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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Redirect Шаблон:Infobox television

George Lopez, commonly referred to as The George Lopez Show,[1] is an American sitcom created by George Lopez, Bruce Helford and Robert Borden, which originally aired for six seasons, consisting of 120 episodes, on ABC from March 27, 2002, to May 8, 2007. Helford and Borden also serve as showrunners and are executive producers. The show stars the titular comedian George Lopez, who plays a fictionalized version of himself, featuring his life at work and his family life in Los Angeles, California.

Series synopsis

Файл:GeorgeLopezsitcomcast.jpg
The season 4 cast of George Lopez (from left to right): Valente Rodriguez as Ernie Cardenas, Constance Marie with Luis Armand Garcia as Angie and Max Lopez, Emiliano Díez as Vic Palmero, Belita Moreno as Benny Lopez, George Lopez as George Lopez, and Masiela Lusha as Carmen Lopez.

The comedy revolves around a fictionalized portrayal of Lopez who works at the Powers Brothers aviation factory. George raises daughter Carmen and dyslexic son Max with his wife Angie, after surviving a miserable, dysfunctional childhood at the hands of his neglectful alcoholic mother Benny, who is portrayed as selfish and cold-hearted. Other characters include Angie's indulgent father, wealthy doctor Vic Palmero, who is not very fond of George at first; and George's best childhood friend Ernie Cardenas, noted for his socially-awkward behavior and unsuccessful attempts at dating. After Carmen's departure from the series, Angie's overindulged niece Veronica moved in, laden with a large trust fund that is entrusted to George's care.

Multiple storylines in the series are established through the unveiling of a secret guarded by Benny throughout George's whole childhood, most notably the discovery that his father Manny is still alive after Benny had convinced George that he died. Throughout the second and third seasons, George tries to locate his father; when Manny is finally introduced, he turns out to be a stubborn but successful businessman who is now married to a woman named Lydia with whom he has more children including a second George Lopez. Manny's personality was commonly depicted as being abusive toward his son and former wife in his early appearances. Upon meeting as adults and George about to donate a kidney to Manny, he dies of kidney disease. Much to George's fury, a final letter from Manny prohibited him and his family from attending his funeral in protection of his reputation.

Episodes

Шаблон:Main List of George Lopez episodes

Characters

Шаблон:Main

Character Portrayed by Seasons
1 2 3 4 5 6
George Edward Lopez George Edward Lopez colspan=6 Шаблон:CMain
Angelina "Angie" Lopez (née Palmero) Constance Marie colspan=6 Шаблон:CMain
Ernesto "Ernie" Cardenas Valente Rodriguez colspan=6 Шаблон:CMain
Maximilian "Max" Victor Roberto Magic Johnson Lopez Luis Armand Garcia colspan=6 Шаблон:CMain
Carmen Consuelo Lopez Masiela Lusha colspan=5 Шаблон:CMain colspan=1 Шаблон:CGuestШаблон:Efn
Benita "Benny" Lopez (née Diaz) Belita Moreno colspan=6 Шаблон:CMain
Dr. Victor "Vic" Garcia Lantigua Palmero Emiliano Díez colspan=1 Шаблон:CNone colspan=2 Шаблон:CRecurring colspan=3 Шаблон:CMain
Veronica Ann Palmero Aimee Garcia colspan=4 Шаблон:CNone colspan=1 Шаблон:CRecurring colspan=1 Шаблон:CMain

Production

Conception

Comedian George Lopez had been performing standup throughout the early 1990s, expressing interest in having his own comedy television show like Seinfeld.[2] Lopez was only willing to do a show if it meant that the roles were not demeaning to Latinos, vowing never to play a murderer, drug dealer or gang member.[2] With an absence of TV deals, he continued to perform standup through the 1990s and into the 2000s.[2] In August 2000, after being given one of Lopez's comedy albums to listen to, actress Sandra Bullock saw Lopez perform live at the Brea Improv Comedy Club.[3] Bullock had been interested in developing a TV show with a Latino storyline, being concerned about the lack of visibility for Latinos on American television.[3] Bullock approached Lopez backstage after the show and made her pitch to produce and star in a situational comedy centered around the comedian.[4]

