reno 911!' Thank goodness for that. It's liberating to revisit comedy's not-so-distance past, and actually kind of revealing as to how exhausting those overproduced and overwritten shows have started to become.
What makes the consequences of political correctness difficult to measure is that we can't fully know what's not being made. The 'Reno' reboot actually functions as a glimpse into the magnitude of that loss. Of course, Quibi's decision to bring the show back without sanding away of its edges indicates some in the industry are still willing to test those waters, convinced there's a market for genuinely controversial comedy. Between YouTube and the booming podcast industry, that should be abundantly clear.
Like Michael Scott, a character even Steve Carrell believes wouldn't fly in today's Hollywood, the bumbling idiots of the Reno PD are used to satirize the ugliness of racism and sexism and xenophobia. Our laughter reinforces society's intolerance for bigotry. That's a worthy effort, and comedy is one of our best tools to tackle it.
I don't know how 'Reno' will be perceived by critics in legacy media, who typically enforce the narrowing standards of acceptable discourse, even if they allow for a little more wiggle room than the left's most humorless detractors. For 2020, the writing on 'Reno's' seventh season is bold. It's also great.
I'll close by acknowledging what's behind the shameless enthusiasm of this glowing review. 'Reno 911!' and 'Strangers With Candy' and 'The Sarah Silverman Program' were what I watched when my parents weren't home. They were what taught me the value of satire. They were what made me appreciate the intellectual freedom that comes with comedy. But nostalgia aside, the reboot is worth your time.
Besides, if you don't watch, you will never know what happened to Trudy Wiegel's hamster. And trust me, you're going to want to know what happened to Trudy Wiegel's hamster.
KEYWORDS:comedy; quibi; reno911; television; televisionreview; tv; tvreview
I once knew a police officer who said they had someone on the force that matched each Reno 911 character.
Tacos! Tacos! Tacos! Tacos!
'The service launched on April 6, 2020.[8] On April 14, the company announced it had seen 1.7 million downloads of the Quibi app in its release week.[9]'
So it's gone viral.
No, but I'm pretty sure she is.
C'mon, boy! Find the sloppy joe!
We used to joke about my brother wearing hot pants at work.
Download Free Reno 911 Sheriff Patch Software Windows 7
In Quibi's hands, the show is back at its Bush-era peak, a relic from a time when few topics were off limits in comedy, and skillful humorists lampooned every one of them with equal vigor and delight.IOW, the last time a GOP President was willing to bend over and take it without fighting back.
Yea i really liked that show.
The funniest one was when one of them came into a shift meeting waving a lotto card and telling the shift commander to kiss his ass, and every name In the book cause he was rich and gonna quit.
The shift commander showed him the Newspaper with a headline about fake lotto ticket scams going around.
the Reno PD are used to satirize the ugliness of racism and sexism and xenophobia..'
Isn't that what damn near everyone does today over and above story and plot? I bet they got no end of guys who look just like me who are full of sneering hate for everybody. Now if there were some irreverence in the direction of institutionalized PC.. Air tc stats and performanceturks and caicos virtual.
They don't make television comedies like they used to.
Red Green nods
'Familiar faces like Patton Oswalt,'
One of the most disgusting Trump-haters out there.
So, is this 'comedy' clever and genuinely funny. Every comedy I try these days is crude and full of gutter humor, gay characters, smut, and low brow. I am not a prude. Swear works and gutter humor are not out of my arsenal of humor, done sparingly and cleverly on the rare occasion they are appropriate to humor. Seinfeld dealt with them very cleverly. Even Frasier could do gutter humor but with such dry wit it was genuinely funny.
Is this comedy actually funny and well written or is this more of the same post-2000 'humor' that is crude and disgusting.
In these trying times, happiness is an elusive sensation. The unbridled joy I felt one minute into the reboot's premiere, having realized 'Reno 911' is returning to us in fine form, defies description. In Quibi's hands, the show is back at its Bush-era peak, a relic from a time when few topics were off limits in comedy, and skillful humorists lampooned every one of them with equal vigor and delight. You can't fully understand the magnitude of this cultural loss until you see Jim Dangle work his way through a PSA on gender pronouns.
The PSAs are only of many gags from the show's original run that return in the reboot, which premieres on Monday, including Junior's universally ill-fated attempts to pull drivers over, and Dangle's bicycle woes. Familiar faces like Patton Oswalt, Toby Huss (Big Mike), and Dave Holmes (Leslie Frost) make appearances as well, furthering the show's ability to channel its singular original spirit.
Speaking of which, 'Reno 911!' left the air in 2009, but more than a decade later, its cultural commentaries hold up remarkably well. Revisit, for instance, the eighth episode of season five, presciently titled 'The Wall,' for a taste of the show's lasting satirical value. Quibi's reboot is similarly fearless, diving straight into the new politics of policing, transgenderism, paper straws, and gun control. Oswalt's character is basically Alex Jones. With the exception, perhaps, of 'It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia,' another holdover from the mid-aughts, there's just nothing like this on television anymore.
