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・ The Weight of the World (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
・ The Weight of the World (Metal Church album)
・ The Weight of the World (The Beautiful Girls album)
・ The Weight of Water
・ The Weight of Water (film)
・ The Weight of Your Love
・ The Weight's on the Wheels
・ The Weight-Loss Cure "They" Don't Want You to Know About
・ The Weightless EP
・ The Weightroom
・ The Weiner, the Bun, and the Boob
・ The Weinstein Company
・ The Weir
・ The Weir Garden
・ The Weird
The Weird Al Show
・ The Weird and Wonderful Marmozets
・ The Weird Circle
・ The Weird Tapes
・ The Weird Villa
・ The Weird World of Blowfly
・ The Weird World of Blowfly (album)
・ The Weird, Weird West
・ The Weirding
・ The Weirdness
・ The Weirdos
・ The Weirdstone of Brisingamen
・ The Weiss School
・ The Welborn System
・ The Welch News


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The Weird Al Show : ウィキペディア英語版
The Weird Al Show

''The Weird Al Show'' is a television show hosted by "Weird Al" Yankovic. Produced in association with Dick Clark Productions and taped at NBC Studios, it aired on Saturday mornings on the CBS TV network. New episodes ran from September to December 1997; after that, the episodes were repeated until September 1998. The show was released on DVD on August 15, 2006. The show is similar to ''Pee-Wee's Playhouse'' which also premiered on CBS.
Al's television set is called "Al TV", the name of a number of Yankovic's television specials.
==CBS's reaction==
Major creative conflicts occurred between CBS, which considered the show an educational children's series, and Yankovic, whose humor style was more adult-oriented. The show was canceled after one season, along with several other series in the CBS Saturday morning lineup.
CBS sent various notes to the writers of the show after reviewing the scripts, asking the writers to "Yankocize" (i.e. make funny) the commercial-break bumper announcements that the network wrote to reinforce each episode's lesson (or as Al put it, make them suck a little less), as well as remove any "imitable behavior" from the scripts that children might want to mimic after seeing on TV.
The writers were often surprised not at what the censors took out, but what they left in — for example, a sketch (written and submitted as a joke) in which Baby and Papa Boolie commit suicide after listening to one too many of Fred Huggins' songs was being seriously considered by the network for use on the show. (The sketch was later rewritten to have Papa Boolie call a mental hospital to take Fred away.) The unused script of the unedited Fred Huggins sequence is role-played in an audio commentary for an episode on the DVD.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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