| A Whole New Ballgame | |
|---|---|
| Created by | John Peaslee Judd Pillot[1] | 
| Starring | Corbin Bernsen Julia Campbell Richard Kind John O'Hurley | 
| Country of origin | United States | 
| Original language | English | 
| No. of seasons | 1 | 
| No. of episodes | 11 (4 unaired) | 
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes | 
| Production companies | Bungalow 78 Productions Universal Television | 
| Original release | |
| Network | ABC | 
| Release | January 9 – March 13, 1995 | 
A Whole New Ballgame is an American sitcom that aired on ABC on Monday Night at 8:30PM from January 9, 1995, to March 13, 1995.[2] It replaced Blue Skies, a sitcom from the same creators, which featured several of the same actors and aired in the same timeslot in the fall.[3]
Premise
The series centered on Brent Sooner, an egotistical baseball player sidelined by the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike, who became a sportscaster for TV station WPLP in Milwaukee. Also shown were station manager Meg O'Donnell, weatherman Dr. Warner Bakerfield, anchorman Tad Sherman, and sales manager Dwight King.
Cast
- Corbin Bernsen as Brett Sooner
- Julia Campbell as Meg O'Donnell
- Richard Kind as Dwight King
- Stephen Tobolowsky as Dr. Warner Bakerfield
- John O'Hurley as Tad Sherman
Episodes
| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Opening Day" | Unknown | Unknown | January 9, 1995 | 
| 2 | "They Say It's Yer Birthday" | Barry Kemp | Judd Pillot & John Peaslee | January 16, 1995 | 
| 3 | "You Are What You Date" | Unknown | Unknown | January 23, 1995 | 
| 4 | "Brett's Beef" | Unknown | Unknown | February 13, 1995 | 
| 5 | "Horace Morgan Is Dead and Living in Milwaukee" | Unknown | Unknown | February 20, 1995 | 
| 6 | "With Brett You Get Eggroll" | Unknown | Unknown | February 27, 1995 | 
| 7 | "Twisted" | Unknown | Unknown | March 13, 1995 | 
| 8 | "The Make Out Movie" | TBD | TBD | UNAIRED | 
| 9 | "The Jumper" | TBD | TBD | UNAIRED | 
| 10 | "The Sexual Superheroine" | TBD | TBD | UNAIRED | 
| 11 | "Trouble Down Under" | TBD | TBD | UNAIRED | 
References
- ↑ New York Times (9 January 1995). "Familiar Faces in a Flurry of Midseason Sitcoms". New York Times. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
- ↑ The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 1305. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
- ↑ Sun Sentinel. "Polluted 'Blue Skies'". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
External links
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