Some of these segments appeared in the compilation video of that program, Doctor Duck's Super Secret All-Purpose Sauce.īetween 19, Deep Thoughts were shown during commercial breaks on The Comedy Channel with Handey's narration.īetween 19, Saturday Night Live included Deep Thoughts on the show as an interstitial segment between sketches. Handey's work next showed up in the Michael Nesmith-produced TV series Television Parts in the format which would later become famous on Saturday Night Live (though in Television Parts, Nesmith provided the narration). "The crows seem to be calling my name", thought Caw.If trees could scream, would we be so cavalier about cutting them down? We might, if they screamed all the time, for no good reason.The one-liners were to become Handey's signature work, notable for their concise humor and their outlandish hypothetical situations. Additional Deep Thoughts appeared in the October and November 1984 editions as well as in the short-lived comedy magazine Army Man, while more appeared in 1988 in The Santa Fe New Mexican. In April 1984, National Lampoon published the first of Jack Handey's Deep Thoughts. Handey returned to Saturday Night Live in 1985 as a writer. For several years Handey worked on other television projects: the Canadian sketch series Bizarre in 19 Steve Martin television special Comedy Is Not Pretty! and Lorne Michaels' short-lived sketch show on NBC called The New Show in 1984. According to Martin, Handey got a job writing for Saturday Night Live after Martin introduced Handey to the show's creator, Lorne Michaels. His first comic writing was with comedian Steve Martin. He lost the job, in his words, after writing an article that "offended local car dealerships". Handey's earliest writing job was for a newspaper, the San Antonio Express-News.
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