词条 | The Real World: San Francisco | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| show_name = The Real World: San Francisco | image = RWSFCast.jpg | caption = The initial cast of The Real World: San Francisco | runtime = 30 minutes | language = English | creator = Mary-Ellis Bunim Jonathan Murray | num_episodes = 20[1] | starring = Pedro Zamora David "Puck" Rainey Rachel Campos Cory Murphy Pam Ling Mohammed Bilal Judd Winick Jo Rhodes | country = United States | network = MTV Syndication | first_aired = June 30, 1994 | last_aired = November 10, 1994 | preceded_by = Los Angeles | followed_by = London }} The Real World: San Francisco is the third season of MTV's reality television series The Real World, which focuses on a group of diverse strangers living together for several months in a different city each season, as cameras follow their lives and interpersonal relationships. It is the second season of The Real World to be filmed in the Pacific States region of the United States, specifically in California after Los Angeles. The season featured a total of eight cast members over the course of the season, as one cast member was evicted and replaced. This is the first of two seasons to be filmed in San Francisco. Twenty years later, the show made a return to the city in the twenty-ninth season, Ex-Plosion. Casting was completed by January 1994, by which time the cast was informed that one of their housemates would be HIV-positive, though they did not learn which one it was until the day they moved into their Russian Hill house, on February 12, 1994. The cast was filmed until they moved out on June 19.[2] The season premiered on June 30 of that year and consisted of 20 episodes. The Real World: San Francisco is noteworthy for the depiction of Pedro Zamora's struggle with AIDS, and his and other cast members' confrontations with David "Puck" Rainey, which led to Rainey's eviction. These conflicts provided what Entertainment Weekly called emotional high points for the season,[3] and are credited with making The Real World a hit. It was ranked #7 on Time magazine's list of 32 Epic Moments in Reality-TV History.[4] The season is also notable for featuring the first-ever same-sex commitment ceremony on TV, between Zamora and his partner, Sean Sasser.[5]Season changesThis season was the first to feature a castmember, Pedro Zamora, dealing with a life-threatening illness. Future seasons would feature castmembers dealing with other illnesses, such as Lyme disease and cystic fibrosis. This is also the first season to feature an Asian American, Pam Ling, and two Hispanic Americans, Pedro Zamora and Rachel Campos. The residenceThe cast lived in a house at 949[6] Lombard Street in San Francisco, California from February 12 to June 19, 1994.[7] The house is located between Leavenworth Street and Jones Street, one block east of the eight sharp turns that have earned the street the distinction of being "the crookedest street in the United States". Production renovated the third and fourth floors of the building for filming. A June 8, 2000, fire caused approximately $2 million in damage to the house. Several years after the fire, the building was completely renovated, and bears only a slight resemblance to its appearance in 1994.[8] The renovations include a second garage on the east side of the house, atop of which sits a patio.[9][10] {{Clear}}Cast
Duration of cast
Note: Even though Puck was evicted from the house in Episode 11, he still remained part of the cast and made appearances throughout the rest of the season.
{{Color box|#959FFD|FEAT|border=darkgray}} = Cast member is featured in this episode. {{Color box|#FFFF00|REP.|border=darkgray}} = Cast member replaces another cast member. {{Color box|#00A86B|KICK.|border=darkgray}} = Cast member is kicked out of the house by fellow cast members.
