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On the Team

On the Team is an American documentary television series produced for the Noggin channel. It covers the experiences of a youth baseball team in Brooklyn as they prepare for the 2000 playoff games. The series premiered on Noggin on January 30, 2001. It started airing on Noggin's sister channel, Nickelodeon, on May 2, 2001. It was created by Lisa Wood Shapiro and executive-produced by Shapiro and Gus Reyes.

On the Team
Also known asNoggin's On the Team[1]
Genre
Created byLisa Wood Shapiro
ComposerChris Hajian
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes13
Production
Executive producers
Producers
Production locationsBrooklyn, New York
EditorJill Schweitzer
Camera setupVideotape; Multi-camera
Running time30 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkNoggin
ReleaseJanuary 30 (2001-01-30) –
April 24, 2001 (2001-04-24)

The show was first announced by Variety in November 2000.[3] According to an article in The New York Times, the idea stemmed from Lisa Wood Shapiro's wish to create a "cinéma vérité for kids."[6] She spent the summer of 2000 scouting different teams, looking for a group that demonstrated team spirit. Shapiro eventually chose the Camp Friendship Panthers, a team that played at Brooklyn's Prospect Park. Noggin greenlit a thirteen-episode series based on the team because the network "wanted a program about real kids doing real things."[7] Ahead of the show's premiere, former New York Mets player John Franco hosted promotional events for On the Team.[7]

On the Team debuted during Noggin's primetime block, The Hubbub, which was designed to allow viewers to interact with the show as it aired. Viewer comments were played live during interstitials and after each broadcast. The show was aimed at pre-teens.[8] Critical response to the series was positive, with The Los Angeles Times calling it "unexpectedly compelling true storytelling"[9] and The Star Democrat calling it better than most new adult documentaries at the time.[10]

Plot edit

The show chronicles the triumphs and tribulations of a diverse coed team of 9- and 10-year-old baseball players in Brooklyn as they learn to be a team, deal with hard work, and face disappointment. The team has 20 members: nine girls and 11 boys.

The team is led by their coach Bobby Gari, who played for the Panthers back in the 1980s, and his assistant Mr. Cruz (always called "Mr. C"), who tries to be a calming voice in the children's frenetic world.[6] The players include Stephanie, the daughter of Mr. C and an ace pitcher; Jarian, the team's best hitter; Jarra, a right fielder who is high-spirited and friends with everyone on the team; Christine, a left fielder who tries to be the team's personal cheering section; Jordan, who is stuck in a midseason batting slump; Kevin, Jordan's best friend who is better at batting; Aida, who wants to be a pitcher but has trouble throwing; and Justin, who plays short-stop and outfield.[6]

History edit

Production edit

The show was created by Lisa Wood Shapiro.[11] She likened the concept to "The Real World meets The Bad News Bears."[6] In an interview for The New York Times, she said "I definitely wanted to do some kind of cinéma vérité for kids, and I knew I wanted to do a sport. I was on a Little League baseball team [as a kid] and I was the only girl, and it was horrible. I always regretted that I didn't do sports more."[6] She chose baseball and spent the summer of 2000 searching for a baseball team that demonstrated team spirit. She chose the Camp Friendship Panthers because, while they were far from the best team, they all enjoyed playing and treated each other as friends.[7]

The crew spent over 100 hours taping the show, from tryouts to the final trophy day.[7] The Panthers were a racially and ethnically diverse group from modest urban backgrounds.[12] Tom Ascheim, the general manager of Noggin, said to the New York Daily News: "They live in a very real, urban society. We don't talk about it, we just show it."[7] Ascheim hoped that, after watching the series, children in other parts of the country would empathize with their urban counterparts.[7]

Gus Reyes executive-produced the series alongside Shapiro. Tom Donahue was a producer, and the show was edited by Reyes and Donahue's production company, Stolen Car Productions.[13] Music for the show was composed and performed in Queens, New York, by Chris Hajian.[14]

