Skit Night
From Wikimacs
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''2001:'' | ''2001:'' | ||
*[[A Day In the Life of WMACS]] (B6) | *[[A Day In the Life of WMACS]] (B6) | ||
- | + | *[[Who Wants to be a WMACS Counselor?]] (G1)--they won for best skit that year | |
''2002:'' | ''2002:'' |
Revision as of 21:18, 3 August 2006
Until 2006, Thursday night has traditionally be reserved for Skit Night, where each group is tasked with writing and performing a skit that summarized their week's experiences. Skits ranged wildly in topic, style, duration, and of course, quality. They often parodied a movie, television show, or otherwise current event, but almost always relied heavily on satirizing other campers and especially the counselors. After all the groups have performed (more than one group combining to perform one skit has occurred), the counselors deliver their skit. Top skits (counselors excluded) are recognized at The Dance.
Notable skits include:
1999:
- Counselor Deathmatch (B4), a parody of the MTV claymation series Celebrity Deathmatch.
2000:
- Thursday Night Live (B5), a parody of the NBC comedy show, Saturday Night Live.
- Strip Poker (B6)
2001:
- A Day In the Life of WMACS (B6)
- Who Wants to be a WMACS Counselor? (G1)--they won for best skit that year
2002:
- Space Camp: Attack of the Staff (Group E), a parody of George Lucas' Star Wars movie saga, especially focusing on the recently released Episode I: The Phantom Menace.
- Behind the Music (Counselors), a parody of the VH1 show of the same name.
2003:
- A Week at WMACS (F4), a general skit parodying the counselors and other happenenings of that week.
2004:
- The Lord of the Keys (counselors), a parody of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings movie saga, based on J.R.R. Tolkien's novels.
2005:
- Naru-chen (counselors), a parody of the popular anime series Naruto.