1. ^The Real World: San Francisco: Full Episode Synopses and Recaps. MTV.com. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 2. ^Winick, Judd (2000). Friendship, Loss and What I Learned. Henry Holt. pp. 61, 63-67 and 119. 3. ^Fretts, Bruce. (July 21, 1995). "The British Invasion The Real World returns for fourth season — The MTV hit invades London". Entertainment Weekly. Page 1 of 4 4. ^Webley, Kayla. "32 Epic Moments in Reality-TV History: 7. The Real World: Puck vs. Pedro". Time magazine. Retrieved April 9, 2011. 5. ^1 2 3 Duke, Alan; Carter, Chelsea, J. (August 8, 2013). "Sean Sasser, whose ceremony with partner on 'Real World' was TV first, dies". CNN. 6. ^Although sources such as Real World Houses give the door number as 953, castmate Cory Murphy notes the door number as 949 when first arriving there with Pedro Zamora in the season premiere. This page at Real World Houses explains that one entrance to the house that leads to the second floor bears the number 949, and an adjacent door, the one facing the street, which leads to the third and fourth floors, bears the numbers 951 and 953. 7. ^Winick (2000). Pages 61 and 119. 8. ^"Lombard Street House". Real World Houses. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 9. ^"Lombard Street House Front". Real World Houses. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 10. ^"Lombard Street House East Patio". Real World Houses. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 11. ^1 Cory: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 12. ^Winick (2000). Page 111. 13. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite episode|title=Planes, Trains and Paddywagons|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=1|network=MTV|airdate=June 30, 1994}} 14. ^1 {{cite episode|title=White Like Me|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=3|network=MTV|airdate=July 14, 1994}} 15. ^1 2 3 {{cite episode|title=Trouble in Paradise|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=7|network=MTV|airdate=August 4, 1994}} 16. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite episode|title=Just Friends|series=The Real World: San Francisco|network=MTV|season=3|number=18|airdate=October 27, 1994}} 17. ^1 Judd: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 18. ^{{Cite web|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990DEEDB1139F93AA3575AC0A9679C8B63|title=Weddings: vows; Pamela Ling and Judd Winick |accessdate=2007-04-12 |author=Debra A. Klein |date=2001-09-09|publisher=The New York Times}} 19. ^1 {{cite episode|title=From a Six to a Nine and Back Again|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=4|network=MTV|airdate=July 21, 1994}} 20. ^1 {{cite episode|title=Why Is Love Like An Elevator|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=15|network=MTV|airdate=October 6, 1994}} 21. ^1 2 Mohammed: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 22. ^Stephanie first appears in Episode 3. Her occupation, the duration of their relationship, and his schoolwork is established in Episode 16. 23. ^The Real World Diaries. Pocket Books. 1996. Pages 129 and 133. 24. ^1 2 Pam: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 25. ^1 {{cite episode|title=Coffee and Sympathy|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=7|network=MTV|airdate=August 11, 1994}} 26. ^1 Pedro: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 27. ^Winick (2000). Pages 58 and 59. 28. ^1 {{cite episode|title=Homecoming|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=13|network=MTV|airdate=September 22, 1994}} 29. ^His first name is given in Act 1 of Episode 14 and Act 3 of Episode 19. 30. ^1 2 Puck: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 31. ^1 2 3 {{cite episode|title=Love Stinks|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=2|airdate=July 7, 1994}} 32. ^His relationship to his mother and grandmother were depicted in Episode 8. His sister and grandfather visited the house in Episode 9, and the latter shows up in Episode 10 as well. 33. ^1 2 Gliatto, Tom. "Brave New World: Mtv's Real World Cameras Feast on An International House of Flatmates". People. Vol. 44. No. 2. July 10, 1995 34. ^1 2 Rachel: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 35. ^Rachel Campos. Mooviees.com. Retrieved December 1, 2011 36. ^1 2 {{cite episode|title=Rebel, Rebel|series=The Real World: San Francisco|network=MTV|season=3|episode=12|airdate=September 15, 1994}} 37. ^Campos-Duffy, Rachel. Stay Home, Stay Happy: 10 Secrets to Loving At-Home Motherhood. Celebra Trade. 2009. Acknowledgements. {{ISBN|0-451-22807-3}} 38. ^1 {{cite episode|title=Old Fish, New Fish|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=14|network=MTV|airdate=September 29, 1994}} 39. ^1 2 3 {{cite episode|title=Hawaii|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=17|network=MTV|airdate=October 20, 1994}} 40. ^Her full first name is mentioned at the end of Act 1 of Episode 18. 