Broadcast edit

The series aired as part of The Hubbub, Noggin's primetime programming block.[15] Premieres aired Tuesdays through Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.[9] The Hubbub allowed viewers to interact with the show as it aired. Viewers could log onto Noggin's website, Noggin.com, to submit comments and questions about the show. These comments were played live during interstitials and after each episode.[16]

On May 2, 2001, Nickelodeon started airing On the Team on its main channel as well.[6] Nickelodeon aired it from May until June 22, 2001. In April 2002, Noggin changed its lineup to add a block called The N, which included all of its tween and teen-oriented shows. On the Team was deemed to "skew old enough to fit the new mandate,"[8] and it was announced by Kidscreen that the show would move to a new timeslot on The N.[8] Reruns aired during The N until December 21, 2003.

Promotions edit

Former New York Mets player John Franco hosted a promotional event for On the Team in January 2001, celebrating the upcoming launch of the show.[7] The series was previously announced by the magazine Variety on November 8, 2000.[3] One of Noggin's parent companies, Viacom, first registered the show as a trademark on September 11, 2000.[1]

Noggin heavily featured the show on their website in mid-2001.[17] It created a "Fantasy Baseball League" game to coincide with On the Team, which featured segments called "Rules of Baseball" and "Baseball Lingo."[16] In mid-2001, the top ten players of the game won a Noggin package of prizes. The top 100 players were inducted into an online list of players called the On the Team Hall of Fame. The Noggin site also included an element called "On the Team's Calculator" which allowed sport players to catalogue their scores.[16]

Episodes edit

The show has 13 episodes in total. The first episode features three intertwined stories: Coach Bobby stressing the importance of commitment during batting practice, Stephanie visiting her grandparents, and Aida trying to prove that she can become the team pitcher.[2]

Episodes
No. Title Original air date
1 "The Making of a Ball Player" January 30, 2001[18]
2 "Picking the Panthers" January 31, 2001[18]
3 "Becoming a Team" February 13, 2001[18]
4 "Practice in Life" February 20, 2001[19]
5 "Everyone's Friend" February 27, 2001[19]
6 "Picking the All Stars" March 6, 2001[20]
7 "To Quit or Not to Quit" March 13, 2001[20]
8 "Striking Out" March 20, 2001[20]
9 "Practice Makes Perfect" March 27, 2001[20]
10 "It's Only a Game" Apr 3, 2001[21]
11 "Making the Grade" Apr 10, 2001[21]
12 "The Re-Match" Apr 17, 2001[21]
13 "Trophy Day" Apr 24, 2001[21]

