Culmination of Hasselhoff's singing career came when he was invited to sing his greatest hit atop the Berlin Wall in 1989 just after the re-unification of Germany.
#TEAM KNIGHT RIDER THEME SONG TV#
Naturally, the music video for the song prominently featured footage from the Knight Rider TV show. His biggest hit by far was a corny pop song called Looking for Freedom. Emboldened by his success as a TV star, David Hasselhoff embarked upon a music career in mid 1980s. The music legacy of Knight Rider doesn't stop there, either. More than a decade after the show's cancelation, the theme was used and re-sampled by other artists: first by Busta Rhymes for his single Turn It Up/Fire It Up in 1997 and later by Panjabi MC in Mundian To Bach Ke in 1998. Phillips, who previously worked on Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, recorded the Knight Rider theme using five synthesizers along with drums, percussion and a fender bass. The theme was created by Stu Phillips, a favorite composer of the show's producer Glen A. 6 The Evil Twin CarĮven those who hate it - do such people even exist? - have to admit that the Knight Rider title theme is insanely catchy. Garthe returns late in the second season, but this was his last appearance as Hasselhoff unfortunately found playing dual roles to be too strenuous. Naturally, Michael defeats him, but not before plenty of hammy acting by The Hoff. Sporting a goatee - like all evil twins do - Garthe steals technologies used to make KITT and builds himself an armored truck called Goliath. Garthe returns home and he isn't too happy to find his father gone and his face stolen. It's the kind of decision that psychoanalysis was invented to study. Although Garthe and Michael aren't biologically related, elder Knight had Michael's face reconstructed to look exactly like his son's. Also played by David Hasselhoff, Garthe Knight is that oldest of soap opera cliches: an evil twin! The only son of the late billionaire Wilton Knight, Garthe spent years imprisoned somewhere in Africa.
One of the rare exceptions comes in the second season's two-part opener Goliath. Throughout its four seasons run, Knight Rider mostly stayed away from the recurring villains. KITT's most recognizable feature - a cool red light above the front bumper - was directly inspired by the Cylon scanners from Larson's previous TV show, Battlestar Galactica.
On the set, actors interacted with the recordings of his voice and barely ever saw the actor himself. KITT's voice was provided by the actor William Daniels. However, as eager Pontiac customers began expecting real Trans Ams to have all the cool features seen on Knight Rider, producers stopped mentioning the car's exact model. At first, the show basically advertised the car by explicitly naming its company and model.
Throughout the show's production, Knight Rider used heavily modified 1982 Pontiac Trans Am as KITT. 9 The StarĪn experimental car prototype developed by the Knight industries, KITT - or Knight Industries Two Thousand - comes equipped with numerous features including a super computer that boasts 1,000 megabits of memory, tri-helical plasteel molecular bonded shell plating, pyroclastic lamination, turbojet engine with modified afterburners, anharmonic synthesizer and anamorphic and etymotic equalizers. Either way, NBC executives loved the idea and approved it for development. As a joke, Tartikoff offered them an idea of The Man of Six Words, a show in which the hero would speak only several phrases such as "Thank you!", "Freeze!" and "OK." while the rest of the talking would be done by his car.
According to him, TV executives at the time complained about challenges of producing a show around the handsome male lead who couldn't act. Instead of a western, the show would take place in the modern day, with a lone hero fighting injustice helped only by his trusty ride.īrandon Tartikoff, the head of NBC programming at the time, tells a more entertaining version of this origin story.
#TEAM KNIGHT RIDER THEME SONG MOVIE#
In early 1980s, Larson came up with an idea of remaking the classic movie and radio serial Lone Ranger for the contemporary audience. Larson created a number of classic TV shows such as Battlestar Galactica, Magnum P.I. Throughout the 1970s and 80s, Hollywood producer Glen A.