Mad TV season 10

The tenth season of Mad TV, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on the Fox Network between September 18, 2004, and May 21, 2005.

Summary
With MADtv in its tenth year on FOX, the show continued to change with cast turnover. Mo Collins left while Josh Meyers was fired, and featured cast members Gillian Vigman and Melissa Paull were let go. The only new cast members this season were Crista Flanagan (who was promoted to repertory player in the next season) and Spencer Kayden (who became one in a long line of microscopically short-lived MADtv players who joined the cast in the middle of the season, barely appeared in sketches, and were immediately fired at its end). Despite the lack of new cast members, the show saw an abundance of featured players getting promoted to repertory status, as seen with the promotions of Daniele Gaither, Keegan-Michael Key, Nicole Parker, and Jordan Peele, all of whom became the show's most memorable cast members since the days of the original 1995-1996 cast. Jordan Peele did not appear in the first four episodes, however, he returned in the fifth episode.

This season saw many departures by the season's end. Aries Spears, who had been a cast member since season three, left the show after eight years, tying Debra Wilson's then-record for longest tenure as a MADtv cast member, which would later be surpassed by Michael McDonald's ten years. Ron Pederson and Paul Vogt would also say goodbye to the show. While Vogt quit so he could work on Broadway, Pederson was fired due to FOX cutting the show's cast budget.

Notable celebrity guest stars this season include: John Heder, Alanis Morissette, Charla Faddoul, Mirna Hindoyan, Bill Maher, Ja Rule, former MADtv cast members Mo Collins, Nicole Sullivan, Debra Wilson, Artie Lange, and Will Sasso; Marilyn Manson, Nelly, Nicole Richie, Amber Tamblyn, Michael Cera, Tony Hale, Christopher Masterson and his brother, Danny; Flava Flav, and Jeff Probst.

Opening montage
The title sequence begins with the Mad TV logo appearing above the Los Angeles skyline. The theme song, which is performed by the hip-hop group Heavy D & the Boyz, begins and each repertory cast member is introduced alphabetically, followed by the featured cast. When all cast members and guests are introduced, the music stops and the title sequence ends with the phrase "You are now watching Mad TV."

Cast

 * Repertory cast members
 * Ike Barinholtz (23/23 episodes)
 * Frank Caliendo (13/23 episodes)
 * Daniele Gaither (22/23 episodes)
 * Keegan-Michael Key (22/23 episodes)
 * Bobby Lee (21/23 episodes)
 * Michael McDonald (22/23 episodes)
 * Nicole Parker (23/23 episodes)
 * Ron Pederson (22/23 episodes)
 * Jordan Peele (15/23 episodes)
 * Aries Spears (18/23 episodes)
 * Paul Vogt (22/23 episodes)
 * Stephnie Weir (23/23 episodes)


 * Featured cast members
 * Crista Flanagan (5/23 episodes; first episode: February 5, 2005)
 * Spencer Kayden (4/23 episodes; first episode: February 26, 2005/last episode: May 21, 2005)

Writers

 * Bryan Adams (eps. 1–23)
 * Ike Barinholtz (eps. 19, 23)
 * Dick Blasucci (eps. 1–23)
 * Alex Borstein (ep. 12)
 * Kal Clarke (ep. 9)
 * Chris Cluess (eps. 1–23)
 * Mo Collins (ep. 14)
 * Steven Cragg (eps. 1–23)
 * John Crane (eps. 1–23)
 * Lauren Dombrowski (eps. 1–23)
 * Crista Flanagan (eps. 16, 17, 21)
 * Michael Hitchcock (eps. 1–23)
 * Jennifer Joyce (eps. 1–23)
 * Keegan-Michael Key (eps. 5, 13)
 * Scott King (writing supervisor) (eps. 1–23)
 * Jason Kordelos (eps. 1–23)
 * Bobby Lee (ep. 21)
 * Bruce McCoy (eps. 1–23)
 * Michael McDonald (eps. 2, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 14, 18, 20, 23)
 * Nicole Parker (eps. 10, 15, 19)
 * Jordan Peele (eps. 5, 10, 15, 19, 23)
 * Robert Porch (ep. 17)
 * Tami Sagher (eps. 1–23)
 * David Salzman (eps. 1–23)
 * Greg Ungar (ep. 21)
 * Stephnie Weir (eps. 1, 4, 6, 10, 12, 17, 20, 22)
 * Maiya Williams (eps. 1–23)
 * Jim Wise (eps. 1–23)

Home releases
Season 10 of Mad TV has not been released on DVD. However, several sketches culled from this season appear on a compilation DVD called Mad TV: The Best of Seasons 8, 9, and 10 (first released on October 25, 2005).

As of 2020, season 10 is available on HBO Max, with episodes 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, and 21 missing.