Reception edit

Critical response to the series was positive. Lynne Heffley of Los Angeles Times praised the show, calling it "unexpectedly compelling true storytelling" that "scores" in comparison to Big Kids, a British co-production that also aired on Noggin.[9] Heffley enjoyed the show's multi-layered approach to portraying both physical and emotional sides of baseball, writing that "drama, suspense and human interest are captured in the camera's eye ... there's dimension as well as action aplenty."[9] In an article for The Star Democrat, Evan Levine of the Newspaper Enterprise Association called the show better than most adult documentaries at the time, adding: "witness On the Team...they go from being the underdogs to a cohesive group of players, and the series will interest viewers most when it chronicles how the change came about. Viewers will also enjoy identifying with the different players."[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Official Gazette of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. United States Patent and Trademark Office. May 15, 2001. p. 233. SN 78-025,356. Viacom International Inc., New York, NY. Filed 9-11-2000: Noggin's On the Team
  2. ^ a b c . TV Guide. CBS Interactive. 2001. Archived from the original on August 29, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Bernstein, Paula (November 5, 2000). "Noggin adds new series to its lineup". Variety. Penske Media Corporation.
  4. ^ International Documentary: The Newsletter of the International Documentary Association. International Documentary Association. 2001. p. 35.
  5. ^ "The Creative Team of People Like Us". Louis Alvarez and Andrew Kolker. 2002. from the original on January 5, 2016. Most recently, through Hitchhiker, she executive produced and directed the new 13 episode documentary series for Noggin called On the Team.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Shattuck, Kathryn (June 17, 2001). "A Team Grows in Brooklyn". The New York Times. from the original on May 27, 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Shelby, Joyce. "No 'Bad News Bears': Prospect Park Little Leaguers making TV debut". New York Daily News. Tribune Publishing.
  8. ^ a b c Connell, Mike (January 3, 2002). "Noggin has tween educon on the brain". Kidscreen.
  9. ^ a b c d Heffley, Lynne (January 29, 2001). "New on Noggin: Team, Yes, Big Kids, No". The Los Angeles Times.
  10. ^ a b Levine, Evan (June 10, 2001). "Reflections and reality on TV". The Star Democrat. Jim Normandin – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Wood Shapiro, Lisa (November 21, 2018). (Interview). Interviewed by Harold Reitman. Archived from the original on August 29, 2020.
  12. ^ Cable Vision: Volume 25. Cahners Business Information. October 2000. pp. 7–8. On the Team, a documentary series about a multiracial Little League team, 'is a gentle way of demonstrating diversity without having to talk about it.'
  13. ^ Reyes, Gus. . Archived from the original on June 16, 2004.
  14. ^ . Future plc. June 1, 2004. Archived from the original on August 29, 2020.
  15. ^ Umstead, R. Thomas (June 10, 2001). "Noggin Adds Interactive Series". Multichannel News.
  16. ^ a b c . The Family Screen Scene. May 2001. Archived from the original on June 7, 2002. At the end of the season, the top ten teams win a Noggin package of prizes.
  17. ^ . Noggin LLC. Viacom International. Archived from the original on June 9, 2001.
  18. ^ a b c . Excite.com. InterActiveCorp. May 7, 2001. Archived from the original on May 7, 2001. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  19. ^ a b . Excite.com. InterActiveCorp. June 25, 2001. Archived from the original on June 25, 2001. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  20. ^ a b c d . Excite.com. InterActiveCorp. May 15, 2001. Archived from the original on May 15, 2001. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  21. ^ a b c d . Excite.com. InterActiveCorp. July 9, 2001. Archived from the original on July 9, 2001. Retrieved February 22, 2021.