Though Bullock had connections through Hollywood, The George Lopez Show was not an easy sell.[5] Bullock sought the help of Bruce Helford (who created The Drew Carey Show and had been a head writer for Roseanne), and, due to his history with ABC on those shows, became a co-creator and executive producer of Lopez's show.[5] Bullock, Helford, and two of the show's other executive producers met with ABC executives later that month, and the network tested the show with 4 episodes, before committing to 13 episodes the following fall and eventually adding an additional 9.[4][5] Lopez was given full starring, creator, producer and writer credits for the show.[4] The George Lopez Show was seen as an attempt from ABC to diversify their programming, while still appealing to the widest possible audience.[4] ABC executives were hopeful that Lopez's humor and relatability would draw a large family audience, focusing on marketing the series as much as possible.[4] The network bought promotional time for the show on Spanish-language networks, and took out full-page ads in some magazines.[4]

Lopez drew much of the material for the show from his own life experiences, especially his upbringing in the San Fernando Valley.[4] Upon the series debut, Lopez became one of the few Latinos to star in a television comedy series, following in the footsteps of Desi Arnaz, Freddie Prinze, and John Leguizamo.

Casting

For the first five seasons, the show had an all-Latino cast with the exception of Albanian American actress Masiela Lusha, who played George's daughter Carmen. During the show's fifth season, Aimee Garcia was cast as George's niece, Veronica.

Music

The show's theme song is "Low Rider", performed by War. The theme plays in the opening credits and was present when the show aired on ABC as well as syndication, but was replaced in the DVD releases of all seasons except 1 episode due to licensing costs. At the 9th ALMA Awards in 2007, George Lopez called the song the "Chicano National Anthem".

Cancellation

Шаблон:One source The series finale aired on May 8, 2007, after the show was canceled by ABC.[6] According to Lopez, ABC prime-time entertainment president Steve McPherson called him over the weekend and explained that the network would lose money if the show was picked up again, and that it wasn't doing well financially.[7] Lopez stated that the explanation was "painful to hear," noting that the show had four different time slots in only five years and had to constantly compete against shows like American Idol, yet the final season of the show was still able to outperform a comedy series that was renewed by ABC: Notes from the Underbelly. Lopez said that ABC "dealt with us from the bottom of the deck" and that it was "hard to take after what was a good run."[7]

Lopez attributed the cancellation in part to the fact that the show was not produced directly by ABC Studios, but instead by Warner Bros. Television.[7] Lopez also criticized ABC's decision to approve the show Cavemen, being perplexed at the circumstances: "So a Chicano can't be on TV, but a caveman can?" According to Lopez, 170 staff members who worked on the show lost their jobs. Lopez explained that he "took the five years of good, and I did a lot with the good. My popularity, I was involved in charities, I overcame my illness, all on TV. I shared all of that with America—every secret I had... Every emotion. Everything was open to the show. And what happens?"[7]

In 2021, Lopez revealed that a reboot of the show was sold to Netflix several years ago but a former Warner Bros. Television president had squashed the potential series and "made a point to purposely not have the reboot ever happen".[8]

Distribution

Broadcast and syndication

The show entered syndication one month after the series finale on ABC, and is distributed by Warner Bros. Television Distribution. The show aired in broadcast syndication on independent stations, and affiliates of Fox, The CW and MyNetworkTV as well as The CW Plus stations in the United States from 2007 to 2011 and on Telelatino in Canada. The show moved to ION Television on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011.[9] George Lopez aired on TBS from 2020 until 2023.[10][11]

On March 8, 2007, it was announced that George Lopez would join the Nick at Nite lineup. It first aired on Nick at Nite on September 10, 2007—it was the most current non-original show to air on Nick at Nite[12] (until it was announced that Everybody Hates Chris would join the lineup, followed by The Goldbergs and Mom and currently Young Sheldon). To this date, it continues to be their highest-rated series and one of cable's best for an off-network sitcom. On September 9, 2020, the show was removed from syndication on Nick at Nite, ending its almost 13-year run on the network. The series was also shown on Paramount Global sister networks MTV Tres and TV Land.

Never a major hit in primetime, the show became an unexpected success in syndication. Many markets also moved the show from overnight timeslots to more desirable ones.[13]

Episodes from the first four seasons of George Lopez do not use those respective seasons' opening titles, the season five version is used instead (this is evident as Emiliano Diez is credited in the sequence, which is slightly longer than how they were originally broadcast on ABC, though there is also a short version also used in syndication that also differs from the original short opening credits that does not credit him for seasons 1–3, even though Diez did not make his first guest appearance until season two and did not become a cast regular until season four); the final two seasons use those seasons' appropriate versions of the opening credits.

