Blockbusters Tv Game Show
- May 18, 2017 New Series and new set! Here is Bob Holness hosting ITV's teatime quiz in 1992.
- Blockbusters was a game of skill and strategy, where the game board was a honeycomb filled with letters, each of which were the beginning letters 'that lead to victory' of an answer to a question. This show originally pitted a solo player against a family pair to see if two heads really are better than one.
- Cult game show Blockbusters to return to our TV screens in 2019 nearly six years after it last aired. Production company Thames TV, which makes X Factor and Britain’s Got Talent, are making the.
- For those that don’t know, Blockbusters is a question based game show that see’s two teams of teenagers (one team with a solo player and the other as a team of two) battle it out, as they answer questions to make their way across the board to the other side.
Blockbusters Game Show with Bill Cullen. TV Shows News. Blockbusters BigJon's Edition PC Game 2 MathewV21688 Vs. This ESL word game has been adapted from a famous TV game show. Divide the class into four teams and assign each team with a number. The first team chooses nine letters by saying either 'vowel' or 'consonant'. Each time the team says vowel or consonant, write a random letter on the board, corresponding to the team's choice. With Bill Cullen, Bob Hilton, David Vito Gregoli, Jolene Rae Harrington. Game show which sought to resolve the question, 'Are two heads better than one?' A single contestant competed against a team of two (related in some way but not married) to answer general knowledge questions, which allowed them to claim hexagonal boxes on a large five-by-four game board if they answered correctly.
Blockbusters | |
---|---|
Title screen for original version of show (1986–93) | |
Also known as | All New Blockbusters (2012) |
Genre | Quiz show |
Created by | Steve Ryan Mark Goodson |
Presented by | Bob Holness(1983–95) Michael Aspel(1997) Liza Tarbuck(2000–01) Simon Mayo(2012) Dara Ó Briain(2019) |
Theme music composer | Ed Welch(1983–95, 2000–01) Paul Boross (1997) Rage Music (2012) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 11 (Bob Holness) 1 (Michael Aspel)[1] 1 (Liza Tarbuck)[1] 1 (Simon Mayo)[1] 2 (Dara Ó Briain) |
No. of episodes | 1340 (Bob Holness) 60 (Michael Aspel)[1] 100 (Liza Tarbuck)[1] 41 (Simon Mayo)[1] 1541 (Total) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Tony Wolfe, Jenny Dodd, Andy Martin, Hector Stewart |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) | Central in association with Talbot Television and Goodson-Todman Productions(1983–95) Fremantle (UK) (1997) Grundy(2000–01) Thames(2012, 2019) |
Distributor | ITV Studios Fremantle |
Release | |
Original network | ITV(29 August 1983 – 19 May 1993) Sky One(18 April 1994 – 17 February 1995, these were also aired on ITV Central and ITV Anglia in full) BBC Two(31 March[1] – 28 August 1997[1]) Sky One(30 October 2000[1] – 23 March 2001[1]) Challenge(14 May[1] – 3 August 2012[1]) Comedy Central(2019) |
Picture format | 4:3(1983–2001) 16:9(2012, 2019) |
Original release | 29 August 1983 – Present[1] |
Chronology | |
Related shows | Blockbusters |
Blockbusters is a British televisiongame show based upon an American game show of the same name in which contestants answer trivia questions to complete a path across or down a game board of hexagons. The programme premiered on 29 August 1983 on ITV and ran for ten series, ending on the ITV network on 19 May 1993. Blockbusters was revived for three additional series, the most recent of which aired on Challenge in 2012. A fourth revival, a comedy version hosted by Dara Ó Briain, premiered on Comedy Central on 21 March 2019.
- 1Background
- 2Main game
- 3Other versions
- 5Transmissions
- 5.2Champion Blockbusters
- 5.2.1Regional transmissions information
- 5.2Champion Blockbusters
Background[edit]
Blockbusters was created by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions and originated as an American series in 1980. The UK version was created after Central Independent Television producer Graham C. Williams spotted the show in 1981 and produced a pilot in 1982. The difference was that instead of adults, who appeared on the American edition, the UK edition was produced for sixth formers.
Bob Holness was the original presenter staying on for the first ten series of the first incarnation and a 1994 revival on Sky One. Holness commented in 1988: 'When Central TV were looking for someone to host Blockbusters I was thought of. It was remembered that I'd done TV programmes of much the same sort, such as Junior Criss Cross Quiz which I compered in the 1960s and which was also a question and answer show. One led to the other.'[2] A 1997 edition featuring adults was produced for one series on BBC Two with Michael Aspel presenting. Sky One brought Blockbusters back under its original rules in 2001 with Liza Tarbuck at the helm, and the Challenge series was presented by Simon Mayo.
The show's first series, in 1983, was recorded at the Elstree Centre (which Central sold to the BBC in 1984). Subsequent series were produced at Central's Lenton Lane Studios in Nottingham; however, at least one season (1989–90) was taped at Central's Birmingham studios. The series was filmed in the summer months over a 6–8 week period, with five episodes being made each day.
