The Adventures Of Pete & Pete - Wikipedia
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| The Adventures of Pete & Pete | |
|---|---|
| Genre |
|
| Created by | Will McRobbChris Viscardi |
| Starring |
|
| Narrated by | Michael Maronna |
| Theme music composer | Mark Mulcahy |
| Opening theme | "Hey Sandy" by Polaris |
| Composer | Mark Mulcahy |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| No. of seasons | 3 |
| No. of episodes | 34 (plus 5 specials and 26 shorts) (list of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Producer | Charles Darby |
| Running time | 24 minutes |
| Production companies |
|
| Original release | |
| Network | Nickelodeon |
| Release | 1989 –1990 (shorts) |
| Release | February 9, 1991 –January 2, 1993 (specials) |
| Release | November 28, 1993 –April 1, 1996 |
The Adventures of Pete & Pete is an American television sitcom created by Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi for Nickelodeon. It focuses on two brothers, both named Pete Wrigley, and their humorous and surreal adventures in suburbia among their equally eccentric friends, enemies, and neighbors.
The Adventures of Pete & Pete began on Nickelodeon in 1989 as minute-long and 30-second shorts that aired as interstitials. Because of the popularity of the shorts, five half-hour specials were made, followed by a regular half-hour series that ran for three seasons from 1993 to 1996. As of October 5, 2015, reruns of the shorts and the shows aired on TeenNick as part of the NickSplat block. Jason Ankeny of AllMusic called the series "the greatest children's show ever",[1] while IGN called it "one of the most well-written kids shows ever".[2] The first two seasons were released on DVD in 2005; the third was planned for 2006 but was indefinitely postponed.
Plans for a film based on the show fell through and the script was reworked into the Nickelodeon movie Snow Day, released on February 11, 2000.[3] That film in turn, got a musical remake in 2022 as well.
Setting
[edit]Pete & Pete is set in Wellsville, a fictitious town in the United States whose exact geography is never specified. License plates in the show refer to "The Sideburn State", and according to the series' canon, the Wrigley house is set miles from the Canadian border, 500 miles from Hoover Dam and "not far from the beach".[4] The name of the town is also a nod to The Embarrassment's song "Wellsville".[5] Certain locations were fictionalized for the purposes of the show; Glurt County, mentioned in "Yellow Fever" and "The Good, the Bad and the Lucky", does not exist in any state.
The show was filmed largely in Leonia, New Jersey, with location shots done in a variety of other spots around northern New Jersey, including the Willowbrook Mall in Wayne, New Jersey, and the Wrigley House in Cranford, New Jersey. The exteriors of Pete & Pete's house (as seen in the credit sequence and other shots) were filmed on Vreeland Avenue in Leonia. The football field used for various episodes is that of Bayonne High School in Bayonne, New Jersey.[6] The fictional Wellsville High School's mascot is a squid.
Episodes
[edit] Main article: List of The Adventures of Pete & Pete episodes| Season | Episodes | Originally released | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First released | Last released | |||
| Specials | 5 | February 9, 1991 | January 2, 1993 | |
| 1 | 8 | November 28, 1993 | January 16, 1994 | |
| 2 | 13 | September 4, 1994 | December 4, 1994 | |
| 3 | 13 | October 1, 1995 | April 1, 1996 | |
Characters
[edit]Family
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Friends
[edit]


Enemies
[edit] "Endless" Mike Hellstrom (Rick Gomez) Endless Mike is the mortal enemy of Big Pete. The origins of his nickname are unknown, though it is speculated it was due to his perpetually repeating the same year of high school; it has also been stated that his nickname comes from the fact that "his hatred of Big Pete is endless". Endless Mike reigns over shop class and loves Neapolitan ice cream. Although his relationship with Big Pete is largely antagonistic, the two have joined forces on rare occasions. The neighborhood kids hate and despise Endless Mike, but also envy him because he owns his own car. He hates Little Pete in "Time Tunnel" for humiliating him at the drive-in theater by showing everyone their home movies of him as a toddler and making him a laughingstock. In "Halloweenie" he foils Endless Mike's attempt to make Big Pete hate the holiday like him by putting a jack-o'-lantern over his head. "Hat Head" (Chris Leveille) Hat Head draws his name from the fact that his hair perpetually looks as if it has been flattened by a hat, even though he is almost never actually seen wearing a hat. (The only exception being in the short "Hathead".) He originally appeared on several of the original shorts, making him the first bully in the Pete & Pete world. Hat Head hates Halloween and plots with Endless Mike to ruin it for the neighborhood kids, in part because Halloween is too frightening for him. He is frequently defeated by Artie, who protects both Petes from him and even made him into a man-made jack-o'-lantern with his proton push. "Open-Face" (Jason Late) One of Big Pete's enemies. A boy who is always shown eating open-faced sandwiches, even in church. Ellen dated him briefly in