'Reno 911' is a good fit for Quibi's experimental model, which is to produce series with episodes under 10 minutes long, in vertical and horizontal formats optimized for smartphone viewing. The show actually used to air 'hodgepodge' episodes with no narrative string at all, basically just a collection of sketches. There's continuity in the 'Quibi' episodes, at least the three made available to press before launch day, which works well for breezy shows like 'Reno.'
There's something odd about watching 'Reno 911!' in 2020, about seeing its unchanged crassness applied to a world where cultural pressures have reined in most satire—even most good satire. Everything is overproduced and overwritten, two qualities that could never be used to characterize 'Reno 911!' Thank goodness for that. It's liberating to revisit comedy's not-so-distance past, and actually kind of revealing as to how exhausting those overproduced and overwritten shows have started to become.
What makes the consequences of political correctness difficult to measure is that we can't fully know what's not being made. The 'Reno' reboot actually functions as a glimpse into the magnitude of that loss. Of course, Quibi's decision to bring the show back without sanding away of its edges indicates some in the industry are still willing to test those waters, convinced there's a market for genuinely controversial comedy. Between YouTube and the booming podcast industry, that should be abundantly clear.
Like Michael Scott, a character even Steve Carrell believes wouldn't fly in today's Hollywood, the bumbling idiots of the Reno PD are used to satirize the ugliness of racism and sexism and xenophobia. Our laughter reinforces society's intolerance for bigotry. That's a worthy effort, and comedy is one of our best tools to tackle it.
I don't know how 'Reno' will be perceived by critics in legacy media, who typically enforce the narrowing standards of acceptable discourse, even if they allow for a little more wiggle room than the left's most humorless detractors. For 2020, the writing on 'Reno's' seventh season is bold. It's also great.
I'll close by acknowledging what's behind the shameless enthusiasm of this glowing review. 'Reno 911!' and 'Strangers With Candy' and 'The Sarah Silverman Program' were what I watched when my parents weren't home. They were what taught me the value of satire. They were what made me appreciate the intellectual freedom that comes with comedy. But nostalgia aside, the reboot is worth your time.
Besides, if you don't watch, you will never know what happened to Trudy Wiegel's hamster. And trust me, you're going to want to know what happened to Trudy Wiegel's hamster.
KEYWORDS:comedy; quibi; reno911; television; televisionreview; tv; tvreview
I once knew a police officer who said they had someone on the force that matched each Reno 911 character.
Tacos! Tacos! Tacos! Tacos!
'The service launched on April 6, 2020.[8] On April 14, the company announced it had seen 1.7 million downloads of the Quibi app in its release week.[9]'
So it's gone viral.
No, but I'm pretty sure she is.
C'mon, boy! Find the sloppy joe!
We used to joke about my brother wearing hot pants at work.
Download Free Reno 911 Sheriff Patch Software Windows 7
In Quibi's hands, the show is back at its Bush-era peak, a relic from a time when few topics were off limits in comedy, and skillful humorists lampooned every one of them with equal vigor and delight.IOW, the last time a GOP President was willing to bend over and take it without fighting back.
Yea i really liked that show.
The funniest one was when one of them came into a shift meeting waving a lotto card and telling the shift commander to kiss his ass, and every name In the book cause he was rich and gonna quit.
The shift commander showed him the Newspaper with a headline about fake lotto ticket scams going around.
the Reno PD are used to satirize the ugliness of racism and sexism and xenophobia..'
Isn't that what damn near everyone does today over and above story and plot? I bet they got no end of guys who look just like me who are full of sneering hate for everybody. Now if there were some irreverence in the direction of institutionalized PC.. Air tc stats and performanceturks and caicos virtual.
They don't make television comedies like they used to.
Red Green nods
'Familiar faces like Patton Oswalt,'
One of the most disgusting Trump-haters out there.
So, is this 'comedy' clever and genuinely funny. Every comedy I try these days is crude and full of gutter humor, gay characters, smut, and low brow. I am not a prude. Swear works and gutter humor are not out of my arsenal of humor, done sparingly and cleverly on the rare occasion they are appropriate to humor. Seinfeld dealt with them very cleverly. Even Frasier could do gutter humor but with such dry wit it was genuinely funny.
Is this comedy actually funny and well written or is this more of the same post-2000 'humor' that is crude and disgusting.
Mom is rancid crap.
Two broke girls is unfunny tripe.
Anything with Charlie Sheen is toilet humor to the max. Download pokerstars para windows phone 7.
Any recommendations? Is this a funny show genuinely, or more of the same crap they have been flooding us with post 2000?
Download Free Reno 911 Sheriff Patch Software Update
I loved that show. Especially Terry the guy on skates.
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