DIRTY JOBS
'''Dirty Jobs''' is a program on the Discovery Channel in which host Mike Rowe is shown performing difficult, strange, and/or messy occupational duties alongside professional workers. The show premiered with three pilot episodes in November 2003. The show returned as a series on July 26 2005. The episodes shown on the European Discovery Channel sometimes include scenes that were not included in the US version.
The appeal of the show is the juxtaposition of Mike Rowe, a well-spoken man of television with a sharp, sarcastic, self-deprecating wit, the blue-collar situations in which he's put, and the colorful personalities of the men and women who actually do that job for a living.
| Contents |
| Format |
| History |
| Episodes |
| Unaired segments |
| Promotion |
| Music |
| References |
| See also |
| External links |
Format
A worker takes on Rowe as a fully-involved assistant during a typical work day, during which he works hard to complete every task as best he can despite discomfort, hazards or situations that are just plain disgusting. The "dirty job" often includes cameramen Troy Paff or Doug Glover getting just as dirty as he does. Mike frequently takes on-camera jabs at his field producer, Dave Barsky, regarding Barsky's penchant for setting up scenes where Mike will encounter the most dangerous and/or dirty part of the "dirty job" as part of a great camera shot; when a safety officer finishes going over the rules and regulations for the "Billboard Installer" job in the third season and hands Mike a log to sign to acknowledge receiving instructions, Mike mutters the words "Dave...Barsky" as he signs his name.
Mike Rowe often makes jokes about his jobs and describes them as "dirty jokes." But he almost never makes fun of the workers themselves. Indeed, Rowe and the show consistently respect these people for taking on the jobs that average people would never touch, and the show always begins with the following quote from Mike Rowe:
: ''"My name is Mike Rowe, and this is my job: I explore the country looking for people who aren't afraid to get dirty—hard-working men and women who earn an honest living doing the kinds of jobs that make civilized life possible for the rest of us. Now...get ready, to get dirty."''
Upon learning that a worker has teenage children, Rowe sometimes directs comments at them through the camera, such as, "This is what your Mom does every day, just to keep a roof over your heads!"
History
Rowe raking mud on a Hawaiian Taro farm.
The show is a spin-off of a segment host Mike Rowe once did on a local San Francisco program called ''Somebody's Gotta Do It''. After completing a graphic piece on artificial cow insemination, Rowe was inundated with letters expressing "shock, horror, fascination, disbelief, and wonder". Rowe then sent the tape to the Discovery Channel, who commissioned a series based on this concept [1]. ''Dirty Jobs'' is now produced by Craig Piligian (executive producer) of Pilgrim Film & Television. The Discovery Channel executive producer is Gena McCarthy.
Episodes
Main articles: List of Dirty Jobs episodes
In July 2006, the show aired two special episodes to kick off and wrap up Discovery's annual Shark Week, of which Mike Rowe was the host. The episodes featured him in a number of jobs related to the animals, some as outlandish as shark repellent tester and shark suit tester, both of which necessitated his jumping into a shark feeding frenzy. As a pun on Discovery Channel's "Shark Week" theme, the two episodes were named "Dirty Jobs That Bite" and "Dirty Jobs That Bite Harder" for the opening and closing hours respectively.
In late August of 2006, the show reached a milestone with Mike Rowe's 100th dirty job. This was commemorated with a special 2 hour long episode which mainly showed Mike's day with the U.S. Army's 187th Ordnance Battalion at Fort Jackson, and included bloopers plus an "about me" segment of Mike's crew. At the end of the episode, Mike Rowe and Dave Barsky had a guitar/banjo duet and performed a song about the 100 dirty jobs.
Each episode ends with a segment, usually shot at a previous dirty job, where Rowe tells the viewers that the show's continued existence depends on viewer submissions of suggestions for additional dirty jobs, and instructs them to go to the show's official website[1] for details on how to submit ideas. Rowe has often noted on-screen and off-screen that without viewer contributions, the show would be lost; Rowe originally concocted a list of a dozen jobs that could be featured in the three episodes that served as the show's pilot, and within days after the first episode aired, viewers flooded Discovery Channel with e-mail and video featuring their own dirty jobs, a tradition that has kept the show going ever since. As Rowe explained to Craig Ferguson on an episode of ''The Late Late Show'' in July 2007 about his original cache of jobs for the pilots, "I haven't had an original idea since then."[2]
Unaired segments
According to roadkill taxidermy artist Stephen Paternite, ''Dirty Jobs'' filmed a segment featuring him in 2003, which was ultimately cut by the Discovery Channel as "too gross." The segment follows Mike Rowe and Paternite as they gather and skin dead raccoons, which Paternite will eventually turn into art pieces. The segment is available to view on Paternite's website[3], and on YouTube, under the name "Too Gross for Discovery."[4] In an interview on ''The Late Late Show'' Rowe also mentioned that there were several segments which they have chosen not to air because they were too disturbing, including a "body farmer" and crime scene investigators. Even aired segments can be heavily edited, such as the "skull cleaner" segment, the final aired version of which Mike has likened to "''The Sound of Music'' with the songs edited out" because parts of it were deemed too graphic for television.[5]
Promotion
Discovery Channel issued the following statement in its publicity of the program:
:In the feisty ''Dirty Jobs'', host and everyman Mike Rowe gets the grimy scoop on downright nasty occupations. The featured "foul play for pay" could be processing smelly seafood in a fish factory, collecting bat guano for prized fertilizer, combing creek bottoms for edible wildlife, or cleaning septic tanks to maintain a fresh-smelling environment.
