Still kidding around Comedy legends back to push the envelope, this time under Amazon’s watchful eye

It has been nearly 27 years since the five-man Canadian comedy troupe Kids in the Hall challenged comedy norms with their landmark sketch comedy series, which ran on CBC and HBO from 1989 to 1995.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 12/05/2022 (1526 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

It has been nearly 27 years since the five-man Canadian comedy troupe Kids in the Hall challenged comedy norms with their landmark sketch comedy series, which ran on CBC and HBO from 1989 to 1995.

TV preview

Kids in the Hall
Eight episodes
• Debuting on Prime Video on Friday

The trailer for the new Prime Video series demonstrates the same biting-the-hand-that-feeds-them ethos — a bit between Mark McKinney and Dave Foley suggesting the Amazon corporation may be in league with Satan — that marked the quintet’s initial foray into comedy.

That sense also comes through in a Zoom interview with the group’s other three members, Kevin McDonald, Bruce McCulloch and Scott Thompson, conducted after the show wrapped production last year.

This show follows in the original’s template, says the Montreal-born McDonald, 60, who now resides in Winnipeg.

“It’s our typical humour,” he says. “Imagine us 25 years older.”

“We’re kind of going OG on it,” says the Edmonton-born McCulloch, 61. “We talked about modernizing it. But no, we just do what we do, which is write about the world around us.

“Yes, we’re older, but we’re happy to be here,” he continues. “It feels good and the material is a combination of old characters and new situations and new things.”

It was Thompson who, in a 1990 interview with this reporter, complained about CBC’s tendency to play it safe, although the show had more than its share of cutting-edge material.

Thompson, 62, born in North Bay, Ont., doesn’t have an entirely rosy perspective on working for Amazon, try as he might to stay tight-lipped about it when asked if the creators were untethered compared to the CBC days.

The Associated Press
From left: Mark McKinney, Dave Foley, Scott Thompson, Kevin McDonald and Bruce McCulloch’s reboot of The Kids in the Hall debuts Friday on Prime Video.
The Associated Press From left: Mark McKinney, Dave Foley, Scott Thompson, Kevin McDonald and Bruce McCulloch’s reboot of The Kids in the Hall debuts Friday on Prime Video.

“I would say no, we were not untethered,” Thompson says. “We were very tethered. We did our best with the tether. But we were very tethered.

It’s been a very challenging experience, addressing this generation. The censorship has been very intense, it’s come from a different direction, and we did everything in our power to fight it.”

Thompson was gay and proud from the start of the show, and that was mainly manifest in the series via the character of Buddy Cole, a character who, while seemingly constructed from a collection of gay stereotypes, was nevertheless one of the most beloved and three-dimensional characters in the series. Buddy, Thompson says, will return.

“It might not be the part that I wanted it to be, but we did what we could,” Thompson says. “But absolutely, Buddy is going to address the world (of 2022).”

Jackie Brown / Amazon Studios
Kevin McDonald (at left) who now lives in Winnipeg, says the streaming show follows in the typical humour of the original’s template.
Jackie Brown / Amazon Studios Kevin McDonald (at left) who now lives in Winnipeg, says the streaming show follows in the typical humour of the original’s template.

“I think they’re a large organization and therefore a bit fearful,” McCulloch says. “We certainly got enough of our great stuff through without any consequence.

“It’s still provocative and edgy, I think.”

Shot in Toronto over the summer of 2021, the series will also maintain its Hogtown flavour.

“I love Toronto and I think that’s one of the things I was so proud of in its first iteration, was how authentic we were,” Thompson says. “We fought very hard to be seen as who we were. We weren’t going to pretend to be an American group. We were a Canadian group so this show is very much set in Toronto.”

Jackie Brown / Amazon Studios
Scott Thompson (left) says the group was ‘tethered’ working with Amazon, but Bruce McCulloch (right) says the series remains provocative and edgy.
Jackie Brown / Amazon Studios Scott Thompson (left) says the group was ‘tethered’ working with Amazon, but Bruce McCulloch (right) says the series remains provocative and edgy.

The show also put the five members back into a harmonious groove, though that harmony was often afflicted with some acrimonious dissonance back in the original run.

“That’s been the most shocking thing to me … how well we came together,” Thompson says. “All the cracks that appeared in the group got papered over. In some ways, it’s more beautiful now.”

Ironically, that feeling may have been augmented by the COVID-19 protocols in place during production.

“The production stopped for a year,” McDonald says. “And that (situation) leaked into the sketches. I have a lot of sketches about a lonely guy complaining.

