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  1. Apr 14, 2009 · Subscribed. 23. 1.8K views 14 years ago. 2/5s of the Kids in The Hall - Kevin McDonald & Dave Foley performing on day 4 of Ships & Dip V. Special appearance by Craig Northey of the Odds...

    • 5 min
    • 1830
    • stanzig44
  2. At the same time, Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald were performing around Toronto (along with Luciano Casimiri) as The Kids in the Hall (KitH). In 1984, the two pairs met in Toronto and began performing regularly as KitH, with a rotating band of members, including Paul Bellini for a short time.

  3. Oct 4, 2019 · KITH featured comedians Bruce McCulloch, Dave Foley, Mark McKinney, Scott Thompson and Kevin McDonald. The show aired in Canada on CBC from 1988-1995.

    • Did Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald perform on 'Ships & Dip V'?1
    • Did Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald perform on 'Ships & Dip V'?2
    • Did Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald perform on 'Ships & Dip V'?3
    • Did Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald perform on 'Ships & Dip V'?4
    • Did Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald perform on 'Ships & Dip V'?5
    • The Kids in The Hall Adopted Their Name from A Sid Caesar Gag.
    • The Kids in The Hall Avoided Conversations About The Nature of Comedy.
    • The "Head Crusher" Made His Debut Much Earlier Than The Kids in The Hall Series.
    • It Was A The Kids in The Hall Fan Who Gave Them Cow eyes.
    • The Kids in The Hall Made only One (Super Divisive) Movie Together.
    • Brain Candy Was Made Under Incredibly Depressing circumstances.
    • The Kids in The Hall Stand by Their Most Controversial Gag.
    • “Girl Drink Drunk” Had An Unhappy Origin.
    • The Kids in The Hall Reformed to Make A Murder Mystery.

    Whenever Sid Caesar bombed a joke, he’d say that it had been written by “the kids in the hall,” referring to the young upstarts working for him in the NBC studio of Your Show of Shows. Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald were big Caesar fans, but they didn’t choose the name solely because of that admiration. The “kids” Caesar was goofing on in the 1950s ...

    There’s a cottage industry of comedians waxing comically about being funny (think Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee), and it makes sense to assume funny people are always discussing what makes things funny. Yet The Kids in the Hall shied away from navel gazing. “There was always a pooh-poohing of theoretical discussions,” Mark McKinney toldVulture. ...

    One of The Kids in the Hall's most famous characters was the Head Crusher, in which McKinney played a delusional (or was he?) man who tried to crush people’s heads by squinting through his thumb and forefinger. It turns out that he’s been a champion against yuppiedom since the beginning. “It was something that I created back in our club days,” McKi...

    The Kids in the Hall attracted a curious fanbase, including one fan in Vancouver who gave them a jar of cow eyes. But it wasn’t just a gift: He put them out on a plate and asked the Kids to chow down. “We didn’t eat that,” McDonald toldThe A.V. Club.

    Many TV comedies have tried to make the jump to feature films by trying to make their humor appeal to an even larger audience. That’s not what The Kids in the Hall did. They actually went even weirder when they made 1996’s Brain Candy, a film about a struggling pharmaceutical company that hits on a potent antidepressant which becomes a massive succ...

    A cult film through and through (read: a box office flop), Brain Candy also represented the end of the road for The Kids in the Hall. It came after their TV show was over, and when the group's members were forging their own paths. Foley, who’d found mainstream success with NewsRadio, left the group over creative differences, and lost his writing cr...

    One Kids in the Hall character who made the leap to their movie also ruffled a lot of feathers for those who couldn’t tell where the satirical line had been drawn. Cancer Boy was meant to mock celebrities who sought the spotlight with sick children, but a lot of people thought it was a bad taste jab aimed at the kids. The studio desperately wanted ...

    In another famous sketch, Foley plays a “grown man” corporate climber peer pressured into having alcohol for the first time. Eventually, the drinks that “taste like candy” ruin his life, hilariously. For McDonald, the idea for the gag came from a ruinous performance when McCulloch bombed throughout a show and then scolded the group, which depressed...

    The dissolution of the group after Brain Candy wasn’t the end for The Kids in the Hall. They’ve reunited a few times in the past two decades for live tours, but The Kids in the Hall: Death Comes to Townwas their first time returning to television, and the result is something tonally similar to their sketch show while structurally divergent. It foll...

  4. The Kids in the Hall: With Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney. The TV series of the Canadian sketch comedy troupe that, more often than not, puts bizarre, unique, and insane twists in their skits.

    • (11K)
    • 1988-10-16
    • Comedy
    • 25
  5. May 15, 2008 · The Kids In The Hall Concert History. 8 Concerts. The Kids in the Hall is a Canadian sketch comedy group formed in 1984, consisting of comedians Dave Foley, Kevin McDonald, Bruce McCulloch, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson.

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  7. Dec 17, 2022 · We spoke to two of the founders of Kids in the Hall, Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald, in May and asked what it was like to have their whole crew back together.