Home » This Was One Of The Strangest Sitcom Cameos Of A Post-Apocalyptic Movie Car: Cold Start

This Was One Of The Strangest Sitcom Cameos Of A Post-Apocalyptic Movie Car: Cold Start

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Remember Chris Elliot? Sure you do. I always liked Chris Elliot’s cocky moron sort of persona that I used to see on the old David Letterman show, and sure, even if “Chris Elliot” was just the product of mid-1980s animatronics and special effects, he was still hilarious in his own strange, surreal way. He also had a goofy and short-lived sitcom from 1990 to 1992 called Get A Life which was about Chris as a 30-something guy who still lived at home and had a paper route; the show seemed on the surface to be like a fairly normal sitcom, but was more of a parody of sitcoms and progressively got more and more unhinged. For example, here’s how Wikipedia describes an episode that was a sort of parody of the movie E.T.:

One of the more controversial episodes featured a character named Spewey the Alien (a parody of the films Mac and Me and E.T.), an extraterrestrial who secretes mucus from under his scales (which Chris proceeds to drink and call the “nectar of the Gods”) and projectile vomits when he becomes emotionally overwrought. At the end of the episode, Chris and Gus barbecued and ate Spewey, although the creature was resurrected inside their refrigerator.

You can see the whole thing right here, because all the episodes seem to be online now, thanks to I guess Fox assuming there’s zero value here. Anyway, it’s nice and strange. There’s an automotive reason I’m bringing all this up, of course: one episode featured a massive truck custom-built by famous car customizer Dean Jeffries (the man who pinstriped James Dean’s “Li’l Bastard” Porsche 550 Spyder, worked on the Batmobile, and made famous show rods like the Mantaray) which was built for a goofy 1970s post-apocalypse movie called Damnation Alley. Here’s the trailer!

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That massive truck-like-thing that looks a bit like a more elegant Cybertruck is the Landmaster, and it’s really incredible because it’s about as fully functional as a movie prop fictional vehicle is likely to get. Built on an articulated truck military vehicle chassis, the 11-ton machine actually drove and could hit speeds of 55 mph thanks to its 6.4-liter Ford V8, The Landmaster used the rear ends of two commercial trucks, an Allison truck transmission, and, as is mentioned in the movie, as many off-the-shelf commercial truck parts as possible so repairs and scavenging parts will be easier. It was great at crawling over obstacles and jumping small holes, and it was even amphibious.

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I remember seeing this thing outside of Jeffries’ shop near Burbank when I lived in Los Angeles; I’d drive past it and wonder about just what the hell that thing was, especially the remarkable tri-wheel setup it sported, which allowed it a remarkable ability to traverse obstacles and rough terrain, and probably rocks or large, stubborn tortoises. It’s said to have survived a 25-foot jump with no damage!

After it was used in the movie, the Landmaster did manage to pick up a few small roles here and there, but I think the most fascinating one is when it got a starring role in an episode of Get A Life, where it played the Paperboy 2000, a sophisticated robotic newspaper delivery system that had been banned in Eastern Europe. The episode focuses on Chris Elliot and all the other paperboys being replaced by the Paperboy 2000, and the sort of John Henry-esque man-vs-machine struggle that follows.

Here, you’re already not working, you may as well watch the whole episode!

Not to spoil anything, but the episode does end with what seems to be the Paperboy 2000 killing Chris. Of course, Chris dies in about half the episodes anyway, so that barely matters.

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I really like how little was done to alter the appearance of the Landmaster; the only changes involved were slapping a bunch of signs that read PAPERBOY 2000 on it and removing the side gun barrels, which were now newspaper-launching ports.

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The gag that this newspaper delivery robot is an 11-ton colossal, exhaust-spewing deathtruck I think works very well.

I’m not sure there’s another relatively famous hero vehicle that has gone from a grim and gritty Mad Max-type of movie to playing a role on an absurd sitcom other than the Landmaster, so you really have to admire the flexibility of this incredible machine.

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The Landmaster is still around; in 2016 it was bought by Gene Winfield’s Custom Shop and is now around Mojave, California, where it can be seen from the road by the shop. I don’t know if it still runs, but I wouldn’t be surprised. That thing is a beast.

Too bad it goes into murderous rampages when delivering newspapers.

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Piston Slap Yo Mama
Piston Slap Yo Mama
1 month ago

If there’s a cultural bellwether that affirmatively weeds out people I don’t want to hang out with, it’s Get a Life detractors and anyone who disparages Chris Elliott’s comedic talents.

While I’m here, add Schitt’s Creek to that list.

