Classroom (2006)
Classroom
2006Here's a history lesson: From April 2007 until February of 2011, Classroom was Channel 101's longest running show of all time. Tyler Spiers created Classroom in January of 2006 writing, producing and directing the first three episodes. With help from the hilarious Joe Davidson, Spiers started the show as a humble, character-driven pilot and it became the most embraced episodic series, schooling the competition for twelve screenings in a row. With its talented cast of Channel 101 regulars, the creative addition of Mike Rose as writer/producer beginning with Episode 4, and frequent plot hi-jinks, the show maintained its status throughout one of the best seasons of Channel 101. Closing the book with it's thirteenth episode, Classroom leaves behind a legacy of five first-place episodes, thousands of happy audience members, and a show that can teach us all a thing or two about Channel 101 success.
Seasons & Episode
Mr. Miller's "unteachables" are challenged to an academic decathalon.
A student's tragedy pushes Mr. Miller to take the law into his own hands.
Boombox has a secret.
Principal Brockaway lands the school in financial trouble.
Jason brushes with the dark side of mall photography.
LaShanda tries out Bulemia to impress the popular girls.
Mr. Miller must save his class from an evil substitute.
Estranged brothers, family fights, turkey, and stuffing all converge in this touching Thanksgiving special.
A new student requires some special needs.
When a cool new poetry teacher stumbles into the classroom, the students find out just how much they're worth. Literally.
With the help of Jason's Science Fair project, the class gets a hands-on lesson in American history.
Classroom's epic finale.
Here's a history lesson: From April 2007 until February of 2011, Classroom was Channel 101's longest running show of all time. Tyler Spiers created Classroom in January of 2006 writing, producing and directing the first three episodes. With help from the hilarious Joe Davidson, Spiers started the show as a humble, character-driven pilot and it became the most embraced episodic series, schooling the competition for twelve screenings in a row. With its talented cast of Channel 101 regulars, the creative addition of Mike Rose as writer/producer beginning with Episode 4, and frequent plot hi-jinks, the show maintained its status throughout one of the best seasons of Channel 101. Closing the book with it's thirteenth episode, Classroom leaves behind a legacy of five first-place episodes, thousands of happy audience members, and a show that can teach us all a thing or two about Channel 101 success.