Shining Time Station

Shining Time Station was a children's television series produced by Britt Alcroft in the early to mid 90's.

It primarily concerned station manager Stacy Jones (Didi Conn), scheming arcade manager Schemer, and Stacy's nephews, Matt and Dan, both of whom became friends with Tanya and Kara, the granddaughters of Harry Cupper, the titular station's engineer and mechanic.

The children would often be told stories of Thomas the Tank Engine by the magical Mr. Conductor, a strange six-inch tall man who secretly lived at the station. These stories would occasionally have elements that paralleled events at the station.

In addition, various characters would request songs from the jukebox, and these songs (typically re-arranged versions of classic folk songs like "Jesse James" and "Cannonball Blues") were played by a band of puppets who lived in the jukebox, courtesy of Flexitoons.

The show, though geared at children, also appealed to adults, and generated a few "family specials".

This show contains examples of:
"Stacy: Shining Time Station, Stacy Jones speaking."
 * Breakout Character: Schemer became the most popular character on the show and even had a series of home videos dedicated simply to his character.
 * Catch Phrase: Various (especially Stacy): "There's just something about this place..."

"Schemer: Genius time! Schemer: He's a doer, he's a dreamer, he's absolutely Schemer and he's me!"
 * And Schemer's inversion: "This place is haunted!"

"Schemer: Sure I know the difference. Chili powder you use in chili con carne, and cocoa powder you use in cocoa con carne..."
 * Chroma Key: Used for Mister Conductor.
 * Cousin Oliver: Schemer's nephew Schemee, added sometime later in the show.
 * Doing It for the Art: The third season was written as the last, with "How the Station Got Its Name" as the intended finale. Unexpectedly, they were offered a chance to produce a fourth season, but they decided instead to pool their budget into four feature-length specials. This allowed them new sets, better effects, location shooting, and guest stars.
 * Easy Amnesia: Stacy once lost her memory after sniffing some flowers that Mr. Conductor had sprinkled with a potion that was supposed to make bees forget they had to take nectar from the plants. Her nephew and Mr. Conductor jogged her memory, and she made a full recovery after taking a nap.
 * Evil Twin: George Carlin's Mr. Conductor had one that could be brought to life from a picture with sparkle dust and caused trouble around the station. This may have also been what introduced kids to George Carlin's darker side, and since then, the episodes with Mr. C's evil twin have gained a somewhat small following.
 * Framing Device: Mr. Conductor's stories of Thomas the Tank Engine, which were episodes of the television series.
 * Franchise Killer: The movie Thomas And the Magic Railroad was this for Shining Time Station, but NOT for Thomas the Tank Engine, which is still being promoted today.
 * Glad I Thought of It: Schemer does this in one of the episodes.
 * Green Aesop: The episode "Stacy Cleans Up." The local dump closes and garbage bags pile up around the station, and an engineer with a trainload of garbage keeps picking up more, but no one wants to let him unload it in their town. The solution ends up being to weed out the recyclable materials, which ends up reducing the volume.
 * Heel Face Turn: J.B. King, the superintendent of the Indian Valley Railroad, where the station resides, goes through this when he initially intends to close down the station in favor of a much larger one in another town, but changes his mind when he finds out that Mr. Conductor lives at the station. In a later episode, he reveals that when he was a boy, he had missed his train home and Mr. Conductor kept him company until adult help arrived.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!: Ringo Starr as Mr. Conductor, and then George Carlin...for some reason.
 * Stacy was played by Frenchie (the Beauty School Dropout girl) from Grease and its sequel Grease 2.
 * Ironically, Aurelio Padron, who had a recurring role as bus driver Felix Perez, also appeared in Grease 2 as a boy greaser.
 * The actor who played Harry, Leonard Jackson, previously was the first actor to play Mr. Handford on Sesame Street.
 * Ironically, Gerard Parkes, who also had a recurring role as general store proprietor Barton Winslow, also worked with the Muppets when he played Doc on Fraggle Rock.
 * This also applies to people who worked off camera as well. Original music director Joe Raposo previously served as music director for Sesame Street and The Electric Company, while his successor, Steve Horelick, also did similar work on Reading Rainbow and The Puzzle Place. In addition, set designer Dikran Hazirjian performed similar duties on Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego??
 * Hey, It's That Voice!: Jonathan Freeman (Tito) tried to steal Aladdin's magic lamp. Just compare their singing voices.
 * Kara was played by Erica Luttrell, who later became the voice of Keesha on The Magic School Bus. (She's also the sister of Stargate Atlantis's Rachel Luttrell!)
 * Impossibly Tacky Clothes: Schemer's mother can be recognized (off-screen), by a hat with a plastic skunk on it.
 * In the Blood: Schemer's nephew Schemey could out-scheme his uncle.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Schemer, occasionally.
 * Keep Circulating the Tapes: Literally the only place you can find episodes is YouTube. Nine episodes were released on now-discontinued VHS tapes.
 * Lethal Chef: Schemer in one episode tries to make a sandwich spread from his mother's recipe, but mistakes "C. Powder" for cocoa powder instead of chili.