one episode. Fran "Pit Stain" Jones (Eric Kushnick) Little Pete's primary antagonist in season 3, he has a glandular disorder that gives him huge, smelly armpit stains. Little Pete gave him the nickname, which was quickly adopted by everyone in school (including the teachers), causing Pit Stain to swear revenge against Little Pete. He has a secret crush on Nona, which often distracts him to the point of abandoning his pursuit of Little Pete. He is also often seen with his goons, "Hairnet" (Helen Davidson) and "Drawstring" (Yull Neri Borda). Drawstring was later replaced by "Nightbrace" (Robert Whitfield). During episode 3.07, "The Last Laugh", Little Pete and Pit Stain worked together to mastermind a prank on Principal Schwinger and the "Up With Personal Hygiene Singers". "Paper Cut" (Christopher Conte) Artie's original enemy in the season 2 episode "Farewell, My Little Viking" (parts 1 and 2). A boy who grew up in a copy shop, he is covered with lacerations and scars from paper cuts. Paper Cut can fold paper into hundreds of origami shapes, including makeshift weapons. According to Big Pete, the numerous paper cuts did "some kind of origami number on his brain." Paper Cut enjoyed making life miserable for the helpless students by forcing them to throw "rock" while playing rock paper scissors (since he always throws "paper"). When Little Pete defied him by throwing scissors, he became Paper Cut's enemy. He swore to destroy Little Pete in the rematch. Little Pete repeatedly defies him, and the other students, finally seeing how helpless Paper Cut is when he isn't allowed to get his way, gang up and drive Paper Cut out of Wellsville forever. Principal Ken Schwinger (Adam West) The principal of Little Pete's school who always tries to stop his pranks, to no avail. Schwinger has earned the title of Most Despised Principal in Wellsville. According to Big Pete it wasn't just the mandatory regime of squat thrusts in gym class and ordering that the school serve creamed corn (Schwinger's favorite food) for every meal that earned him that reputation, it was his continuous inviting a singing group called "Up With Personal Hygiene" Singers to perform every year. This reflected both his strange obsession with personal hygiene that stemmed from childhood and his tyrannical control over the student body. This last caused Little Pete to make a truce with his mortal enemy Pit Stain to orchestrate a prank that ruins Schwinger's reputation and frees the school from his control. In turn, the humiliated singers revoke Schwinger's honorary giant cotton swab and swear off the school forever. Matt "The Urinator" Uplinger (Christopher Cooke) The lifeguard at the Wellsville swimming pool, he appears in ("Splashdown") as an antagonist to both Petes. When Little Pete and his friends threaten adult swim with their "atomic splash", Uplinger conspires to undermine them by giving Big Pete a lifeguard whistle and power over the pool. Big Pete is won over by his new authority and tries to do a good job by enforcing the pool rules, including kicking his brother and friends out of the pool. However, Big Pete realizes that Uplinger has been using him and soon joins Little Pete in defying Uplinger by performing the Atomic Splash, causing even the adults to join them in the forbidden dive. Uplinger is finally defeated, and he is exposed as having broken the primary pool rule: never urinate in the pool's filter. Monica proved this by using a chemical known as Weewee See, which exposes his inability to hold his bladder after drinking too much coffee. Uplinger is humiliated further as everyone chases him out of the pool for good.Neighbors
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Guest stars
[edit]The many guest stars that appeared on Pete & Pete include:
- Selma Blair – Penelope Ghiruto, school bus passenger from whose name Big Pete can make 27 words. ("Das Bus")
- Elizabeth Bogush – Diane Senski, love interest of Big Pete who loses interest due to Big Pete's friendship with Teddy, whom she finds too annoying. ("The Trouble With Teddy")
- Golden Brooks – Heather, captain of the tennis team and Big Pete's love interest. ("Crisis in the Love Zone")
- Drew Carey (uncredited) – Veteran at 4 July picnic launching fireworks. ("Grounded for Life")
- Jude Ciccolella and Don Creech – Mr. Slurm, high school shop teacher with a claw for a hand. He later returns in season 3 to serve as the school's driving instructor. ("Tool and Die" and "Road Warrior")
- Matthew G. Cliff – Roger SanGreco, known as "Chalkface" due to his pale skin and the fact that he smells like classroom chalk. He is a short-lived enemy of Little Pete. ("The Call", "Dance Fever")
- Ellen Cleghorne – Bus driver Sally Knorp, on-again/off-again girlfriend of Stu Benedict.[10] (Appears in "Day of the Dot" and "Yellow Fever", though she is mentioned in other episodes)
- Marshall Crenshaw – "Lightning" Mel Ratner, a meter reader who joins Little Pete's band. ("A Hard Day's Pete")
- Art Donovan – As himself, talking to Big Pete about playing with Johnny Unitas. ("Space, Geeks, and Johnny Unitas")
- Martin Donovan – Crossing guard Kenneth G. Keegan who passes messages between Big Pete and Ellen in "Apocalypse Pete"; also Smith ("Smitty"), a security guard whom Little Pete and Petunia distract in "Space, Geeks, and Johnny Unitas".
