Air Bud: Golden Receiver


09:05 am - 11:05 am, Sunday, November 30 on Freeform (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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A lovable canine athlete dons a football helmet to help his young owner (Kevin Zegers) lead his struggling team to the state championship. But their dreams of gridiron glory are threatened by a pair of villains intent on dognapping the amazing hound for their circus. Cynthia Stevenson, Gregory Harrison, Nora Dunn, Perry Anzilotti.

1998 English Stereo
Comedy Children Football Comedy-drama Sequel

Cast & Crew
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Kevin Zegers (Actor) .. Josh Framm
Cynthia Stevenson (Actor) .. Jackie
Gregory Harrison (Actor) .. Patrick
Nora Dunn (Actor) .. Natalya
Perry Anzilotti (Actor) .. Popov
Tim Conway (Actor) .. Fred Davis
Dick Martin (Actor) .. Phil Phil
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Coach Fanelli
Shayn Solberg (Actor) .. Tom Stewart
Suzanne Ristic (Actor) .. Principal Salter
Alyson MacLaren (Actor) .. Andrea Framm
Tyler Thompson (Actor) .. Oliver
Rhys Williams (Actor) .. Goose
Shari Khademi (Actor) .. Juan
Jason Anderson (Actor) .. Weeble
Myles Ferguson (Actor) .. J.D.
Shahari Khaderni (Actor) .. Juan
Cory Fry (Actor) .. Cole Powers
Jeff Gulka (Actor) .. Pudge
Marcus Tucker (Actor) .. Giants Quarterback
Jay Brazeau (Actor) .. Official
Frank C. Turner (Actor) .. Official
Mark Brandon (Actor) .. Richard
Jaida Hay (Actor) .. Tammy
Doreen Esary (Actor) .. Receptionist
Julio Caravetta (Actor) .. Giants Coach
David Lewis (Actor) .. Herb
Monica Marko (Actor) .. Lady with Broom
Scott Ateah (Actor) .. Official
Ritch Renaud (Actor) .. Photographer
Barry MacDonald (Actor) .. Sportcaster
Simon Isherwood (Actor) .. Rams Coach
John Keelan (Actor) .. Ice Cream Boy
Warren Moon (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Joey Galloway (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Blue Edwards (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Pete Chilcutt (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
George Lynch (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Sam Mack (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Lee Mayberry (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Ivano Newbill (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Richard Martin Jr. (Actor) .. Guy in Stands
Scott J. Ateah (Actor) .. Official

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Kevin Zegers (Actor) .. Josh Framm
Born: September 19, 1984
Birthplace: St. Marys, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: The Canadian child actor-turned-young heartthrob Kevin Zegers inevitably recalls an early Tom Cruise, with his high-gloss and surreal handsomeness. These photogenic, audience-pleasing qualities helped to carry Zegers through his adolescent screen career, with a steady series of roles in family-friendly films. Zegers then proved himself capable of sustaining more mature, adult-oriented Hollywood turns, signified by his fine contribution to the pansexual comedy drama Transamerica (2005). Born September 19, 1984, into a blue-collar family (his dad worked in a lime quarry), Zegers attended Holy Family French immersion school in his hometown of Woodstock, Ontario, and received an invitation at eight years old to participate in a London fashion show as a child model. Zegers did a few of these events, then talked his parents into letting him audition for a Toronto-based talent agent; not long after, Zegers landed his first screen role, as a younger version of Michael J. Fox's character in James Lapine's uneven comedy drama Life with Mikey (1993), and spent the preponderance of the next ten years starring in innumerable animal-oriented comedies -- everything from Air Bud and its sequels to Virginia's Run to Nico the Unicorn and MVP: Most Valuable Primate. Lest he be typecast, however, Zegers demonstrated his versatility throughout this period with occasional turns in dark horror outings and telemovies as well.Zegers later recalled how, throughout this period, he honed his ability to size up the fundamental strengths and weaknesses of a script, and by his early twenties, he placed a high premium on this instinct, often rejecting screenplays on the basis of poor quality. Transamerica (which Zegers reportedly read and then fell in love with at first glance) marked the actor's first dramatic leap away from child and adolescent-oriented roles. He later told interviewer Selma Blair that he refused to be turned down for the part, and stalked director Duncan Tucker for weeks on end after an initial rejection from the film, until Tucker recanted. In that well-received picture, Zegers plays Toby, the long-estranged juvenile-delinquent son of pre-operative transsexual Bree (christened Stanley and