‘Still Bringing Joy’: Samm Levine Celebrates ‘Freaks and Geeks’ 25th Anniversary

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High school comedy star thanked the show's creator and directors for giving a "comedy loving teenage nerd that kind of opportunity"

To mark the 25th anniversary of Freaks and Geeks, the beloved NBC comedy about high school outcasts in the suburbs of Michigan, cast member Samm Levine reflected on the show’s lasting impact.

“Twenty-five years,” Levine wrote in an Instagram post on Wednesday. “Some days I can’t believe it’s been that long. Other days, it sure feels like a lifetime ago. But a quarter century later, I’m truly humbled at how ‘Freaks and Geeks’ is still being talked about, still finding new fans, and still bringing joy to so many people.”

Set during the 1980 – 1981 school year, Freaks and Geeks focuses on the 16-year-old mathlete Lindsay Weir, played by Linda Cardellini, who joins a crew of burnouts Ken (Seth Rogen), Kim (Busy Philipps), Daniel (James Franco), and Nick (Jason Segel). Meanwhile, her 14-year-old brother Sam Weir, played by John Francis Daley, is entering high school and finds his own crew of outsiders.

Levine starred as the buttoned-up high school geek Neal and friend to fellow nerds Sam and Bill Haverchuck, played by Martin Starr. Levine went on to thank the show’s creator Paul Feig and the show’s directors Judd Apatow and Jake Kasdan in his post for “giving an awkward, overconfident, comedy loving teenage nerd that kind of opportunity. I’m eternally grateful.”

Freaks and Geeks, released in 1999, ran for a single season, and NBC canceled the comedy while in post-production for its final episodes. The show has appeared on several Best Of television lists with Rolling Stone ranking the series at Number 24 as it “put a spotlight on all their mortifying adolescent awkwardness” that’s all too familiar. Rolling Stone also ranked all of its 18 episodes.

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In Levine’s tribute post, he thanked his costars, crew members, and finally the fans who supported the gone-too-soon show.

“If I could, I’d give each of you a hug,” Levine wrote. “(Actually, by now I probably have met everyone who watched the show back in ‘99. All 300 of you. You’re like family to me.)”

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