“So even though we never mention it, I think it would be easy to guess that a lot of the sketches were written during that period.”

Jackie Brown/Amazon Studios
Shot in Toronto in the summer of 2021, the show also put the five troupe members back into a harmonious groove.
Jackie Brown/Amazon Studios Shot in Toronto in the summer of 2021, the show also put the five troupe members back into a harmonious groove.

“It was tough to do this, but in a way, this bubble of us five together, unmasked, it made it like an island,” McCulloch says. “So I think it actually made us stronger together and enjoying being together.”

“I think it made it more intense because you couldn’t put your energy anywhere else but the five, and the work,” Thompson says. “A lot of times, that energy could go out to flirting with the sound guy. But we’d be so tunnelled into each other.”

So if that comedy lightning strikes twice, will there be another season?

“If this goes and people like it, I would love to have another crack at it,” Thompson says. “Maybe this time, the tethers will be loosened a little.”

“We’ve always felt vital, even if we weren’t doing things,” McCulloch says. “(This) just made us love the troupe again. So we’ll see what happens next.”

randall.king.arts@gmail.com

Twitter: @FreepKing

Randall King

Randall King
Writer

Randall King writes about film for the Winnipeg Free Press.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Preview

Name-change sex abuser pleads guilty

Dean Pritchard 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

A convicted child sex predator who changed his name before going on to abuse another victim is now facing a likely 15-year prison sentence.

Ryan Knight, 44, pleaded guilty Monday morning to sexual interference and making child sexual abuse and exploitation material.

Knight remains in custody and is expected to be sentenced in the fall, when Crown and defence lawyers will jointly recommend the repeat offender serve 15 years in prison.

Knight, who was born Ryan Gabourie, has been in custody since last July when he was charged with sex crimes involving a 13-year-old boy.

Read
Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Carney trumps Trump with Gordie Howe bridge deal

Dan Lett 5 minute read Preview

Carney trumps Trump with Gordie Howe bridge deal

Dan Lett 5 minute read Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

This is the reality of dispute resolution with the Trump administration: getting what we want but doing it in a way that gives the wacky, volatile and irrational president some sort of moral victory to parade on social media.

Read
Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

Toys ‘R’ Us closing Polo Park store

Free Press staff 2 minute read Preview

Toys ‘R’ Us closing Polo Park store

Free Press staff 2 minute read Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

Embattled toy retailer Toys “R” Us is closing its store in Winnipeg’s Polo Park area.

Read
Monday, Jul. 13, 2026

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read 6:36 PM CDT

Business owners in the East Beaches area of Lake Winnipeg hauled out generators Wednesday after a planned Manitoba Hydro outage left thousands of residents and cottagers without power.

Lise Bourassa, who runs several stores in Grand Beach, had to rent generators to accommodate the eight-hour blackout, which affected the area from Beaconia to Victoria Beach as well as Sagkeeng First Nation, while Hydro crews fixed a pole that was damaged by fire in May .

Despite the spare power source, she was only able to open one of her stores during the outage and said it came at a bad time.

“I understand the importance of what Manitoba Hydro is doing, the problem all the businesses in this area are having is that our season is very short and to be shut down for a full day has a fairly big impact, plus they added cost of getting generators,” she wrote in a message to the Free Press. “We also had less than one week to make arrangements, find electricians and generators to be able to keep all the food safe.”

Read
6:36 PM CDT

Bee2gether Bikes out of The Forks after lease confusion

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read Preview

Bee2gether Bikes out of The Forks after lease confusion

Gabrielle Piché 5 minute read 7:41 PM CDT

Tandem bike rentals aren’t on offer at The Forks this summer — and the longtime company behind them is claiming financial loss, calling the change unexpected.

For nearly two decades, people have zipped around The Forks on Bee2gether Bikes’s tandem and buggy rides.

Owner Chad Celaire said he planned for another season of downtown Winnipeg rentals. He said he emailed The Forks leadership in the spring, checking when Bee2gether could set up.

Celaire said he was “blindsided” when he received a May 19 email from property management saying The Forks wouldn’t grant a 2026 lease to Bee2gether Bikes.

Read
7:41 PM CDT

Police to report Tuesday on Linden Woods shooting

1 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 2:35 PM CDT

The Winnipeg Police Service will hold a news conference Tuesday to provide details about a shooting involving an officer in the Linden Woods neighbourhood Monday night.

No other details have been released.

The 1 p.m. news conference will be livestreamed on the WPS's YouTube page.