 * Long Bus Trip: The original Mr. Conductor (played by Ringo Starr) leaves kind of abruptly, and we think it's just for a while. But then the other Mr. Conductor (George Carlin) takes over and we never see the original again.
 * Harry was put on the bus twice -- first to explain why his brother was working at the station in the Christmas special, then with the big cast change in the Season 2 premier. He does show up again, though, in one of the last specials.
 * Man Child: Schemer is a full grown adult and doesn't know how to take care of himself
 * Nephewism: Schemee.
 * Niche Network: When Schemer introduced the kids to television, one such channel was of footage of babies crying.
 * Odd Couple: Stacy and Schemer. Also Midge Smoot, the zany town gossip, and Ginny Johnson, the straight-laced farmer, usually end up filling this role.
 * Once Per Episode: The Thomas stories, the musical number from the jukebox, the music video from the picture machine (although this only appears in maybe half of the episodes).
 * The Other Darrin: George Carlin replaced Ringo Starr.
 * Playing Against Type: George Carlin playing an affable, friendly character on a Kid's Show. That is all.
 * Rhymes on a Dime: Mr. Conductor's evil twin.
 * Rich Bastard: Hobart Hume III, the leader of a club which Schemer tries to join (until.
 * Shout-Out: In one episode the kids ruminate on forming a band. "I used to play in a band.", Mr. Conductor (AKA Ringo Starr) chirps. And toddlers all over America wonder why Mommy is falling off the sofa laughing....
 * Spot the Impostor: One of the girls was once challenged to use glue to turn Mr. Conductor's Evil Twin into a drawing. She remembered from earlier that the real Mr. Conductor's whistle sounded different than usual that day, so she asked both Conductors to blow their whistles, then dumped the glue on the one whose whistle made the normal sound.
 * Stock Footage: Except for using original songs, many of the picture machine's music videos are remarkably similar in style to modern-day Fan Vids.
 * Suspiciously Similar Substitute: The second season replaced half the cast with different characters in essentially the same role: Matt and Tanya were displaced by Dan, Kara and Becky; Harry was replaced with Billy Twofeathers; and Mr. Conductor was replaced with... a different Mr. Conductor. The in-universe reasons for all of this are laid out at the beginning of the second season's first episode.
 * Averted in a few episodes of season 2, which feature the Matt and Tanya alongside the new cast of kids (mostly for group activities like baseball).
 * Too Soon: The episode "The Mayor Runs For Re-election" featured a Richard Nixon parody, and aired shortly after Nixon's death. It was pulled immediately afterward.
 * Ultimate Job Security: Schemer does some outrageous stunts, and is often rude to the children and Stacy, but is never fired for any of it.
 * To be fair Schemer may not have been actually employed by the station, but simply rented some space in which to put up his arcade. At least once the station owner told him he had to renew his contract. Although why they didn't simply refuse to renew is beyond this troper.
 * Subverted in one episode where Schemer tries to host a live radio show out of the arcade. He goes on unprepared, forgets what he's been asked to announce, and everyone in the station tries to get in on the show. He then gets a call from the station, saying they pulled him off the air.
 * Weaksauce Weakness: On one occasion when Schemie is caught misbehaving (insofar as you could call it "misbehaving" given the example he follows), Schemer unfairly, and quite reluctantly, punishes him by combing flat the family cowlick.
 * What Could Have Been: Plans were in place back in the nineties for a Shining Time movie. The plot involved an evil circus leader kidnapping Mr. Conductor and the kids helping a circus performer overcome her fear of horses. Highlights would have included the Jukebox Band becoming separated and reuniting through a song, and Schemer being shot out of a cannon.