Propane enthusiasts rejoice! ‘King of the Hill’ slated for a reboot

EntertainmentFeatured

Written by:

 

Grab an Alamo Beer and head to the alley. Hulu is bringing back “King of the Hill” for a 2023 reboot.

Rumors of a “King of the Hill” remake have swirled since 2017, when creators Mike Judge and Greg Daniels celebrated a 20-year reunion with the cast at San Francisco Sketchfest. (The show aired on Fox starting in 1997.)

And on Jan. 31, Hulu announced that they have ordered a revival of the animated hit from 20th Television Animation. Deadline has confirmed that much of the original cast will be back for the remake, including Hank Hill (voiced by Mike Judge), Peggy Hill (Kathy Najimy), Bobby Hill (Pamela Adlon), Bill Dauterive (Stephen Root), Dale Gribble (Johnny Hardwick) and Minh Souphanousinphone (Lauren Tom).

______________________

SPONSORED: Find a Qualified Financial Advisor

1. Finding a qualified financial advisor doesn't have to be hard. SmartAsset's free tool matches you with up to 3 fiduciary financial advisors in your area in 5 minutes.

2. Each advisor has been vetted by SmartAsset and is held to a fiduciary standard to act in your best interests. If you're ready to be matched with local advisors that can help you achieve your financial goals get started now.

______________________

 

 

 

Saladin Patterson (who was also involved in the “The Wonder Years” reboot) will be the showrunner for the newly-ordered episodes. He shared his excitement in a statement by adopting the classic twang of Hank’s pal Boomhauer, who was voiced by Judge, writing, “Yeah, man I tell you whot man, that dang Ol’ Greg, talking about O.G. and then that Mike Judge … Inspirations, man … the original show, dang ol’ classic.”

As longtime fans of “King of the Hill” know, Brittany Murphy was the voice of Peggy’s niece Luanne Platter. Since Murphy died in 2009, it is unknown if Judge and Daniels will use a different voice actor for her role or if Luanne will simply not be in the remake.

There is another possible hiccup as well: You might notice that 20th Television Animation only confirmed the return of Minh Souphanousinphone, voiced by Asian American actor Lauren Tom. However, there is no mention yet of her husband Kahn’s return. Kahn had a large role in “King of the Hill,” playing Hank’s nemesis and trying to keep his daughter Connie (also voiced by Tom) away from Bobby. However, Kahn was voiced by Toby Huss, a white actor not of Asian descent.

As with Apu Nahasapeemapetilon (formerly voiced by Hank Azaria) on “The Simpsons,” many people have challenged whether white actors should be voicing non-white characters such as Kahn. In 2020, Azaria resigned from his long-standing role and apologized for any harm his role may have caused. It could be that for the “King of the Hill” reboot, Huss may be replaced by another actor, or perhaps that Kahn will not appear in the remake at all.

Hulu also recently announced a reboot of “Futurama,” another animated favorite from the early aughts. The new episodes are expected to air sometime this summer.

You can currently watch the old episodes of the successful 13-season run of “King of the Hill” on Hulu.

 

This article originally appeared on Simplemost.com and was syndicated by MediaFeed.org.

More from MediaFeed:

Like MediaFeed’s content?Be sure to follow us.

Remember these classic TV commercials?

 

For the most part, television commercials are not watched so much as endured. People of a certain age will remember the unpleasant sensation of watching some show or another, then jumping up to go to the bathroom and grab a snack in the 120 seconds afforded them by the commercial break. The less we knew about what we had missed in those two minutes, the better.

 

Still, as much as we bemoaned their existence, these same commercials often became popular culture institutions in their own right. After all, when you see the same ad over and over again, it’s going to stick with you, and if there’s a catchy jingle or clever slogan, its permanence is even more likely. Look no further than the antacid Alka-Seltzer, whose slogan, “Plop, Plop Fizz, Fizz,” was one of many that people still refer to decades later. In fact, you’re probably saying “Oh what a relief it is” silently in your head at this very moment.

 

We’ve rounded up 25 examples of some of the most memorable television commercials of all time and presented them here. Whether you roll your eyes when you see them or get that twinge of nostalgia, one thing’s for sure – you will still remember them.

 

 

YouTube / Coca-Cola

 

Regrets, we’ve had a few, and Alka-Seltzer capitalized on that very feeling for one of its most memorable commercials. In this ad, a man sits on his bed, awake with tummy trouble and repeating the mantra, “I can’t believe I ate that whole thing.”

And you’re not alone if you always thought he was saying “I can’t believe I ate THE whole thing.” Listen closely. He’s actually saying “I can’t believe I ate THAT whole thing.”

For those of us who have at times committed the sin of gluttony, the ad resonated.

