Back in 2012 I moved out of my studio apartment, where I'd been living alone for several years, and into a house that I shared with a roommate who was never around. But, he paid for cable. Nearly every night while I ate dinner I watched Attack of the Show! (AOTS) until its cancelation a year later. Video game news meant nothing to me, but Chris Gore’s DVDuesday segments were always fun.
Candace Bailey and Sara Jean Underwood were easy on the eyes.
As I recall, Candace has retired in obscurity as a housewife. Good for her!
These days I listen to alarming number of podcasts, including Film Threat, which is hosted by Chris Gore, Michigan native and director of Attack of the Doc! While my exposure to AOTS was limited and the film assumes more than a casual familiarity with the show, I'm a sucker for labors of love if I'm even the least bit interested in the story.
This is a true labor of love.
Gore covers the history and development of G4TV, the short-lived videogame network where AOTS thrived. From the start, the show should have failed. The host was a PA on a different show, and his co-host was equally unknown (maybe you’ve heard of her now). The subject matter, geek culture, was niche.
Or was it?
"You don't have to love playing Super Mario Brothers," someone says in VO, "but we'll show you why some people do." That was the spirit of the show, and of the doc. I'm not a gamer, but the zany humor appealed to the kid in me who watched Nickelodeon, much to his parents’ chagrin. And I didn't start watching the AOTS until the end, but I understand now why people loved it for more than ten years.
Despite the crass humor that was offensive then and cancel-worthy shocking now, AOTS was wholesome?
AOTS grew an audience because it was about what the showrunners loved. Before negativity poisoned the airwaves and we became so tribal, there was a time when we could people enjoy things we didn't. It was never a game for eyeballs, playing defense of offense with the emotions of the audience. Was it political? Maybe. But never to make a point. What Attack of the Doc! shows is TV back when it was fun.
I miss that, and so I enjoyed Attack of the Doc! and hope that places like Criticless can foster the return of that spirit.
It's currently streaming on YouTube and Tubi.