portrayed by Felicity Huffman). Toby reconnects with his father for a road trip -- just as Bree is about to undergo a permanent sex-change operation. Together, they set off for Los Angeles -- Bree to have her procedure and Toby to make it as a porn star. Zegers proved himself thoroughly worthy of the role; few critics who praised the film failed to single out the actor's performance.Unfortunately, Zegers followed this with an ill-advised retread of his career origins -- first in the critically reviled, Tim Allen-starring family comedy Zoom, then in the Nick Hurran-directed teen film It's a Boy Girl Thing (both 2006) -- leading many of the actor's fans to grow impatient for additional Zegers work on the level of Transamerica. Not long after, he signed for a small role in more substantial fare: the eagerly anticipated, female-driven ensemble drama The Jane Austen Book Club (2007), directed by Robin Swicord and starring Amy Brenneman, Maria Bello, and Jimmy Smits. Beginning in 2009, Zegers took on a recurring role in the CW's teen drama Gossip Girl, playing the entitled son of a foreign ambassador. His growing career gradually led Zegers to starring roles, playing one of the leads in the 2010 horror film Frozen, opposite Shawn Ashmore and Emma Bell, and the lead in the Encore miniseries Titantic: Blood and Steel (2012).
Cynthia Stevenson (Actor) .. Jackie
Born: August 02, 1962
Birthplace: Piedmont, California, United States
Trivia: Dark-haired and petite American comic actress Cynthia Stevenson first made a name for herself appearing on various television shows during the 1980s. On television she was typically cast as flighty somewhat forgetful optimists. In 1990, Stevenson was the host of the unsuccessful syndicated My Talk Show, a parody of talk shows in which she interviewed unknown celebrities in her living room. The show only lasted three months and nearly led Stevenson to leave acting. Then Robert Altman cast her as Bonnie Sherow in The Player. After that she won the second lead in Bob, a television sitcom starring Bob Newhart. Despite favorable critical reviews, the show only briefly aired. More sporadic film and television work followed until 1995, when Stevenson's career finally took flight and she appeared in three major feature films, including Live Nude Girls. As icing on the cake, she also landed the role of Gloria on the television sitcom Hope & Gloria.
Gregory Harrison (Actor) .. Patrick
Born: May 31, 1950
Birthplace: Avalon, Santa Catalina Island, California
Trivia: During his days of prominence in the '80s, handsome, powerfully built American actor Gregory Harrison became the unofficial poster boy of the Catalina Island chamber of commerce. As a native of that offshore isle, Harrison frequently guested on talk and variety shows, elucidating the natural wonders of both Catalina and the Avalon resort. A graduate of New York's Actors Studio, Harrison briefly supported himself as a nightclub doorman before securing small film and TV roles. Harrison's most memorable credits were for the small screen: He played Logan 5 on Logan's Run (1977), Michael Sharpe on the final 1989-90 season of Falcon Crest, and the title role in the brief 1990 sitcom The Family Man. Harrison's longest TV-series run was seven seasons (1979-86) as "Gonzo" Gates, the Vietnam-vet doctor on Trapper John MD (1979-86).
Nora Dunn (Actor) .. Natalya
Born: April 29, 1952
Birthplace: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Comedic actress Nora Dunn has frequently played acerbic character roles in films and TV as foils to generally likeable leads. She was a regular cast member on Saturday Night Live from 1985 to 1990, when she left due to the controversial episode with musical guest Sinead O'Connor and host Andrew Dice Clay. During her five-year run, she played several talk show hosts and was one of the Sweeney Sisters, along with Jan Hooks. She made her film debut in Mike Nichols' Working Girl (1988) as a jaded office worker, followed by Savage Steve Holland's How I Got Into College (1989) as an SAT coach. Her next few films were less successful: Stepping Out, Born Yesterday, and I Love Trouble. She turned back to TV and joined the cast of the NBC drama Sisters as the lesbian TV producer Norma Lear, followed by the CBS comedy The Nanny as Dr. Reynolds. In the late '90s, she had a few small yet funny roles in the more successful films The Last Supper, Bulworth, Drop Dead Gorgeous, and Three Kings. She also used her vocal talent to provide voices for the animated TV shows Futurama, The Wild Thornberrys, and Histeria! In 2001, she played the mom in Max Keeble's Big Move, a fashion designer in Zoolander, and Miss Madness in Heartbreakers. Her 2003 projects include the independent comedy Die Mommie Die, the Jim Carrey feature Bruce Almighty, and the romantic comedy Laws of Attraction.
