Product Details
Buffalo Bill - The Complete First and Second Seasons

Buffalo Bill - The Complete First and Second Seasons
Directed by Dennis Klein, Ellen Falcon, Jim Drake, Tom Patchett

List Price: $19.98
Price: $13.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

39 new or used available from $7.86

Average customer review:

Product Description

Bill bittinger host of a local talk show in buffalo ny is trying to make it in the big leagues. He isobnoxious insensitive & will do whatever it takes to succeed. Unable to keep bill under control his producer brings in wendy to keep a watchful eye. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 02/05/2008 Starring: Dabney Coleman Geena Davis Run time: 630 minutes


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #54863 in DVD
  • Brand: Lions Gate
  • Released on: 2005-09-06
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Running time: 630 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The name is Bill Bittinger. Bittinger, not "Bittinjer"--even the syllables of the name are slippery. He's a venal, self-serving, double-talking, pusillanimous, hypocritical, male-chauvinist, bigoted, quintessentially sleazy varmint, and a TV talk-show host besides. He could inherit the title "The Man You Love to Hate," except that that would connote too much stature. Make it "The Man You Love to Be Appalled By."

Buffalo Bill was, if not the best sitcom ever, indisputably the most brilliant, outrageous, exquisitely detailed and nuanced. Naturally, the network kept it on the shelf for a year, till a summer slot needed filling. An instantaneous critical hit, the show also grabbed five Emmy nominations. The following winter it was brought back and, for a few months, enjoyed a Thursday-night berth between Cheers and Hill Street Blues--part of the best two hours on weekly commercial television. All praise to series creator Jay Tarses, who specialized in comedy so offbeat, the beat could be hard to locate. (His next effort was the dramedy The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd.) But if we were to name only one name in celebration of Buffalo Bill, it would be Dabney Coleman. A breathtakingly deft character actor, Coleman had already test-flown the Beta version of Bill Bittinger as Merle Jeeter, the con artist nonpareil of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. Bill was a socially condoned con artist: a daily TV talk-show host in Buffalo, N.Y. He had world-class company: Joanna Cassidy as JoJo, Bill's director and sometime lover; Max Wright as the encyclopedically neurotic station manager, Karl Shub; John Fiedler as the diminutive floor manager eerily content to be Bill's yes-man even though he owned half the real estate on Lake Erie; Coleman's fellow Tootsie alum Geena Davis, who not only played Bill's daft, starstruck personal assistant but also wrote for the series; Meshach Taylor as JoJo's affable assistant director; and Charlie Robinson as Newdell, the rare character in network television who projected a scarily becalmed version of Black Rage.

The show never played to expectation, on any level. The most outrageous things could happen without the writers feeling obliged to work them into the story-proper. In one episode, dozens of imitation Jerry Lewises participating in some ill-conceived promo are rolling around the station like arrant bowling balls; open a door and another one tumbles in. That other one, incidentally, was Jim Carrey, just like he was before he was--the creepiest of the bunch, it goes without saying, and sublime. And no, the episode wasn't "about" the Jerry Lewis promo. There were uncanny grace notes--say, when Bill became instantly enamored of a musician guest. Someone referred to her as a "flute player" and Bill, his eyes turned reverently to some Elysian Field in his mind, quietly emended: "flautist." Or consider the time Bill, coping with the possibility of JoJo being pregnant, holed up in his apartment and re-enacted Lou Gehrig's farewell speech at Yankee Stadium, complete with microphone echo. An absolutely astounding episode turned on a duel of wills as Bill forced Newdell out of his job, then had to get him back to escape an anti-discrimination suit. The high point was a Black Power fantasia on Bill's part that ... well, Jamie Foxx's rendition of "Hit the Road, Jack" in Ray had nothing on Bill Bittinger's.

The network suits never did figure out what to do with Buffalo Bill; inevitably, they killed it--and yes, more Emmy nominations followed its demise. Never mind. Dabney Coleman and his sainted ensemble are assured of seats on Parnassus. And happily, life eternal on DVD. --Richard T. Jameson


Customer Reviews

Disgusted2
Bought this expressly for THE classic sitcom scene of all time, "Hit The Road Jack." Instead of this scene, a written apology appears, saying the scene has been excised due to licensing problems. Thanks for the apology ater you got my dough. Be warned, America!

Finally ! But...5
I loved this show when it was on. The ensemble of terrific actors,all lead by D.C.,was way ahead of its time in the early 80's. Actually...not too many shows have had the edge that "B.B." had.So,all in all I am very happy to have these episodes available when I need my quota of sharp-edged humor,and darn fine acting.
But..I specifically wanted to see the episode where Bill is speaking with a ventriloquist,and makes a really off-color,and hysterically funny comment about the courage it takes to "operate" the dummy. Or sock puppet,I can't remember. I watched all of the episodes over a three day period,and didn't see that particular scene. Anyone remember that one? Is it on the "Hit the Road Jack" episode??
Well..if I cannot laugh myself sick over D.C.'s delivery of that one line,then I am glad to at least be able to have a million other laughs with this set of DVD's. D.C. is a terrific actor.The entire cast was/is. I only wish the network would have realized what a gem they had in this show.
Now..I will wait patiently for "Slap Maxwell" to come out on DVD. Another treasure short-shrifted by the network ostriches.

long overdue!5
I've been waiting for this one! Coleman was brilliant in the show. I'm looking forward to the episode where a news crew shows to do a story on Bill which he thinks is going to be a tribute, but which is really an expose of how bad it is to work with him. He keeps rehearsing how he majestically wants himself shown- then finally gets so tired of waiting for his time on camera, he imagines himself telling the woman interviewer off and her forcing herself on him. This show pioneered the concept the Seinfeld show later embraced about a flawed character who demonstrates no emotional growth or 'warm fuzzy' moments. Can't wait for the release!