- Richard Edson – School janitor and field chalker, Mr. Beverly. ("Valentine's Day Massacre")
- Chris Elliott – Meterman Ray, a meter reader who foretells the future by gazing into the energy meter; he predicts Little Pete's future. ("Sick Day")[10]
- Gordon Gano – Mr. Zank, the first of many substitute math teachers. ("X=Why?")
- Janeane Garofalo – Ms. Brackett, an English teacher. ("X=Why?")[10]
- Frank Gifford – As himself, a customer at Dad's driving range. ("Rangeboy")
- Ellen Greene – Abilene Jones, drive-in film operator. ("Time Tunnel")
- Debbie Harry – A neighbor whose lawn the Petes sweep for land mines. ("New Year's Pete")
- Eliza Harris – Girl in the straitjacket. ("Last Laugh")
- Juliana Hatfield – Lunchlady Emma. ("Don't Tread on Pete")
- Patty Hearst – Mrs. Kretchmar, a member of the family that moves into the Wrigley house.[10] ("35 Hours")
- William Hickey – Grandpa Wrigley, Dad's dad. ("When Petes Collide")
- David Johansen – Park Ranger Thorsen, who scrutinizes Dad's activities until learning he is hunting for Old Bob. ("On Golden Pete")[10]
- LL Cool J – Mr. Thornberry, Little Pete's teacher. ("Sick Day")
- Luscious Jackson – The band that plays at the school dance. ("Dance Fever")
- Alicia Keys – A student ("Tool and Die")[11]
- Ann Magnuson – Eunice Puell, mail carrier and object of Little Pete's affection. ("Crisis in the Love Zone")
- John McLaughlin – As himself, devoting a portion of his show to support Big Pete's bid for Dad's bowling ball. ("When Petes Collide")
- Miracle Legion – The four-piece version of Polaris that Little Pete sees in a garage ("A Hard Day's Pete"). Polaris, in turn, was Miracle Legion minus guitarist Mr. Ray.
- Bebe Neuwirth – Mail Lady McGintee, a mail carrier whom Little Pete comes across on his sick day adventure. ("The Call", "Sick Day")
- Larisa Oleynik – A nurse who rushes Little Pete through the hospital. ("Dance Fever")[10]
- Vincent Pastore – Vincent Park, a neighbor and bowling agent who is impressed with Artie's bowling skills and gets him to sign a bowling contract.