Perry Anzilotti (Actor) .. Popov
Born: December 11, 1959
Tim Conway (Actor) .. Fred Davis
Born: December 15, 1933
Died: May 14, 2019
Birthplace: Willoughby, Ohio, United States
Trivia: American actor Tim Conway was born in Willoughby, Ohio, but grew up in the curiously named community Chagrin Falls, a fact that he'd later incorporate for a quick laugh in many of his comedy routines, TV films and movies. After majoring in speech and radio at Bowling Green State University, Conway went into the Eighth Army Assignment Team, where, much in the manner of his later bumbling screen characters, he managed to "misplace" a boatload of 7500 replacement troops. Once the army was through with him (and vice versa), Conway secured a job answering mail for a Cleveland radio deejay; his letters were so amusing that he was given a position as a writer in the promotional department, then went on to direct a TV program called Ernie's Place. Whenever Ernie was short a guest, Conway showed up as "Dag Hereford," a so-called authority on several subjects who'd reveal himself to be a blithering simpleton. Comedienne Rose Marie happened to be in Cleveland in 1961, and upon catching Conway's routine recommended the young erstwhile comic to Steve Allen; Conway redid the Hereford bit for Allen's ABC variety series in the fall of '61, fracturing the audiences (and Allen) in three memorable appearances. Now that he was a full-fledged comic, he knew he couldn't continue performing under his real name, Tom Conway, since that was also the name of a well-known British actor; Allen advised Tom to "dot the O," and thereafter he was known as Tim Conway. In 1962, Conway was engaged to play the Doug Hereford-like role of Ensign Doug Parker on the wartime sitcom McHale's Navy, which lasted six seasons and made Conway a star. The actor made several attempts over the following decades to succeed as a solo TV star (witness his 1967 western comedy Rango on ABC), but none of his post-McHale's Navy series have been anything resembling hits. Still, Conway was always welcome as a supporting comic, and he scored major success with hysterically funny appearances opposite Harvey Korman on The Carol Burnett Show in the 1970s; Conway also enjoyed a measure of success as star or co-star of a number of Disney films and low-budget "regional" comedy pictures like The Prize Fighter (1978) and The Private Eyes (1980). In the late 1980s and '90s Conway starred in a popular series of satirical "how-to" home videos, playing a diminutive, dim-bulbed Scandinavian named Dorf; he also lent an acclaimed comedic cameo as a driving instructor to the action film Speed 2 (1997), and voiced a series of Christian-themed animated videos entitled Hermie & Friends, with such friends and colleagues as the late Don Knotts and Burnett co-star Vicki Lawrence. Conway would continue to appear on screen over the coming years, making memorable appearances on TV shows like 30 Rock and providing the voice of Barnacle Bob on the animated series Spongebob Squarepants.
Dick Martin (Actor) .. Phil Phil
Born: January 30, 1922
Died: May 24, 2008
Birthplace: Battle Creek, Michigan, United States
Trivia: Though he has done many other things since the late '60s and early '70s, comedian/actor Dick Martin will best be remembered as the co-host of the innovative sketch comedy series Laugh-In (1968-1973) with his longtime partner and straightman Dan Rowan. Rowan and Martin started out on television appearing briefly on the summer edition of the comedy variety show The Chevy Show in 1958. He and Rowan made their feature-film debut that year in the Western Once Upon a Horse. Between 1962 and 1964, Martin, sans Rowan, was a regular on The Lucy Show. The two reunited to appear regularly on The Dean Martin Summer Show (1966-1967). That year, Martin also made another solo appearance in the Doris Day feature The Glass Bottom Boat. Laugh-In was the comic duo's biggest success and at the peak of their popularity, the two attempted to further cash in by appearing in the Abbott and Costello-like horror spoof, The Maltese Bippy (1969). The film bombed and it would be years before Martin again appeared in a film. Since then, his acting appearances on television and in film have been sporadic.