External links edit

team, american, documentary, television, series, produced, noggin, channel, covers, experiences, youth, baseball, team, brooklyn, they, prepare, 2000, playoff, games, series, premiered, noggin, january, 2001, started, airing, noggin, sister, channel, nickelode. On the Team is an American documentary television series produced for the Noggin channel It covers the experiences of a youth baseball team in Brooklyn as they prepare for the 2000 playoff games The series premiered on Noggin on January 30 2001 It started airing on Noggin s sister channel Nickelodeon on May 2 2001 It was created by Lisa Wood Shapiro and executive produced by Shapiro and Gus Reyes On the TeamAlso known asNoggin s On the Team 1 GenreDocumentary 2 Baseball 2 Created byLisa Wood ShapiroComposerChris HajianCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons1No of episodes13ProductionExecutive producersLisa Wood Shapiro Gus Reyes 3 ProducersTom Ascheim Maude Chilton Tom Donahue Jarret Engle 4 Production locationsBrooklyn New YorkEditorJill SchweitzerCamera setupVideotape Multi cameraRunning time30 minutesProduction companiesHitchhiker Films 5 Noggin LLC Stolen Car ProductionsOriginal releaseNetworkNogginReleaseJanuary 30 2001 01 30 April 24 2001 2001 04 24 The show was first announced by Variety in November 2000 3 According to an article in The New York Times the idea stemmed from Lisa Wood Shapiro s wish to create a cinema verite for kids 6 She spent the summer of 2000 scouting different teams looking for a group that demonstrated team spirit Shapiro eventually chose the Camp Friendship Panthers a team that played at Brooklyn s Prospect Park Noggin greenlit a thirteen episode series based on the team because the network wanted a program about real kids doing real things 7 Ahead of the show s premiere former New York Mets player John Franco hosted promotional events for On the Team 7 On the Team debuted during Noggin s primetime block The Hubbub which was designed to allow viewers to interact with the show as it aired Viewer comments were played live during interstitials and after each broadcast The show was aimed at pre teens 8 Critical response to the series was positive with The Los Angeles Times calling it unexpectedly compelling true storytelling 9 and The Star Democrat calling it better than most new adult documentaries at the time 10 Contents 1 Plot 2 History 2 1 Production 2 2 Broadcast 2 3 Promotions 3 Episodes 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot editThe show chronicles the triumphs and tribulations of a diverse coed team of 9 and 10 year old baseball players in Brooklyn as they learn to be a team deal with hard work and face disappointment The team has 20 members nine girls and 11 boys The team is led by their coach Bobby Gari who played for the Panthers back in the 1980s and his assistant Mr Cruz always called Mr C who tries to be a calming voice in the children s frenetic world 6 The players include Stephanie the daughter of Mr C and an ace pitcher Jarian the team s best hitter Jarra a right fielder who is high spirited and friends with everyone on the team Christine a left fielder who tries to be the team s personal cheering section Jordan who is stuck in a midseason batting slump Kevin Jordan s best friend who is better at batting Aida who wants to be a pitcher but has trouble throwing and Justin who plays short stop and outfield 6 History editProduction edit The show was created by Lisa Wood Shapiro 11 She likened the concept to The Real World meets The Bad News Bears 6 In an interview for The New York Times she said I definitely wanted to do some kind of cinema verite for kids and I knew I wanted to do a sport I was on a Little League baseball team as a kid and I was the only girl and it was horrible I always regretted that I didn t do sports more 6 She chose baseball and spent the summer of 2000 searching for a baseball team that demonstrated team spirit She chose the Camp Friendship Panthers because while they were far from the best team they all enjoyed playing and treated each other as friends 7 The crew spent over 100 hours taping the show from tryouts to the final trophy day 7 The Panthers were a racially and ethnically diverse group from modest urban backgrounds 12 Tom Ascheim the general manager of Noggin said to the New York Daily News They live in a very real urban society We don t talk about it we just show it 7 Ascheim hoped that after watching the series children in other parts of the country would empathize with their urban counterparts 7 Gus Reyes executive produced the series alongside Shapiro Tom Donahue was a producer and the show was edited by Reyes and Donahue s production company Stolen Car Productions 13 Music for the show was composed and performed in Queens New York by Chris Hajian 14 Broadcast edit The series aired as part of The Hubbub Noggin s primetime programming block 15 Premieres aired Tuesdays through Thursdays at 7 30 p m 9 The Hubbub allowed viewers to interact with the show as it aired Viewers could log onto Noggin s website Noggin com to submit comments and questions about the show These comments were played live during interstitials and after each episode 16 On May 2 2001 Nickelodeon started airing On the Team on its main channel as well 6 Nickelodeon aired it from May until June 22 2001 In April 2002 Noggin changed its lineup to add a block called The N which included all of its tween and teen oriented shows On the Team was deemed to skew old enough to fit the new mandate 8 and it was announced by Kidscreen that the show would move to a new timeslot on The N 8 Reruns aired during The N until December 21 2003 Promotions edit Former New York