Sin City Saints | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Chris Case Bryan Gordon Michael Tollin |
Directed by | Bryan Gordon Fred Savage |
Starring | Malin Åkerman Andrew Santino Keith Powers Justin Chon B. K. Cannon Rick Fox Tom Arnold |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 8 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers | Chris Case Bryan Gordon Michael Tollin |
Producers | Alec Chorches Billy Crawford Dan Kaplow Brendan Finnigan |
Production location | Las Vegas, Nevada |
Cinematography | Anthony R. Palmieri |
Editor | Les Butler |
Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 20-23 minutes[1] |
Production companies | Mandalay Sports Media Yahoo! Studios |
Original release | |
Network | Yahoo! Screen |
Release | March 23, 2015 |
Sin City Saints is an American sitcom television series starring Malin Åkerman, Andrew Santino, and Keith Powers. It debuted on Yahoo! Screen on March 23, 2015. Its eight-episode first season was directed by Bryan Gordon and Fred Savage. The series follows a fictional Las Vegas basketball franchise.
Its executive producers are Bryan Gordon, Mike Tollin, and Chris Case.[1] The series ended following Yahoo! Screen's closure due to low viewership in the following year.[2]
Sin City Saints follows "wealthy tech businessman Jake Tullus, the unpredictable and charismatic owner of Vegas’ new professional basketball franchise, the Sin City Saints."[3]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Release date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Fool Monty" | Bryan Gordon | Chris Case | March 23, 2015 | |
League attorney Dusty Halford arrives in Las Vegas to oversee Sin City Saints owner Jake Tullus following the injury of star player LaDarius Pope. Magician-comedian Penn Jillette and standup comic Carrot Top cameo as themselves.[6] | |||||
2 | "Smoke and Mirrors" | Bryan Gordon | Chris Case | March 23, 2015 | |
The Saints recruit former star Billy Crane, who now runs a burger franchise. | |||||
3 | "Gone Catfishing" | Bryan Gordon | Chris Case | March 23, 2015 | |
Jake believes that a fiancee LaDarius has never met except online may not be real. | |||||
4 | "Mrs. Wu's Tang" | Bryan Gordon | Ken Cheng | March 23, 2015 | |
Jake and Dusty each try to recruit Chinese star Wu Lee, who is managed by his domineering mother. | |||||
5 | "A Basket Full of Rainbows" | Fred Savage | Chris Case | March 23, 2015 | |
A locker-room rant by Coach Doug goes viral, prompting Jake to ask for his resignation. | |||||
6 | "You Booze, You Lose" | Fred Savage | Chris Case | March 23, 2015 | |
Taunted by a radio-show host, Jake vows not to use drugs, drink alcohol or have sex until the Saints win a game. | |||||
7 | "Urine God's Hands Now" | Bryan Gordon | Jack Amiel | March 23, 2015 | |
Seeking funding for a new arena, Jake woos a conservative-Christian city councilman. A recovered Darius must pass a urine test. | |||||
8 | "Because Vegas" | Bryan Gordon | Chris Case & Noelle Valdivia | March 23, 2015 | |
When the stock of Jake's technology company, Matterhorn, tanks, Jake must find a way to keep the team. |
Yahoo! Inc. announced its first original long-form programs, the comedies Sin City Saints and Other Space, in April 2014 at the 2014 Digital Content NewFronts.[7] By early October, production on Sin City Saints had begun at The Orleans Hotel and Casino.[8] Eight episodes were released simultaneously on Yahoo! Screen on March 23, 2015.[9]
Mike Hale in The New York Times called the show "a comedy less coherent than the halftime scoreboard video at an NBA game", where "[p]lot points and jokes feel as if they came from index cards grabbed at random."[4] Keith Uhlich at The Hollywood Reporter felt the "manic, mostly unfunny half-hour sports comedy" featured "sub-Tracy and Hepburn bickering ... that barely elicits a smirk, let alone busts a gut", and called the casting "problematic.... Both Akerman and Santino are irritatingly one-note."[6]
On October 21, 2015, Yahoo CFO Ken Goldman announced during a Q3 Earnings Phone Call that their original programming lineup last spring resulted in a $42 million writeoff, including season six of Community and Other Space.[10]