Home media

On April 17, 2007, Warner Home Video released seasons 1 and 2 on DVD in Region 1.[14] After over six years since the release of the first and second seasons, Warner Home Video released the third season on July 16, 2013.[15] The fourth season was released on June 23, 2015.[16] The fifth season was released on August 18, 2015.[17] The sixth and final season was released on November 24, 2015.[18]

Online media

The complete series was also published in high definition on the iTunes Store and Amazon Video. The show's theme song "Low Rider" is intact in these releases.[19][20] The series became available to stream on Peacock on July 15, 2020.[21]

Reception

Ratings

Season Timeslot Season premiere Season finale TV season Rank Viewers (in millions)
1 Wednesday 8:30 pm March 27, 2002 April 17, 2002 2001–02 70 9.0[22]
2 October 2, 2002 May 14, 2003 2002–03 50 10.4[23]
3 Friday 8:00 pm September 26, 2003 May 21, 2004 2003–04 96 7.4[24]
4 Tuesday 8:30 pm September 28, 2004 May 17, 2005 2004–05 79 7.2[25]
5 Wednesday 8:00 pm October 5, 2005 April 12, 2006 2005–06 82 7.2[26]
6 January 24, 2007 May 8, 2007 2006–07 95 6.1[27]

Accolades

Association Year Category Nominee(s) Result Ref
ALMA Awards 2006 Outstanding Actor in a Television Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Television Series Belita Moreno Шаблон:Nominated
Outstanding Script for a Television Drama or Comedy (for episode "George Discovers Benny's Silli-Con Job") Luisa Leschin Шаблон:Nominated
2007 Outstanding Television Series, Miniseries or Television Movie George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Outstanding Actress — Television Series, Miniseries or Television Movie Constance Marie Шаблон:Nominated
Outstanding Supporting Actress — Television Series, Miniseries or Television Movie Aimee Garcia Шаблон:Nominated
Belita Moreno Шаблон:Nominated
ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards 2003 Top TV Series Harold R. Brown
Lonnie Jordan
Charlies Miller
Howard E. Scott
Шаблон:Won
BET Comedy Awards 2004 Outstanding Comedy Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Casting Society of America 2002 Best Casting for TV, Comedy Pilot ("Prototype") Mary V. Buck
Susan Edelman
Шаблон:Nominated [28]
Emmy Awards (Creative Arts) 2004 Outstanding Cinematography for a Multi-Camera Series (for episode "Bringing Home the Bacon") Peter Smokler Шаблон:Nominated [29]
2005 Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series (for episode "Leave it to Lopez/"The Simple Life"/"Trouble in Paradise") John Shaffner
Judi Giovanni
Шаблон:Won [30]
GLAAD Media Awards 2003 Outstanding Individual Episode (In a Series Without a Regular Gay Character) (for episode "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Honey?") George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Humanitas Prize Awards 2006 30 Minute Network Syndicated Television (for episode "The Kidney Stays in the Picture") Jim Hope Шаблон:Nominated
Image Awards (NAACP) 2004 Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
2005 Шаблон:Nominated
2006 Шаблон:Nominated
2007 Шаблон:Nominated
Imagen Foundation Awards 2003 Best Primetime Comedy Series — Television George Lopez Шаблон:Won
2004 Best Primetime Series — Comedy George Lopez Шаблон:Won
Best Actor in a Television Comedy George Lopez Шаблон:Won
Best Actress in a Television Comedy Constance Marie Шаблон:Won
Best Supporting Actress in a Television Comedy Belita Moreno Шаблон:Won
2005 Best Primetime Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actor — Television George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actress — Television Constance Marie Шаблон:Nominated
2006 Best Primetime Series George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actor — Television George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actress — Television Constance Marie Шаблон:Nominated
2007 Best Primetime Program George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actor — Television George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Best Actress — Television Constance Marie Шаблон:Nominated
Best Supporting Actress — Television Aimee Garcia Шаблон:Nominated
Teen Choice Awards 2003 Choice TV Breakout Show George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Choice TV Breakout Star — Male George Lopez Шаблон:Nominated
Young Artist Awards 2003 Best Family Television Series (Comedy or Drama) George Lopez Шаблон:Won
Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) — Leading Young Actress Masiela Lusha Шаблон:Won
Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) — Young Actor Ten or Under Luis Armand Garcia Шаблон:Nominated
2004 Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) — Leading Young Actress Masiela Lusha Шаблон:Won
2004 Most Popular Mom & Pop in a Television Series George Lopez
Constance Marie
Шаблон:Nominated
2005 Best Performance in a Television Series — Recurring Young Actor J.B. Gaynor Шаблон:Nominated

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Wikiquote Шаблон:Wikinews

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