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Coach Fanelli
Born: October 20, 1942
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Actor Robert Costanzo is generally typecast an urban Italian-American, prone to mouthing such lines as "You gotta problem with that?" Costanzo began popping up with regularity in such films as Saturday Night Fever in the late '70s. The first of his many TV-series stints was as plumber Vincent Pizo, the blue-collar father of Travolta clone Joe Piza (Paul Regina), in 1978's Joe and Valerie. He retained his man-of-the-people veneer as maintenance engineer Hank Sabatino in the weekly series Checking In (1980), Lt. V.T. Krantz in the 1990 TVer Glory Days, and the voice of Detective Bullock in Warner Bros.' Batman: The Animated Series (1992). In 1995, Robert Costanzo joined the cast of television's NYPD Blue as Detective Giardella.
Shayn Solberg (Actor) .. Tom Stewart
Born: February 02, 1984
Birthplace: Lethbridge, Alberta
Suzanne Ristic (Actor) .. Principal Salter
Alyson MacLaren (Actor) .. Andrea Framm
Tyler Thompson (Actor) .. Oliver
Rhys Williams (Actor) .. Goose
Born: January 01, 1892
Died: May 28, 1969
Trivia: Few of the performers in director John Ford's How Green Was My Valley (1941) were as qualified to appear in the film as Rhys Williams. Born in Wales and intimately familiar from childhood with that region's various coal-mining communities, the balding, pug-nosed Williams was brought to Hollywood to work as technical director and dialect coach for Ford's film. The director was so impressed by Williams that he cast the actor in the important role of Welsh prize fighter Dai Bando. Accruing further acting experience in summer stock, Rhys Williams became a full-time Hollywood character player, appearing in such films as Mrs. Miniver (1942), The Spiral Staircase (1946), The Inspector General (1949), and Our Man Flint (1966).
Shari Khademi (Actor) .. Juan
Jason Anderson (Actor) .. Weeble
Myles Ferguson (Actor) .. J.D.
Born: January 03, 1981
Shahari Khaderni (Actor) .. Juan
Cory Fry (Actor) .. Cole Powers
Jeff Gulka (Actor) .. Pudge
Marcus Tucker (Actor) .. Giants Quarterback
Jay Brazeau (Actor) .. Official
Born: December 22, 1953
Birthplace: Winnipeg, Manitoba
Frank C. Turner (Actor) .. Official
Born: June 02, 1951
Mark Brandon (Actor) .. Richard
Jaida Hay (Actor) .. Tammy
Doreen Esary (Actor) .. Receptionist
Julio Caravetta (Actor) .. Giants Coach
David Lewis (Actor) .. Herb
Monica Marko (Actor) .. Lady with Broom
Scott Ateah (Actor) .. Official
Ritch Renaud (Actor) .. Photographer
Barry MacDonald (Actor) .. Sportcaster
Simon Isherwood (Actor) .. Rams Coach
John Keelan (Actor) .. Ice Cream Boy
Warren Moon (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Joey Galloway (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Blue Edwards (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Pete Chilcutt (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
George Lynch (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Sam Mack (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Lee Mayberry (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Ivano Newbill (Actor) .. Pro Basketball Player
Richard Martin Jr. (Actor) .. Guy in Stands
Scott J. Ateah (Actor) .. Official
Jonathan Adams (Actor)
Born: July 16, 1957
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Is the youngest of five children. First stage role was in Arthur Miller's Danger: Memory. Discovered by a TV casting director at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, where he was playing Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew. Starred on the short-lived Fox series American Embassy and had recurring roles on the crime dramas Bones and Women's Murder Club. Lent his voice to the animated movie Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010) and the video games Army of Two: The 40th Day and Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds. Is an avid reader and chess player.

Before / After
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Air Bud
07:00 am