Since Mike Rowe began appearing in Ford pick-up truck commercials in 2006, the show has made tongue-in-cheek references to these ads. In the "Billboard Installer" episode, Mike jokingly quipped that he wasn't sophisticated in the ways of the advertising business, while standing in front of a Ford advertisement mounted on the billboard he had just helped to erect. Over the end credits of the "Wild Goose Chase" episode, Mike comments that as a Ford spokesman, the show is contractually obligated to mention Ford at least once in each episode.
Music
The show's theme song was originally Faith No More's "We Care A Lot" which features the lyrics, "It's a dirty job but someone's gotta do it." In the first half of 2007, it was replaced with a generic theme song due to rights issues; older episodes aired at the time had their introductions reëdited. Mike Rowe has said "Bottom line, the rights to 'We Care a Lot' were either not renewed on time, or not properly acquired in the first place." [6] Although the network has not issued any statement clarifying the situation, "We Care A Lot" returned as the show's theme song beginning with the June 26, 2007 episode.
Season 2 commercials for the show feature the song "Dirty White Boy" by Foreigner. Season 3 commercials feature Rowe sharing the stage with a pig positioned on a rounded white pedestal, with nondescript formal-sounding light instrumental music in the background.
Rowe often sings on-camera during the segments as part of a sardonic hat-tip to his days as an opera singer. During the candy making segment in episode 34 ("Fuel Tank Cleaner"), Rowe discovers that one of the candy makers makes a confection called "opera fudge" and ask if she sings opera during the making of opera fudge, then belts out an unidentified segment of an opera in Italian. During the cow pots segment of episode 47 ("Poo Pot Maker"), Rowe imitates the singing gondoliers of Venice while paddling around the liquid holding lagoon on the Freund farm: "O Solo Mio/Don't know the words/I'm paddling 'round/On ponds of turds..." In a 2007 episode set at Prince George's Stadium with Mike spending the day doing the "dirty jobs" associated with groundskeeping and dugout maintenance for the Bowie Baysox minor league baseball team in Bowie, Maryland, Mike ended the segment singing the National Anthem prior to the game and throwing out the first pitch.
When Mike reads the very last piece of viewer mail in the viewer's choice episode, he was asked if he could sing the Dirty Jobs Theme Song because his online bio says that he used to be an opera singer. So he explained that one night, as they sat on "Foley" Creek (actually "Folly" Creek, but he has a tendency to pronounce it incorrectly), after a night of oysters and drinking (likely during the Oyster Harvester segment of the shrimper episode), he, Juke Joint Johnny and Sam (likely Silky Sam) jotted down some lyrics and the "official, unofficial Dirty Jobs Theme Song" was born. This shortest version of the song clocked in at just under a minute in length, and it varies a bit from later versions, but it is fun in that it was less planned than the later ones [7].
At the end of the pipe organ specialist segment of the geoduck farmer episode, Mike Rowe sang what he called the Dirty Jobs Anthem [8]. Rowe reprised this moment in the "Leather Tanner" episode from the third season on an antique piano at the tannery.
At the conclusion of a two-hour special edition commemorating Mike's 100th dirty job, he and field producer Dave Barsky faked a guitar/banjo duet, featuring an extended version of this anthem which ran a little over two minutes in length (Rowe actually sang all the parts while Rowe's friend Matt played all the instruments) [9]. The extended song differs slightly from the shorter versions which aired previously, and even the words that are similar vary somewhat [10].
References
1. Sure, it's a dirty job, but ... Deggans, Eric
2. Mike Rowe on ''The Late Show with Craig Ferguson'', retrieved August 20, 2007.
3. Re: Too Gross for Discovery Paternite, Stephen
4. Paternite on YouTube Paternite, Stephen
5. A Mike Rowe Classic: Mike on Skull Cleaning, Discovery.com
6. Re: New Theme SONG?????? Rowe, Mike
7. Dirty Jobs: Viewer's Choice, Dirty Jobs Anthem
8. Dirty Jobs: Geoduck Farmer, Dirty Jobs Anthem
9. Re: Musical Tribute in Episode 100 Rowe, Mike
10. Dirty Jobs: 100th Dirty Job Special, Dirty Jobs Anthem
See also
★ ''The Worst Jobs in History''
External links
★ Discovery.com Dirty Jobs Website
★ Pilgrim Films Dirty Jobs Website
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