Jonee Eisen
Jonee Eisen
1 month ago

God bless Chris Elliott. His Cinemax special Action Family is a lost treasure:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dGRBv-js30&t=2s

I remember seeing the Paperboy 2000 sitting in a parking lot, or gas station off of the 101 just north of Hollywood for several years like 20 or so years ago. I don’t know if that was Dean Jeffries’s shop, or its next home, but it sure had presence.

Mike Holzer
Mike Holzer
1 month ago

Am I the only one who remembers this from the 1984 Amoco commercial “The Road Worrier”?

“Hey Road Worrier, how ya doin?!”

“I’m worried. . .”

“Good, good. Let me call my daughter for you. HEY HONEY! Road’s here!”

Truly awful, but it left a lasting impression on my teenaged self.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKXvHVCtBgU&list=FL9kvT5glHeYX5oE7dMPbiLA&index=8

Piston Slap Yo Mama
Piston Slap Yo Mama
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Holzer

You are a man among men my man: I was tragically unaware of that forgotten bit of pop culture flotsam and I love it.

James Carson
James Carson
1 month ago

Chris Elliott is the unfunniest funnyman Ive ever seen, cannot stand the guy. He always comes across as the earnest guy who doesn’t get how unfunny his attempts at humour are. First time I saw him was the guy under the stairs on Letterman. Saw Damnation Alley, bad, just bad.

Professor Chorls
Professor Chorls
1 month ago

The Landmaster! I’d 100% daily it.

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
1 month ago

I tried to watch the episode linked but it was too cringey for me. The acting was atrocious.

And something about laugh tracks make old shows unbearable for me. Way to ruin Seinfeld. They should remaster all the old sitcoms without the laughs. Even if it’s a live audience I hate it.

Frackle
Frackle
1 month ago

Get a Life is an incredible show. As a millennial I think of it as the best gen x humor, unhinged satire on old sitcom tropes without being smug about it (and Brian Doyle Murray’s in it). Chris Elliott and his dad (famed comedian Bob Elliott) also wrote a book called “Daddy’s Boy” that’s one of the funniest sendups of the tell all memoir. It’s usually a couple bucks used on Amazon.

Me3000
Me3000
1 month ago

For years I thought I saw it off of the 101 in hollywood. It was just sitting in a fenced yard. https://maps.app.goo.gl/YPTUsd5ZEcAFkVmB7

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago

Yeah! Get A Life was hilarious…the best episode by far was the toolbelt fight! (If you haven’t seen…watch it) Also, the 1st episode when they get stuck upside down on a roller coaster. I have fond memories of watching this show w/ my brothers. The Paperboy 2000/LandMaster is awesome
Also, the Cabin Boy movie was so stupid that it was funny (just like this show!)

MAX FRESH OFF
MAX FRESH OFF
1 month ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

My favorite is the submarine episode

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago
Reply to  MAX FRESH OFF

Yeah, that was hilarious when the Neptune 2000 drops through the floor

Óscar Morales Vivó
Óscar Morales Vivó
1 month ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

Personal fav is the one where they find radioactive waste under his place, becomes super-intelligent, proceeds to try striking rich by winning spelling bees.

США! США! США!
США! США! США!
1 month ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

I loved it too! I remember watching Cabin Boy in the theater. 5 people total in the theater. So stupid its funny is the best description. I felt the same way about Zoolander when I saw it in the theater.

Luscious Jackson
Luscious Jackson
1 month ago

If you spell pants with the letter “k” that means you watched Get a Life. Or if you remotely recall the community theater show Zoo Animals on Wheels. What a great show.

Angel "the Cobra" Martin
Angel "the Cobra" Martin
1 month ago

You gotta love a show with a laugh track. Try watching any comedy from the late 70’s to the mid 90’s and it’s all canned laughter. Makes it a tough watch for me.

ES
ES
1 month ago

hey now, there were some “taped in front of a live studio audience” too.

It’s funny though – if i watch something i’ve never seen a show before, the laugh track (audience?) is distracting, but if i’m rewatching the shows i grew up watching (TBNS, AITF, MASH, Cheers for examples), i don’t even notice unless the actors have to stop a beat to let the audience settle down.

Sometimes you couldn’t tell if Newhart was pausing a line for the audience to calm down, for Suzanne Pleshette to calm down, or because he was hadn’t decided on his next line.

Winsome Badger
Winsome Badger
1 month ago

I tried to call my LeMons team the “handsome boy modeling school” but no one else agreed….

Dummyhead
Dummyhead
1 month ago
Reply to  Winsome Badger

I’m guessing y’all couldn’t agree on who got to be “Sparkles”??

