View Full Version : An Oral History of Freaks and Geeks' Keg Party Episode, 'Beers & Weirs'


TMC
10-02-2019, 09:12 PM
https://www.tvguide.com/news/freaks-and-geeks-beers-and-weirs-oral-history-20th-anniversary/

Twenty years after Freaks and Geeks premiered on NBC, it's still challenging to find a TV show about high school that accurately taps into the awkward, painful moments that come with being a teen. Freaks and Geeks made those who considered themselves a "freak" or a "geek" — or both — feel understood. The series' second episode, "Beers and Weirs," masterfully captured that. If you think back at most high school-focused TV shows and movies, parties are always seen as monumental moments that follow the same gist: Parents are out of town, time to pull out the red solo cups! And if it's a show on a family-focused network like Disney Channel or Nickelodeon, that means getting drunk off soda and wrecking the house. But Freaks and Geeks did something different with the party narrative: they turned it into a story about the uncomfortable moments that come with desperately wanting to fit in with the crowd.

"Beers and Weirs" served as a second pilot of sorts, filmed after the show was picked up by NBC. The crew faced the challenge of making sure the network would not regret the decision of giving Freaks and Geeks a chance, proving how it was the perfect vehicle for stories that could be hilarious and simultaneously heartbreaking. This episode is the first one where the freaks and geeks' worlds collide with a premise that sounds ludicrous but is absolutely genius. The geeks — Sam (John Francis Daley), Neal (Samm Levine), and Bill (Martin Starr) — grow concerned about Lindsay's (Linda Cardellini) plans of throwing her first party while her parents are away. So the geeks come up with a plan: they'll swap the freaks' keg with fake beer so nobody will get lit — as the kids say these days. But it turns into a hilarious placebo effect experiment, with a night filled with awkward singing, beer bong funnel mishaps, scary old men, and crying.

In honor of the 20th anniversary of "Beers and Weirs," which aired on Oct. 2, 1999, TV Guide spoke to the cast of Freaks and Geeks about the making of the episode.

Many of the Freaks and Geeks storylines were best on real-life experiences and"Beers and Weirs" was no different. When J. Elvis Weinstein was hired as a writer on the show in his late 20s, he mentioned to co-creator and executive producer Judd Apatow the concept of a story revolving around switching a keg with a fake one, based on a true childhood memory. Apatow decided to use this as the basis of the first episode to follow the pilot.