41. ^She mentions this at the end of Episode 18. 42. ^1 Jo: The Real World: San Francisco. MTV. 1993. Retrieved November 30, 2011. 43. ^The restraining order, date of her marriage, Steve, and comments about conflict and independence are established in Episode 15. 44. ^She revels she is a vegetarian when she first appears in Episode 14, but in Episode 17, says she does not eat dairy products, and is referred to as a vegan. 45. ^Jo replaced Puck as a roommate in Episode 14. 46. ^Puck was kicked out of the house in Episode 11 after his roommates all voted him out of the house. He remained part of the cast. 47. ^{{cite episode|title=You Gotta Have Art|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=5|network=MTV|airdate=July 28, 1994}} 48. ^{{cite episode|title=Together and Apart|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=8|network=MTV|airdate=August 18, 1994}} 49. ^{{cite episode|title=Collision Course|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=9|network=MTV|airdate=August 25, 1994}} 50. ^{{cite episode|title=Kiss and Tell|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=10|network=MTV|airdate=September 1, 1994}} 51. ^{{cite episode|title=Getting Dropped|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=11|network=MTV|airdate=September 8, 1994}} 52. ^{{cite episode|title=Love and Death|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=16|network=MTV|airdate=October 13, 1994}} 53. ^{{cite episode|title=Love Rules|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=19|network=MTV|airdate=November 3, 1994}} 54. ^{{cite episode|title=Last Call|series=The Real World: San Francisco|season=3|number=20|network=MTV|airdate=November 10, 1994}} 55. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.qrd.org/qrd/media/television/1994/real.world.star.new.death-10.10.94 |title=AIDS activist, near death, to see family from Cuba |agency=Reuters |date=October 7, 1994 |accessdate=18 January 2011}} 56. ^1 2 Israel, Betsy (November 28, 1994). "HIV, And Positive, Pedro Zamora of MTV's Real World Lived His Too-Brief Life To Its Limit". People. Vol. 42, No. 22 57. ^Winick (2000). p. 145. 58. ^1 A Tribute to Pedro Zamora MTV. Broadcast in November 1994. 59. ^The Real World Diaries. 1996. Page 172 60. ^Rothaus, Steve (March 22, 2009). "Years After his Death, A Young AIDS Activist's Life is Celebrated on Film: Remembering Pedro". The Miami Herald. p. 1E. 61. ^Winick (2000). pp. 162-173. 62. ^Mentioned at the end of the 2008 film Pedro. 63. ^The Real World: Reunion. MTV. 1995 64. ^{{Cite web|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990DEEDB1139F93AA3575AC0A9679C8B63 |title=Weddings: vows; Pamela Ling and Judd Winick |accessdate=2007-04-12 |author=Debra A. Klein |date=September 9, 2001|newspaper=The New York Times}} 65. ^1 2 "'The Real World' Stars: Where Are They Now?" The Huffington Post/AOL TV. March 4, 2008. 66. ^This was also mentioned at the end of the 2008 film Pedro. 67. ^Mizoguchi, Karen (June 3, 2016). "Sean and Rachel Campos-Duffy Welcome Son Patrick Miguel". People. 68. ^1 "The Cast". The Wedding Video. 2002. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 69. ^Real Worlds Awards Bash. MTV. Retrieved December 1, 2011. 70. ^Associated Press. "Wisconsin's Duffy says he's ready to get to work" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101108021607/http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/wire/chi-ap-wi-wisconsinhouse-7t,0,2649529.story |date=2010-11-08 }}. Chicago Tribune. November 3, 2010 71. ^Ryan Pienciaki, Elaine Aradillas and Paul Chi. "The Real World: Where Are They Now?". People. Vol. 70. No. 7. August 18, 2008 72. ^1 All Access Presents: Where Are They Now?: Reality Stars. VH1. Viewed January 7, 2009 73. ^{{Cite web|url=http://tv.ign.com/articles/746/746056p1.html|title=Drawn Together's creators face reality|work=IGN|accessdate=2006-11-27}} 74. ^1 2 3 4 5 McGonough, Megan (August 13, 2013). [https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/sean-sasser-part-of-one-of-tvs-first-gay-romances-dies-at-44/2013/08/13/d6cc1a4c-035e-11e3-9259-e2aafe5a5f84_story.html " Sean Sasser, part of one of TV’s first gay romances, dies at 44"]. The Washington Post. 75. ^1 Jones, Anderson (June 1997). "Nowhere Else to Go". POZ. 76. ^Howard, Jonathan (May 16, 2013). "Sasser's sweet tooth". Washington Blade. 77. ^1 "Sean Sasser, 'Real World' star, dies at 44". CBS News. August 8, 2013. 78. ^1 Gosgrove Baylis, Sheila (August 8, 2013). "Sean Sasser, of The Real World, Dies at 44". People. 79. ^1 Oldenburg, Ann (August 8, 2013). [https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/08/08/real-world-star-sean-sasser-dies-at-44/2632631/ "'Real World' star Sean Sasser dies at 44"]. USA Today. Episodes