LTDScott
LTDScott
1 month ago
Reply to  Winsome Badger

I just recently learned it was the name of a hip hop group too.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handsome_Boy_Modeling_School

MAX FRESH OFF
MAX FRESH OFF
1 month ago
Reply to  LTDScott

“Prince Paul and Automator made me the best model on the runway in all the Balkan countries put together” – Father Guido Sarducci

Weddings/Birthdays/Whale Breachings
Weddings/Birthdays/Whale Breachings
1 month ago

The Filthy Whore is the greatest name in nautical cinema history.

Harvey Firebirdman
Harvey Firebirdman
1 month ago

He was pulling the wires out of that thing with his strong hand (/insert strong hand gif here)

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago

Idk man. Chris Elliott’s character in Schitt’s Creek was not a good character. Then again, Schitt’s Creek wasn’t really a good show, so it’s not his fault.

Ecsta C3PO
Ecsta C3PO
1 month ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

Thanks for saving me a google to figure out where I remember him from.

Data
Data
1 month ago
Reply to  Ecsta C3PO

I remember him from such movies as “There’s Something About Amy” and a small part where he plays a normal human being as part of the bridge crew on the Benthic Explorer in “The Abyss”. Feel free to read that in the voice of Troy Mclure.

Bleeder
Bleeder
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

I did read that in Troy McClure’s voice, thank you.

Dale Mitchell
Dale Mitchell
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

Think you meant ‘Something About Mary’

Am a fan of Chris Elliots work on Letterman!
Wish the late night comedy shows would go back to non-political humor, at least for most of the content. (Hard to avoid it though, when a certain orange clown is always writing your material for ya)

Last edited 1 month ago by Dale Mitchell
Data
Data
1 month ago
Reply to  Dale Mitchell

No, I was thinking about the sequel, “There’s Something About Amy” 🙂
Yes, I realized my mistake after the timer expired to edit and figured I would let it fly.

Andrew Daisuke
Andrew Daisuke
1 month ago
Reply to  Ecsta C3PO

he was the cameraman in Groundhog Day as well.

CPL Rabbit
CPL Rabbit
1 month ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

Schitt’s Creek is widely regarded as a very good show. After Season 1.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

His Everybody Loves Raymond character was also quite the creeper.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago

That show was effin’ hilarious, and predicted the whole failure-to-launch thing by about two decades. I remember his dad reminded me so much of my dad because he called everybody a “horse’s ass”.

Dummyhead
Dummyhead
1 month ago

I think the best episode was when Chris and his buddies put on the musical “Zoo Animals on Wheels”, and Chris’s sitcom dad (his real-life dad, comedian Bob Elliott!) in the audience asked his wife “Is it possible to die from embarrassment?” It was a truly demented show!

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  Dummyhead

That’s right, it was his real dad.

Alan Christensen
Alan Christensen
1 month ago

I wonder which came first: the idea for an episode about and automated paper delivery truck, or one of the writers seeing the Landmaster and thinking there might be an episode in it.

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
1 month ago

“Tri-wheel” is cool, and it has been used in mobility scooter prototypes that can climb stairs. What strikes me as odd, it doesn’t appear to have suspension. Looks hard mounted to the chassis, relying on air pressure of bulbous tires as the only shock absorption.

Last edited 1 month ago by Hoonicus
Ronald Pottol
Ronald Pottol
1 month ago
Reply to  Hoonicus

The triangle can pivot, giving a little suspension.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
1 month ago

To make the decade arc of this whole thing perfect, don’t forget that Damnation Alley starred two soon to be ’80s tv icons, Jan Michael Vincent and George Peppard!

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

Oh, yes, the Landmaster/Paperboy 2000!!
“You can see the whole thing right here, because all the episodes seem to be online now, thanks to I guess Fox assuming there’s zero value here.”
They actually released a complete DVD set of the show!! (From Shout! Factory.) Last summer I checked it out from my public library and proceeded to watch all the episodes over a few days during an unusually rainy spell; I couldn’t quite binge-watch the show because sometimes all that Chris Elliott would just get overwhelming so I would switch to a film and then switch back (there were holds on the DVD set at the library so I couldn’t renew it, hence the marathon viewing.) The first time I took such a break was after the Paperboy 2000 episode (season 1 episode 6) and the film I started watching was…Damnation Alley. My surprise at the concidence was such that my utterances of astonishment startled my poor napping cats awake (worry not, they quickly resumed their napping.) Somehow such serendipitous synchronicity felt most Chris Elliott-esque.