- Geoff Pierson – Mr. Perfect, Dad's competition on a family trip to the Hoover Dam. ("The King of the Road")
- Kate Pierson – Mysterious blind millionaire Mrs. Vanderveer, who was once married to Mr. Tastee. ("What We Did on Our Summer Vacation")
- John Ottavino – Inspector 34, inspector of Kreb of the Loom underwear and Little Pete's guardian angel. ("Inspector 34")
- Suzzy Roche – PEO MacMillan, meter maid and Inspector 34's love interest. ("Inspector 34")
- James Rebhorn – Supervillain John McFlemp, who rallies the neighborhood to turn Artie into a respectable adult. ("Farewell My Little Viking" (parts 1 and 2))
- Sarah Shannon – A grocery store employee who gives Little Pete a label from an expired can of tapioca pudding. ("Sick Day")
- J. K. Simmons – Barber Dan, who refuses to talk to Big Pete. ("Saturday")
- Michael Stipe – Captain Scrummy, a disliked rival ice-cream vendor to Mr. Tastee. ("What We Did On Our Summer Vacation")
- Syd Straw – Math teacher Miss Fingerwood who loves the subject of mathematics; it's rumored that she got into math when she was a baby and mistook the number 2 in her baby crib mobile for her mother. Played bass in the Blowholes. ("Hard Day's Pete", "X=Why", "Valentine's Day Massacre")
- Liza Weil – Margie Corsell, a girl for whom Big Pete abandons his brother ("35 Hours"). Weil also played a bully in "Yellow Fever", with her mother Lisa as a teacher in the same episode.
One widely reported guest appearance – Hunter S. Thompson in "New Year's Pete" – has been described as "apocryphal" by show creator Will McRobb, who has said the Hunter Thompson listed in the credits is instead a similarly named extra.[12]
Music
[edit]The show featured music by such artists as Luscious Jackson, Nice, Drop Nineteens, Racecar, Chug, Poi Dog Pondering, Syd Straw, and The Apples in Stereo. The music of Stephin Merritt can also be heard throughout the series, including songs from his projects The Magnetic Fields, The 6ths, and The Gothic Archies. On the DVD commentaries, the director and the creators revealed that they tried to use a song by the Pixies, but could not afford the rights.
Polaris, a side project of Mark Mulcahy's Miracle Legion, served as the show's "house band", providing the theme song and many other tunes heard throughout the series and even appearing in "Hard Day's Pete" as a local four-piece playing out of a garage. Some of Polaris's music from the show was released as a CD, Music from The Adventures of Pete & Pete, including the theme song "Hey Sandy".
Polaris's music for the show was released on vinyl on Record Store Day 2015. The album tracks are:
- "Hey Sandy"
- "She Is Staggering"
- "Waiting For October"
- "Saturnine"
- "Everywhere"
- "Ivy Boy"
- "Summerbaby"
- "Coronado II"
- "Ashamed Of The Story I Told"
- "As Usual"
- "Recently"
- "The Monster's Loose"
With a total of 2100 pressings, the album sold out promptly and was considered a must-own by many reputable collector sites, such as Modern Vinyl,[13] Consequence of Sound,[14] and Paste.[15]
Music from the show was also available in 1995 on a promotional cassette mini album, titled Happily Deranged, available by sending in UPC symbols from Kellogg's Frosted Mini-Wheats. This cassette includes the Polaris songs "Hey Sandy", "She is Staggering" (listed on the cassette as "Staggering"), and "Coronado II". The cassette includes a short introduction and closing read by Big Pete.
Robert Agnello was the writer and creator of numerous pieces of music for Pete & Pete and wrote the Blowholes music for the "Hard Day's Pete" episode. The show runners originally intended to use the song "Mississippi Queen" by Mountain for the episode, but could not afford the song rights and instead asked Agnello to write a "sound-alike" version. Agnello's sound-alike song, "Marmalade Cream", was so catchy that he was asked to produce three other songs for the episode: "Summer Wind", "Piledriver", and "You Color My World". He also wrote "One Lousy" Dance which was sung by Iggy Pop and the Garbageman theme sung by David Johanson. Many incidental songs in the series were performed by Agnello and his band Lamb to Slaughter.
Production music
[edit]The show also used music from standard production music libraries.
- "Blood in the Gutter" by Laurie Johnson
- "Drama Link (d)" by Hubert Clifford
- "Dramatic Impact #3" by Ivor Slaney
- "Fisticuffs" by Laurie Johnson
- "Ballata Per Un Pistolero (Ballad of a Gunman)"[16][better source needed] A notable Western theme in the style of Ennio Morricone, it was used whenever there was a showdown between characters, for example Little Pete and the ringing phone in "The Call".
- "Lonely Stranger" by Laurie Johnson
- "Maniac Pursuit" by Trevor Duncan
- "Aloha" by Dick Stephen Walter
- "The Pilgrim" by Jan Cyrka
Home media
[edit]VHS
[edit]Nickelodeon VHS tapes were first released through Sony Wonder, then through Paramount.