Mets player John Franco hosted a promotional event for On the Team in January 2001 celebrating the upcoming launch of the show 7 The series was previously announced by the magazine Variety on November 8 2000 3 One of Noggin s parent companies Viacom first registered the show as a trademark on September 11 2000 1 Noggin heavily featured the show on their website in mid 2001 17 It created a Fantasy Baseball League game to coincide with On the Team which featured segments called Rules of Baseball and Baseball Lingo 16 In mid 2001 the top ten players of the game won a Noggin package of prizes The top 100 players were inducted into an online list of players called the On the Team Hall of Fame The Noggin site also included an element called On the Team s Calculator which allowed sport players to catalogue their scores 16 Episodes editThe show has 13 episodes in total The first episode features three intertwined stories Coach Bobby stressing the importance of commitment during batting practice Stephanie visiting her grandparents and Aida trying to prove that she can become the team pitcher 2 Episodes No Title Original air date1 The Making of a Ball Player January 30 2001 18 2 Picking the Panthers January 31 2001 18 3 Becoming a Team February 13 2001 18 4 Practice in Life February 20 2001 19 5 Everyone s Friend February 27 2001 19 6 Picking the All Stars March 6 2001 20 7 To Quit or Not to Quit March 13 2001 20 8 Striking Out March 20 2001 20 9 Practice Makes Perfect March 27 2001 20 10 It s Only a Game Apr 3 2001 21 11 Making the Grade Apr 10 2001 21 12 The Re Match Apr 17 2001 21 13 Trophy Day Apr 24 2001 21 Reception editCritical response to the series was positive Lynne Heffley of Los Angeles Times praised the show calling it unexpectedly compelling true storytelling that scores in comparison to Big Kids a British co production that also aired on Noggin 9 Heffley enjoyed the show s multi layered approach to portraying both physical and emotional sides of baseball writing that drama suspense and human interest are captured in the camera s eye there s dimension as well as action aplenty 9 In an article for The Star Democrat Evan Levine of the Newspaper Enterprise Association called the show better than most adult documentaries at the time adding witness On the Team they go from being the underdogs to a cohesive group of players and the series will interest viewers most when it chronicles how the change came about Viewers will also enjoy identifying with the different players 10 References edit a b Official Gazette of the United States Patent and Trademark Office United States Patent and Trademark Office May 15 2001 p 233 SN 78 025 356 Viacom International Inc New York NY Filed 9 11 2000 Noggin s On the Team a b c On the Team episode list on TV Guide TV Guide CBS Interactive 2001 Archived from the original on August 29 2020 a b c Bernstein Paula November 5 2000 Noggin adds new series to its lineup Variety Penske Media Corporation International Documentary The Newsletter of the International Documentary Association International Documentary Association 2001 p 35 The Creative Team of People Like Us Louis Alvarez and Andrew Kolker 2002 Archived from the original on January 5 2016 Most recently through Hitchhiker she executive produced and directed the new 13 episode documentary series for Noggin called On the Team a b c d e f Shattuck Kathryn June 17 2001 A Team Grows in Brooklyn The New York Times Archived from the original on May 27 2015 a b c d e f g Shelby Joyce No Bad News Bears Prospect Park Little Leaguers making TV debut New York Daily News Tribune Publishing a b c Connell Mike January 3 2002 Noggin has tween educon on the brain Kidscreen a b c d Heffley Lynne January 29 2001 New on Noggin Team Yes Big Kids No The Los Angeles Times a b Levine Evan June 10 2001 Reflections and reality on TV The Star Democrat Jim Normandin via Newspapers com Wood Shapiro Lisa November 21 2018 Becoming a Writer with Dyslexia with Lisa Wood Shapiro Interview Interviewed by Harold Reitman Archived from the original on August 29 2020 Cable Vision Volume 25 Cahners Business Information October 2000 pp 7 8 On the Team a documentary series about a multiracial Little League team is a gentle way of demonstrating diversity without having to talk about it Reyes Gus About Us Stolen Car Productions Archived from the original on June 16 2004 JECO Opens NYC Film TV Commercial Music Complex Future plc June 1 2004 Archived from the original on August 29 2020 Umstead R Thomas June 10 2001 Noggin Adds Interactive Series Multichannel News a b c From Underdogs to TV Stars Noggin s On the Team is on Nickelodeon The Family Screen Scene May 2001 Archived from the original on June 7 2002 At the end of the season the top ten teams win a Noggin package of prizes On the Team at Noggin com Noggin LLC Viacom International Archived from the original on June 9 2001 a b c Excite TV On the Team Excite com InterActiveCorp May 7 2001 Archived from the original on May 7 2001 Retrieved February 22 2021 a b Excite TV On the Team Excite com InterActiveCorp June 25 2001 Archived from the original on June 25 2001 Retrieved February 22 2021 a b c d Excite TV On the Team Excite com InterActiveCorp May 15 2001 Archived from the original on May 15 2001 Retrieved February 22 2021 a b c d Excite TV On the Team Excite com InterActiveCorp July 9 2001 Archived from the original on July 9 2001 Retrieved February 22 2021 External links editOn the Team at IMDb nbsp On the Team on TV Guide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title On the Team amp oldid 1203395536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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