 

 

 

YouTube / Alka-Seltzer

 

In the 1970s, Coca-Cola aired one of its classic commercials, which depicted former football player “Mean” Joe Greene limping back to the locker room after playing a bruising game. A kid offers him his bottle of Coke, which Greene drinks dry. He then thanks the kid and throws all his sweaty football gear at him. At the time, this was considered heartwarming.

 

 

 

YouTube / Coca-Cola

 

The nonprofit organization Keep America Beautiful ran what has to be one of the most memorable public service announcements of all time. The spot depicts a Native American man canoeing through polluted waters and watching motorists throw garbage out of passing cars, causing him to shed a lone tear. It’s a great spot that gets its point across clearly and poetically, and it absolutely deserves its classic status.

 

 

 

YouTube / Keep America Beautiful

 

This commercial for Life cereal depicts three kids sitting at the breakfast table, two of whom fear this new “healthy” product. They get their youngest brother Mikey to try it, despite his reputation for hating everything, and to their surprise, he likes it! An enduring urban legend posited that the actor who played Mikey, John Gilchrist, died from a combination of Coca-Cola and Pop Rocks, but we’re happy to inform you that this was a scurrilous rumor, and today Gilchrist is the AARP-eligible age of 53.

 

 

 

YouTube / Life Cereal

 

This 1999 ad campaign for Budweiser proved the hypothesis that if your commercial is annoying and repetitive enough, people will remember it. The commercial, which ran during the Super Bowl, features a bunch of twenty-something men saying “Whassup?” to one another interminably on the phone and in person, and the campaign mercifully ended in 2002.

 

 

 

YouTube / Budweiser

 

This holiday advertisement for Hershey’s Kisses is so simple and straightforward that it doesn’t even contain a single spoken word. However, the simplicity is exactly the point, and it helped make this 1989 commercial instantly memorable.

 

 

 

Wikipedia.org

 

Did you know that some M&M’s are red? Well apparently Santa Claus didn’t, because the premise of this ad is that the red M&M and Santa Claus are both so taken aback by seeing one another that they faint. It may not be the most brilliant concept in the world, but it’s certainly memorable.

 

 

 

YouTube / M&Ms

 

This 1984 ad for Wendy’s is officially named “Fluffy Bun,” but thanks to actress Clara Peller, no one on earth is aware of that. Her repeated requests for the location of the beef endeared her to an entire nation and became such a part of popular culture that Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale invoked it during a debate. He went on to lose every state in the nation except for Minnesota, but we’ll always have our memories of that debate.

 

 

 

YouTube / Wendy’s

 

We’ve got to hand it to the good people at Alka-Seltzer – they sure knew how to mine digestive distress for good commercial fodder. This one deserves additional points for its unique film-within-a-film perspective, and like “I Can’t Believe I Ate the Whole Thing,” the famous tag line “That’s a spicy meatball” was immortalized on The Simpsons, an ironclad sign of its cultural primacy.

 

 

 

YouTube / Alka-Seltzer

 

Is “ring around the collar” really a thing? Maybe. But what no one disputes is that Wisk irrevocably thrust this terrible problem into the national conversation. Sure, they talked about it as if it were an extreme form of humiliation, but it sure made the product fly off the shelves.

 

 

 

YouTube / Wisk

 

While this is not strictly a holiday commercial, it certainly has enough snow, blustery wind, and general weather-related misery to qualify. In this one, a snowman comes home and eats a bowl of Campbell’s chicken soup, which causes him to thaw out and reveal a boy under all that snow.

 

 

 

YouTube / Campbell’s Soup

 

Apple’s award-winning “1984” commercial was directed by Ridley Scott, who helmed such big-screen features as Alien and Blade Runner. It was daring, it was bold, and it’s since been hailed as a classic. It also never aired again after its debut during the 1984 Super Bowl, automatically turning it into the stuff of legend.

 

 

 

YouTube / Apple

 

As much as life in these United States has been stressful in the 21st century, people in the last century experienced their fair share of headaches as well. Look no further than this 1978 commercial for Calgon, in which a harried and overwhelmed woman says, “Calgon, take me away!” With that, she’s transported to a faraway realm of relaxation, also known as her bathtub.

 

 

 

YouTube / Calgon

 

Poor Charlie the Tuna. He wants to wind up in a can of StarKist’s chunk light stuff, yet for reasons not shared with us, he is repeatedly rebuffed in the commercials by the people who make these kinds of decisions, leading them to say to him, “Sorry, Charlie.” It’s sad to see his dreams crushed, but in retrospect Charlie should really be happy that he didn’t end up between two pieces of bread.

