Alvar Seeberg’s Stunning Knight Semi Replica

This gallery contains 19 photos.

Alvar Seeberg is a Knight Rider fan that is living the dream. Knight Rider is a show that has spawned a whole community of car owners who have taken the effort to track down and buy a Trans Am, and … Continue reading

More Galleries | Comments Off on Alvar Seeberg’s Stunning Knight Semi Replica

Pictures From The Hollywood Show

This gallery contains 4 photos.

David Hasselhoff & Rebecca Holden were reunited at The Hollywood Show this past weekend, and Rebecca has been kind enough to share some pictures from the event! Also in attendance were frequent Knight Rider guest star Ann Turkel (Adrianne Margeaux … Continue reading

More Galleries | Comments Off on Pictures From The Hollywood Show

Knight Rider in New Samsung Galaxy Gear Ad

Michael, K.I.T.T. and the comlink feature in the new advertisement for the Samsung Galaxy Gear! Check it out below:

Posted in Knight Rider, Merchandise, Original Series | Tagged | Comments Off on Knight Rider in New Samsung Galaxy Gear Ad

On This Day in Knight Rider: October 2, 1983

Goliath TV Guide Ad

Goliath TV Guide Ad

October 2, 1983: It’s now thirty years since Knight Rider revved up for it’s second season with the 2-hour Season Premiere episode Goliath!

Goliath saw Michael and K.I.T.T. face off against their greatest enemies: Garthe Knight (David Hasselhoff), son of Wilton Knight and the model for Michael’s face, and his 14-tonne, 18-wheeled monster truck Goliath – coated with the same indestructible chemical formula as K.I.T.T.

The episode was filmed on location in Las Vegas, Nevada, and is a time capsule of the famous Las Vegas Strip in that era. Many scenes were shot at the Caesar’s Palace Hotel and Casino, including Michael Knight’s first meetings with his evil twin.

David Hasselhoff in 'Goliath'

David Hasselhoff in ‘Goliath’

David Hasselhoff has fond memories of Goliath, and recalls: “Everybody remarks on [that] episode — honest to God, everybody does. And when I was doing it with my little earring, I thought I am never going to work again. And when my father saw it he said, ‘Michael Knight’s evil twin is a better actor than Michael Knight!'”

Goliath proved to be hugely successful – the highest-rated episode of Knight Rider‘s entire run on NBC – and remains a firm fan favourite to this day. Garthe Knight and Goliath returned to wreak more havoc in Goliath Returns later in the second season, and this episode also became the template for the series’ later season premieres.

Posted in Anniversary, Knight Rider, Original Series | Tagged , | Comments Off on On This Day in Knight Rider: October 2, 1983

Knight Rider Meets Back To The Future

Check out this great fan edit of clips from the Back to the Future movies in the style of Knight Rider‘s opening titles! It’s two ’80’s classics in one…

It’s a shame the DeLorean couldn’t have looked a little more like this:

DeLorean K.I.T.T.

DeLorean K.I.T.T.

Posted in Knight Rider, Original Series | Tagged , | Comments Off on Knight Rider Meets Back To The Future

Knight Rider is 31 Years Old!

Knight Rider TV Guide Ad

Knight Rider TV Guide Ad, September 26, 1982

September 26, 1982: Knight Rider debuted on NBC with a 2-hour movie!

Starring David Hasselhoff and Edward Mulhare, the pilot episode (subsequently renamed Knight of the Phoenix in syndication) told the story of Michael Long, a police lieutenant who is ambushed while trying to bust a gang of industrial spies. He is given a new face, a new name (Michael Knight), and a new car: the Knight 2000 – a virtually indestructible machine that is the fastest, safest and strongest set of wheels in the world, and houses an AI named K.I.T.T. (Knight Industries Two Thousand). Together, Knight and his car set off to finish what Michael Long started, and prove the one man can make a difference!

Knight Rider TV Guide Ad, September 26, 1982

Knight Rider TV Guide Ad, September 26, 1982

Brandon Tartikoff, then Head of Programming at NBC, told California magazine that the show was borne out of a conversation he had with one of his assistants about casting handsome leading men who couldn’t act. They imagined a series called The Man of Six Words, which would begin with the hero climbing out of a woman’s bed saying “Thank you.” Then he would chase down the bad guys and shout “Freeze!” Finally the victims would thank him and he would reply, “You’re welcome.” In between, the car would do the talking.

In reality, NBC had been looking at producing a “car show” for some time, in part to compete with CBS’ The Dukes of Hazzard but also thanks to a successful episode of BJ and the Bear about a futuristic police car. The project was shopped all around Hollywood before eventually landing in the lap of producer Glen A. Larson, who got a handle on the concept by modernising the classic Lone Ranger Western format.

Actors Don Johnson and Steven Bauer screentested for the role of Michael Knight along with future guest stars Jeffrey Osterhage (K.I.T.T. Vs K.A.R.R.) and Phil Coccioletti (Slammin’ Sammy’s Stunt Show Spectacular), but it was former soap star David Hasselhoff that walked (or should that be ‘drove’?) off with the role after a chance encounter with Tartikoff on an airplane. Hasselhoff blew his first screentest from nerves, but pulled himself together with positive thinking and won the role – particularly due to his treatment of patting the car like a horse and calling it “buddy,” all in keeping with the Lone Ranger style.