- "Snick Vol. 1: Nick Snicks Friendship" – Includes one episode from each show in the early SNICK lineup: Clarissa Explains It All, Roundhouse, The Ren & Stimpy Show, and Are You Afraid of the Dark?. A pre-series Pete & Pete short is included in between each show. This tape includes the shorts "Artie, the Strongest Man in the World", "X-Ray Man", and "Route 34".
- "Snick Vol. 2: Nick Snicks the Family" – Includes the same lineup as "Friendship". The Pete & Pete shorts are "The Burping Room", "Mom's Plate", and "The Punishment".
- "Classic Petes" – Includes the episodes "What We Did on Our Summer Vacation" and "Apocalypse Pete", plus the bonus short "Artie's Workout". (with an accompanying "Petunia" Tattoo)
- "School Dazed" – Includes the episodes "Day of the Dot" and "Tool and Die", plus the bonus short "StareMaster" (with an accompanying "Magic Motion Eyeball Card").
- "Farewell, My Little Viking" – Includes both parts of the story, edited into one long episode. Also includes the short "Artie, the Strongest Man in the World".
DVD
[edit]Nickelodeon DVDs are released through Paramount.
Season Releases
| Broadcast season | Release date | Episodes | Specials | Commentary tracks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Season 1 | May 17, 2005 | All 8 from season one | "Valentine's Day Massacre""What We Did On Our Summer Vacation""Apocalypse Pete""New Year's Pete" | "What We Did on Our Summer Vacation""Day of the Dot""The Nightcrawlers" |
| Season 2 | November 1, 2005 | All 13 from season two | "Space, Geeks and Johnny Unitas" | "Halloweenie""Yellow Fever""Farewell, My Little Viking" (both parts) |
| Season 3 | Was originally scheduled for release February 28, 2006. However, after the merger between DreamWorks and Paramount Pictures, the third season was removed from Paramount's schedule.[17] | All 13 from season three | N/A | N/A According to co-creators Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi the season three DVDs were actually pressed and are sitting in a warehouse.[18] In a LA Times article they discussed the situation. McRobb said, "The same thing goes on with the mythical third season on DVD. They put out the first two and everyone's thrilled, and the third one doesn't come out, and no one has ever told us why. And they made it, it's in the warehouse."[18] Viscardi added, "It's packaged, it's recorded, we did commentary tracks with a bunch of the cast, there's all these special extras on it. They pressed them, we saw it. Nothing."[18] |
Broadcast
[edit]The Adventures of Pete & Pete first ran on Nickelodeon from 1993 to 1996. Reruns continued to air from 1996 to 1999, and again from 2003 to 2004 on U-Pick Live. It also aired reruns on Noggin's teen block, The N, from 2002 to 2003. In Canada, it aired on the Family Channel in the early 2000s.[19]
The Adventures of Pete & Pete was one of the series mentioned as a potential future series that would air on The '90s Are All That.[20][21] Despite images of the show appearing in the often-shown The '90s Are All That commercial promos, no episodes of the series have aired on the block. The 1989 shorts began airing on the block in 2013. When the block expanded into The Splat (now NickSplat) in 2015, Pete & Pete was listed as part of the block's lineup, but had yet to be scheduled (only the shorts have been aired on the block).
On May 28, 2017, it was announced that Mike Maronna and Danny Tamberelli would take part in a weekend-long event on NickSplat called "The Adventures of Pete & Pete: The Strongest Reunion in the World" on June 17 and 18,[22] where classic episodes were replayed while they share various moments from making the series.
Reunion
[edit]
In late 2011 and early 2012[23] a series of cast and crew reunions took place in Los Angeles and New York City respectively. Tamberelli, Syd Straw and Marshall Crenshaw performed a rendition of the theme song "Hey Sandy" in addition to other Pete & Pete compositions. Creators McRobb, Viscardi, along with Michael Maronna, Hardy Rawls, Judy Grafe, Alison Fanelli, Toby Huss, and director Katherine Dieckmann were all in attendance.[24]
The 2011 Los Angeles reunion was billed by the Cinefamily as the "KrebStar Film Festival", a reference to the show's own brand. Additionally, many products from the show were available, including Krebex, Kreb Scouts, KrebStore 24 and Krebgate Toothpaste. Staff members also handed out "performance-enhanced" Orange Lazarus.[25]
Since September 2013, Danny Tamberelli and Michael Maronna released a monthly podcast, The Adventures of Danny and Mike, on the Seltzer Kings podcast network and hosted by Jeremy Balon. The three also tour with their stage show Nostalgia Personified. Both Tamberelli and Maronna have remained close friends since the end of the series.[26]
References
[edit]- ^ "Music from The Adventures of Pete and Pete". AllMusic.