 

 

 

YouTube / StarKist

 

When it comes to diner employees who act like total jerks when a customer accidentally knocks over a glass, you would have a hard time doing so more memorably than the hard-nosed Rosie character, played by Nancy Walker of Rhoda fame. She played the role in countless commercials for Bounty paper towels between 1970 and 1990, and despite directing the Village People and Steve Guttenberg in 1980’s Can’t Stop the Music, it’s what she’s best remembered for.

 

 

 

YouTube / Bounty

 

Spare a thought for the beleaguered Mr. Whipple, a grocery store manager who wants only to display Charmin toilet paper attractively, yet is thwarted in this effort by people who keep squeezing it. But his cries of “Don’t squeeze the Charmin” were always for naught. Fun fact – country singer Charlie Walker used the slogan as the inspiration for his 1967 hit “Don’t Squeeze My Sharmon.”

 

 

 

Charmin / YouTube

 

Those who go for mani-pedis to pamper themselves would likely blanch at the idea of soaking their fingers in dishwashing liquid, but for over 20 years, actor Jan Miner’s manicurist character Madge would advise her clients to do exactly that in Palmolive dishwashing liquid commercials. She would place one of their hands in a bowl of the green stuff and advise them that they were, in fact, soaking in it. Miner passed away in 2004, but the slogan “You’re soaking in it” is immortal.

 

IMAGE: palmolive-madge | YouTube / Palmolive

 

 

YouTube / Palmolive

 

In 2019, Dunkin’ Donuts changed their brand name to simply Dunkin’, perhaps in a bid to make consumers aware that they sell things besides donuts. Unfortunately, this was impossible, due to its memorable commercials featuring “Fred the Baker” and his repeated slogan “Time to make the donuts.” He repeated this in multiple commercials until you couldn’t get it out of your head.

 

 

YouTube / Dunkin’ Donuts

 

In the 1970s and 1980s, actors James Garner and Mariette Hartley appeared in a series of commercials for Polaroid instant cameras. There was no catchy slogan, but they didn’t need one – the actors had such great natural chemistry with one another that it was easy to forget they were hawking a product. It also didn’t hurt that 40 years before the iPhone, a Polaroid camera was as close as you could get to an “instant” way of taking pictures.

 

 

 

YouTube / Polaroid

 

What do you get when you gather an ethnically-diverse group of people on a hilltop, put bottles of Coca-Cola in their hands, and tell them to sing? You get the 1971 commercial that the ad industry trade publication Campaign called “one of the best-loved and most influential ads in TV history.” It made an appearance on the series Mad Men, too.

 

 

 

YouTube / Coca-Cola

 

Before he was mauling hapless British commuters in 1981’s An American Werewolf in London, actor David Naughton was dancing through the city streets, inviting passers-by to “be a Pepper” by drinking Dr Pepper. There were various incarnations of the very popular commercial, which of course made it the target of parodies on such shows as SCTV.

 

 

 

YouTube / Dr Pepper

 

For decades, people have been making their own “fried” chicken with Shake n’ Bake, which is basically flavored breadcrumbs applied to raw meat and agitated vigorously inside of a plastic bag before baking. It’s so simple that children can be enlisted to help out, which led the company to create a series of ads in which a young child would say “And I helped!” The slogan became such a part of popular culture that during the 1980s, it became something that was yelled at the screen by crowds during midnight showings of The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

 

 

 

YouTube / Shake n’ Bake

 

Chiffon margarine is a product whose slogan outlived it. The margarine itself was discontinued in North America in 2002, but the commercials, which starred Dena Dietrich as Mother Nature herself, are still fondly recalled by those who saw them air. In those commercials, Mother Nature is fooled into thinking Chiffon margarine is butter. Upon learning that it’s margarine, she summons a lightning bolt and warns, “It’s not nice to fool Mother Nature.”

 

 

 

Chiffon

 

Poppin’ Fresh, also known as the Pillsbury Doughboy, debuted in 1965, and while he hawked all manner of Pillsbury cookies, biscuits, and crescent rolls, one thing was always the same – every commercial would end with a human finger poking him in the stomach, causing delighted laughter. Today, that might be considered fat-shaming.

 

 

 

Pillsbury.com

 

Catalina the Mermaid is the mascot of Chicken of the Sea brand tuna fish, and she appeared in advertisements for the brand since the 1950s. Another fun fact – in the early television commercials, the voice of Catalina was provided by Grace Lee Whitney, who played Yeoman Janice Rand in the first season of the original Star Trek television series.

This article was produced and syndicated by MediaFeed.org.

 

 

YouTube / Chicken of the Sea

 

 

Drazen Zigic/istockphoto

 

Featured Image Credit: King of the Hill.

AlertMe