The pilot went before the cameras in a hurry, with several key scenes being filmed for a presentation for NBC executives. In an attempt to make it “Network Proof,” Larson called in favours from friends and cast Richard Anderson, Vince Edwards, Charles Napier, John Quade and Richard Basehart in supporting roles, . Edward Mulhare and William Daniels rounded out the cast as Knight’s boss Devon and the voice of K.I.T.T. respectively. Upon seeing the presentation-form abbreviated version of the pilot episode, the executives immediately passed a series order, and the show rode out 90 hours across four years. The concept has been popular enough to spawn two movies of the week (a reunion movie, Knight Rider 2000, 1991, NBC; and a futuristic reboot, Knight Rider 2010, 1994), and two spin-off TV series (Team Knight Rider, 1997-98, syndicated; and Knight Rider, 2008-09, NBC). A feature film is currently in development.

Posted in Anniversary, Knight Rider, Original Series | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Knight Rider is 31 Years Old!

On This Day in Knight Rider: September 24, 2008

Knight Rider 2008

Knight Rider 2008

September 24, 2008 saw the return of Knight Rider to network television as a weekly series for the first time since 1986!

Following the success of the 2-hour pilot movie that aired the previous February, NBC’s second attempt saw Knight Rider revamped yet again by showrunner Gary Scott Thompson. The series moved away from the more ‘classic’ feel of the pilot movie, and gave us a new and improved ‘Attack Mode’ K.I.T.T., and a much bigger cast – with newcomers Paul Campbell, Smith Cho and Yancey Arias joining the returning Justin Bruening, Deanna Russo, Sydney Tamiia Poitier and Bruce Davison. Val Kilmer returned as the voice of K.I.T.T.

Posted in Anniversary, Knight Rider 2008 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Happy Birthday, Justin Bruening!

Justin Bruening

Justin Bruening

Join us in wishing 21st Century Knight Rider Justin Bruening a very Happy Birthday! Justin played Mike Traceur/Mike Knight in the 2008 NBC revival of the series, and can be seen next month as a regular on the new series Ravenswood.

Posted in Actors, Anniversary, Knight Rider 2008 | Tagged | Comments Off on Happy Birthday, Justin Bruening!

On This Day in Knight Rider: September 20, 1985

Knight of the Juggernaut TV Guide ad

Knight of the Juggernaut TV Guide ad

It’s now 28 years since Knight Rider drove into its fourth season with the feature-length episode Knight of the Juggernaut!

Written by Robert Foster and Burton Armus, Juggernaut saw Michael and K.I.T.T. facing one of their most dangerous foes – an anti-assault vehicle with an explosive ramrod that was created by a Third-World terrorist. Taking its cues from some of the more popular elements of the earlier Goliath episodes, Knight of the Juggernaut is considered by many to be one of the last great Knight Rider shows, and ranks as a firm fan-favourite. It is also notable for introducing two major new features to K.I.T.T.: Super Pursuit Mode (SPM) – an altered configuration of the Trans Am with added wings and spoilers resulting in a 40% increase in speed – and the ‘C’ Mode, which folds the roof back and makes K.I.T.T. a convertible.

Making his debut in this episode was Peter Parros, who played Reginald Cornelius III (RC3), the new member of the team. RC starts out as a Chicago vigilante, ‘The Street Avenger’, who cleans up the streets with his fists and a dummy rifle made of rubber. Actor Peter Parros beat competition including Blair Underwood (who also guest-starred in the show) to the role; he told us that he won over the producers after his audition by rapping to the producers: “I’m badder than Mr. T., and prettier than Muhammad Ali, so hire me for RC3!”

Keep your scanners peeled for more on Juggernaut coming soon!

Posted in Anniversary, Knight Rider, Original Series | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on On This Day in Knight Rider: September 20, 1985

Ken Norton Passes Away

Ken Norton with David Hasselhoff on set

Ken Norton with David Hasselhoff on the set of Season Four’s ‘Redemption of a Champion’

Former US heavyweight boxing champion Ken Norton, who played Bo Keeler in the 1986 Knight Rider episode Redemption of a Champion, has died at the age of 70, according to his son. He had been in poor health following a series of strokes, and passed away of congestive heart failure in a care facility in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Norton famously beat Muhammad Ali as a 15-1 underdog in their first bout in San Diego, in 1973, breaking Ali’s jaw in the process. He would face Ali two more times, the last being a controversial encounter at the New York Yankee Stadium in 1976, where Ali won a narrow decision to retain the title.

Norton began boxing during his time in the US Marines, where he compiled a record of 24-2 with 22 knockouts and won three All-Marine Heavyweight titles. He turned professional shortly after he left the military in 1967.

He won a heavyweight title in 1977, but lost it the following year in a classic 15-round fight with Larry Holmes.

After his boxing career ended, Norton appeared in several movies and became a fight commentator. He also appeared in episodes of The A-Team and Cover-Up before guesting on Knight Rider. Appropriately, Norton’s episode of Knight Rider had a boxing theme: Norton played Bo Keeler, a former champ with a brain injury who is being lured back into the ring by a devious promoter. Don King, Carlos Palomino and Danny Lopez all made special appearances, as did Jerry Quarry, who Norton beat in five rounds (TKO) in 1975. I was fortunate enough to speak to him at a sports convention in Birmingham, England in 2009, and he had nothing but good memories from his appearance on the show.

His career saw him become a multiple Hall-of-Famer: Norton was inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame (1989), the International Boxing Hall of Fame (1992), the San Diego Hall of Champions (2001), the Marine Corps Sports Hall of Fame (2004), and the California Sports Hall of Fame (2011).

He had five children. Ken Norton, Jr. went on to play professional football as a linebacker with the San Francisco 49ers and now coaches in the NFL for the Seattle Seahawks.

You can read more about Norton’s life and career at his Official Site, and a Career Factfile at Sky Sports.

Posted in Guest Stars, Knight Rider, Obituary, Original Series | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Ken Norton Passes Away