- ^ Drucker, Mike (May 3, 2005). "The Adventures of Pete & Pete: Season One". IGN. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
- ^ McMahon, Lisa (April 19, 2016). "Chris Viscardi, '84: Telling Meaningful Children's Stories". Niagara University. Archived from the original on April 21, 2016. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
- ^ Lloyd, Robert (May 29, 2005). "A kids' world, odd and true". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 14, 2021.
- ^ Appelstein, Mike (February 23, 2012). "Going Back To Wellsville: Six Great Musical Moments From The Adventures Of Pete & Pete". The Village Voice. Archived from the original on January 29, 2019. Retrieved January 29, 2019.
- ^ Chanko, Kenneth M. (November 28, 1993). "Meet the Petes". New York Daily News: 718.
- ^ Adventures of Pete & Pete, The – Short 15 – "The Dot"
- ^ "Day of the Dot". The Adventures of Pete & Pete. Season 1. Episode 2. December 5, 1993. Nickelodeon.
- ^ "Pinned". The Adventures of Pete & Pete. Season 3. Episode 10. December 7, 1995. Nickelodeon.
- ^ a b c d e f Kurp, Joshua (March 14, 2011). "The Ten Most Memorable Guest Stars of The Adventures of Pete and Pete". Vulture. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
- ^ "The Many Musical Cameos of The Adventures of Pete & Pete". Lethal Amounts. August 5, 2021. Archived from the original on January 22, 2023. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
- ^ "The Adventures Of Pete and Pete, Episode #6". Green Room Radio (Podcast). Archived from the original on November 16, 2005.
- ^ "RSD Must Haves: Polaris – Music from the Adventures of Pete & Pete". modern-vinyl.com. April 17, 2015. Archived from the original on April 20, 2015.
- ^ Melis, Matt (April 15, 2015). "Album Review: Polaris - Music from the Adventures of Pete & Pete [Reissue]". Consequence.
- ^ Hayden, Mack (April 16, 2015). "The Timelessness of Pete & Pete: Polaris' Mark Mulcahy on His Record Store Day Release". Paste Magazine.
- ^ "Earworms". groups.google.com.
- ^ Lacey, Gord (January 1, 2006). "The Adventures of Pete & Pete - Season 3 cancelled?!". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
- ^ a b c Lloyd, Robert (August 31, 2012). "The further adventures of 'Pete & Pete' and Will and Chris". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
- ^ "Adventures of Pete and Pete, The". family.ca. Archived from the original on November 4, 2001. Retrieved March 1, 2025.
- ^ "Nick at Nite for Twentsomethings on the Way". MTV. March 10, 2011. Archived from the original on March 13, 2011.
- ^ Rice, Lynette (March 10, 2011). "TeenNick goes retro with '90s programming -- EXCLUSIVE". EW.com. Archived from the original on March 11, 2011.
- ^ "Watch Pete & Pete Reunite for The Adventures of Pete & Pete Marathon". PopCulture.com. May 29, 2017. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
- ^ Bradley, Paul T. (August 29, 2012). "Adventures of Pete and Pete Cast Reunites Again (With the Band Polaris!)". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on January 20, 2015.
- ^ Luippold, Ross (March 2, 2012). "'Pete & Pete' Reunion Show Was". HuffPost. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
- ^ Bradley, Paul T. (November 21, 2011). "The Adventures of Pete and Pete Reunion at Cinefamily: Mike Maronna, Danny Tamberelli & Artie...the Strongest Man...in the World". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on February 28, 2012.
- ^ Andaloro, Angela. "28 Years Later, The Adventures of Pete and Pete's Danny Tamberelli and Michael C. Maronna Are Still Best Friends (Exclusive)". People. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
External links
[edit]- The Adventures of Pete & Pete at IMDb
- "Pete & Pete" flickr page
- The website of Pete & Pete
- Overview of Pete & Pete music, including lyrics of theme song "Hey Sandy"
- The History of The Adventures of Pete & Pete
- The Adventures of Danny and Mike podcast (produced and edited by Seltzer Kings)
- The Adventures of Pete & Pete at TV Tango
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