After filmingPedro Zamora fell ill and was hospitalized in New York in October 1994. He was eventually flown to Miami, and was diagnosed with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, or PML. He received a phone call from President Bill Clinton, who thanked him for his work, and helped facilitate emigration of his older brothers, who were flown to Miami from Cuba, reuniting them for the first time in 14 years.[55][56][57][58] A benefit was held to pay for his medical expenses, at which President Clinton praised Pedro.[59] MTV began a trust in order to pay for Zamora's medical costs, as he had no medical insurance.[56][58] Zamora died on November 11, 1994, hours after the debut airing of the season finale. The money from the benefit was used to form the Pedro Zamora Memorial Fund. His best friend and roommate, Judd Winick, began to lecture on HIV/AIDS and safe sex for him,[56][60][61] and did so for three years.[62] The 1995 reunion show, The Real World Reunion, which assembled the casts from the first four seasons of The Real World, was marked by antagonism between Puck and his former castmates. Though some members of the audience and the other seasons' casts expressed interest or fascination with Puck and his antics, his confrontation with his former roommate, Mohammed, resulted in Puck's distancing himself from Mohammed physically, and harsh words from others on the stage, such as second season cast member Irene Berrera-Kearns, led to him temporarily leaving the studio.[63] During his subsequent career writing comic books, Judd has explored LGBT issues, including storylines involving gay bashing, HIV and AIDS, in books such as Green Lantern and Green Arrow. He also chronicled his friendship with Zamora in his 2000 autobiographical graphic novel, Friendship, Loss and What I Learned. Judd and Pam, who fell in love during the vigil they kept over Pedro, married in 2001, and as of 2008, have two children.[64][65][66] Rachel Campos appeared on All Stars, where she met Sean Duffy of the Real World: Boston cast. They eventually married, and as of May 2016, have eight children.[67] They live in Ashland, Wisconsin,[68] where Sean was a District Attorney of Ashland County[69] before being elected to Congress in 2010.[70][71] Campos also appeared in The Wedding Video, a 2002 spoof of The Real World written and directed by New York alumnus Norman Korpi, which starred ten alumni of various Real World seasons.[68]Puck Rainey made a cameo appearance on All Stars, and competed on Battle of the Sexes, during which he came into conflict with David Edwards of Los Angeles, and married on camera Betty, his fiancee and mother of his sons, Bogart and Rocco.[65] As of 2008, he was working as a truck driver.[33] As of 2009, the family lives in Alabama,[65][72] where Rainey makes a living through public appearances and miscellaneous jobs. In his spare time, he enjoys gardening and photography, though he prefers to model, whereas his partner works behind the camera.[72] Spanky Ham, one of the main characters on the animated reality television spoof Drawn Together has been compared by that show's creators to Rainey.[73] As of 2008, Cory Murphy is a mother of two and a teacher of middle-school Spanish and language arts.[33] A 2008 film by Nick Oceano, Pedro, chronicles Zamora's life. Pedro's widower, Sean Sasser, continued his activism for LGBT issues, and his work as an HIV educator. In 1995, he spoke at the inaugural White House AIDS conference, and was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS.[74] He moved to Atlanta in late 1995, in order to be with his boyfriend, and hoped to open a café.[75] He was later a pastry chef at Ritz-Carlton hotel properties and head pastry chef at a luxury hotel in Portland before settling in Washington DC in 2012, where, as a pastry chef at a restaurant called RIS,[74] he was praised by the Washington Blade for his work there.[76] In June 2013 Sasser married Michael Kaplan,[74][77][78][79] whom he had dated off and on since the 1990s, and with whom he had moved in six months prior.[5] While in Washington, Sasser served as a board member of the AIDS Alliance for Children, Youth and Families. He was active in youth and mentoring organizations, and he and Kaplan served as foster parents to a 4-year-old girl.[74] In July 2013, Sasser, who had also been HIV positive for 25 years, was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a rare cancer of the lungs.[5] He died at his home on August 7, 2013, at the age of 44.[5][74][77][78][79] He is survived by his mother, Patricia Sasser of Detroit, and a younger sister.[74][75] The Challenge
Bold indicates the contestant was a finalist on the Challenge. References{{Reflist|30em}}External links
6 : The Real World seasons|Television shows set in San Francisco|HIV/AIDS in television|1994 American television seasons|Russian Hill, San Francisco|Television in the San Francisco Bay Area |
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