BubbaX
BubbaX
1 month ago

Damnation Alley famously saw its special effects budget get raided to cover cost overruns on the other sci-fi film released in 1977. So they had George Lucas to thank for the cockroach carpet and bad color-keying of the sky.
I rewatched it a couple years ago after a similar incident at a northern Jutland gas station involving midges. And, having read that Roger Zelazny denounced the movie, I read the original short story too. Let’s just say that Zelazny’s original plot of a biker taking a vaccine cross-country to save Boston isn’t exactly a prescient masterpiece. I mean, Harry Harrison got rightly pissed off when the execs decided that his tale of the 2020s, featuring global warming, mass extinctions, and an ever-wider gap between the wealthy elite and the rest of humanity, needed to have cannibalism in it as well. But Damnation Alley? That car is awesome.

10001010
10001010
1 month ago

Woogie!

Data
Data
1 month ago

I remember this episode of Get A Life. We had a 30 year old paperboy, and Doogie Howser, a 12 year old doctor. Times were strange back then. Anyone remember Fox’s sitcom about survivors of a nuclear holocaust? I had to Google the name, Woops! Someone should revive The Adventures of Briscoe County Jr.

As a huge Airwolf fan, it should also be mentioned that Damnation Alley starred Jan-Michael Vincent.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

Airwolf had the BEST 80s theme song!

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

Da
Da da da daaaa
DA da da daaa
Da da da da..daa.daa

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

Definitely the best from the 80’s, along with the first minute of “Buck Rogers” (before it goes all disco).
Not quite Five-Oh, which had both the best song and the best opening video.

Ben
Ben
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

I thought Airwolf was the coolest thing when I was little. Then I went back and tried to watch it as an adult. Oof.

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

Oh.

Oh no.

Don’t do that.

Data
Data
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

I own it on Blu-Ray and still enjoy it. Except “Tracks”. Airwolf vs lunatic with a bow and arrow; and not those fancy explosive ones Rambo had.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

Also, production on Damnation Alley apparently stopped for several days because Vincent wandered off on a peyote trip and couldn’t be located

JaredTheGeek
JaredTheGeek
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

I think we are ready for a Street Hawk reboot.

Genewich
Genewich
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

I loooved Briscoe County Jr. John Aston and Bruce Campbell! The Schwenke Twins! It was so weird and fun.

Israel Moore
Israel Moore
1 month ago
Reply to  Genewich

You can’t mention Bruce Campbell and not remember Jack Of All Trades!

Rob Schneider
Rob Schneider
1 month ago

I demand a comparison test between this, the Ark II, and the Dobbertin Surface Orbiter. You can throw in a WW II DUKW as a baseline.

Yes, I know the Ark II doesn’t float, but hey it’d be a reason to show off the Brubaker Box.

MaximillianMeen
MaximillianMeen
1 month ago
Reply to  Rob Schneider

The Ark II + the Brubaker-based Roamer is all I need in my post-apocalyptic 2-car garage.

I also love how a model of the Ark II was the basis for the Seeker spaceship in Space Academy, made by the same studio.

Israel Moore
Israel Moore
1 month ago

Ark II was my favorite Saturday morning show. My weekends were nothing until I had my half-hour fix of the Ark, the Roamer and Jean Marie Hon.

And then there was Jason of Star Command, with Sid Haig as Dragos. It was a kid’s show, but to me Darth Vader was a rank amateur.

Filmation was good when it was hot. Too bad Lou Schiemer screwed up everything.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  Rob Schneider

The BSG Colonial Land Ram must also be included.

Gerontius Garland
Gerontius Garland
1 month ago
Reply to  Rob Schneider

OMG, I was obsessed with the Dobbertin Surface Orbiter as a kid.

Ronald Pottol
Ronald Pottol
1 month ago
Reply to  Rob Schneider

But what about the Herkimer Battle Jitney?

Rob Schneider
Rob Schneider
1 month ago
Reply to  Ronald Pottol

Wow. I’d never heard of that one.

Ronald Pottol
Ronald Pottol
1 month ago
Reply to  Rob Schneider

Mystery Men was a wonderful box office failure.

Rob Schneider
Rob Schneider
1 month ago
Reply to  Ronald Pottol

Other Me says “I can relate”.

Last edited 1 month ago by Rob Schneider
StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

I need a Landmaster. There’s no way I’d abuse that kind of power on my daily commute…

Jbavi
Jbavi
1 month ago

I loved that show. It came in during my late high-school days when stupid and weird are at their highest value. I actually own a Get a Life promotional robe that a former Fox employee friend had but couldn’t bear to throw out. Anytime I see a guy with long dreads, I automatically think about the episode when Chris is the Health Inspector and a guy with long dreads is stirring them in a big kettle of soup

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