In the final episode of each day, the contestants were allowed to do a hand jive during the end credits, therefore only appearing on each Friday's episode. The hand jive first appeared in 1986 after one of the contestants was bored while sitting through filming several shows a day waiting for his turn. It lasted for the rest of the original series' run. The hand-clapping sequence was referenced by Half Man Half Biscuit in their 1991 song 'Hedley Verityesque'.[3]
The original game board was powered using 40 slide projectors, each with its own set of slides for the different Letters and Gold Run questions, and took up the entire height of the studio. Slides were preloaded onto carousels with enough slides for about 3 - 5 shows. Carousels took about 30 minutes to change over. There were 15 different board combinations (5 sets X 3 games per match) which meant the same letter combinations would reappear. The letter 'Q' was only on one board, the letter 'Y' on two boards. All 15 boards followed in the same sequence but if the third game in a set was not needed (as it was best of three) the carousel would skip onto the Gold Run (missing the third board) and then onto the first game of the next set of three.
In 1987 and 1988, readers of TVTimes voted the series the most popular quiz show on television.[4]
Theme music[edit]
The original theme music was written by Ed Welch, who also updated the music for the second Sky series in 2001. The first Sky series kept the same opening titles used from 1987 on the original ITV run (as it continued to be produced by Central). The original theme in C major was an upbeat pop track incorporating piano, strings, drum machine and various other 1980s synthesized sounds reminiscent of the day - the four-note opening motif of Beethoven's 5th Symphony is mixed into the theme at the precise moment the composer's head appears on a flipping hexagon.
The BBC version in 1997 used a piece of music written by Henry Marsh and Paul Boross. It is said by some that the theme is similar to the original theme with notes swapped around but for unknown reasons, the BBC either couldn't or wouldn't use the original theme; therefore, they composed a theme as close to the original as possible but different enough to avoid possible allegations of copyright infringement.
Rage Music created the version used by Challenge, which is an updated version of the original theme, primarily using an electric guitar.[5]
Title sequences[edit]
The original 1983–86 title sequence featured flipping hexagons with various images on them running down an encyclopedia page. The title sequence used from 1987 to 1994 is a city, paying homage to science-fiction films such as Metropolis (1927) and Blade Runner (1982). In the 1994 Sky series the opening titles were cut short, not featuring the hexagons flying over the studio like the 1987–93 titles.
. Astra Militarum, Adeptus Mechanicus, Imperial Knights,. /warhammer-40k-free-codex.html. Upon the launch of 8th Edition, all codexes 7th Edition and prior were invalidated due to a rules overhaul and therefore incompatibility. However, all codexes prior editions of Warhammer 40,000 are still valid in the current edition, unless a later version has replaced it.
The title sequence used in the 1997 series with a complete different theme tune (although as mentioned above, it might have been similar to the original theme but with several notes swapped around) featured a golden head with hexagons showing clips. The title sequence used in 2000–01 featured people throwing and catching the letters that spell 'Blockbusters' using the Ed Welch theme again.
The 2012 title sequence features references to all previous title sequences, mainly hexagons - but also with more subtle features like the golden head (as seen in the 1997 BBC version), and the planet Earth and a city-like structure as seen in the popularised 1987–95 versions.
Main game[edit]
Like the 1980 U.S. version, a solo player competed against a pair of contestants, and hence setting out to prove or disprove the old adage that two heads really were better than one.
The game board consisted of 20 interlocking yellow hexagons, arranged in five columns of four. Each hexagon contained a letter of the alphabet (except X). A contestant would choose one of the letters, and would be asked a general-knowledge trivia question whose correct answer began with the chosen letter. (A typical question might be, 'What 'P' is a musical instrument with 88 keys?' The answer would be a piano.) The phrasing that contestants would use to ask for a letter has entered the language, and is frequently heard to this day. It is also the source of a pun - 'Can I have a 'P' please, Bob?'; 'having a pee' being slang for urinating.
The game board is designed in such a way that a tied game was not a possible finishing result. Even if all 20 hexagons were filled (which did occur at least twice, once in the very first series, and once in the first Sky version) there would always be a winner.
The game began with a toss-up question to play for control of the board, starting with a letter that was chosen at random. The teams or players could buzz-in during the middle of reading of a question. If a player or team got the correct answer, they gained control of that hexagon and were given the chance to choose another one. If the contestant answered incorrectly, the opposing team or player was given a chance to answer it after the host re-read the question. If nobody answered it correctly, the host asked another question whose answer began with that same letter. Each correct answer won £5. In the case of the two-player team, each player won whatever money the team accumulated.
The solo player attempted to complete a vertical connection of white hexagons from the top of the board to the bottom; that required at least four correct answers. The pair attempted to connect a path from left to right with blue hexagons, (purple during the Aspel era) requiring at least five spaces. The first side to connect their path won the game. The first player or team to win two games won the match. When either party was one correct answer away from completing their path, the hexagons forming their path would flash to indicate this. If both were one correct answer away, all lit hexagons on the board would flash, indicating that the situation was effectively 'Blockbusters either way' (later referred to as a 'mutual space' on the board), and the next player to give a correct answer would win the game, unless the contestant chose a panel which did not give them win, which may sometimes be considered as a safety tactic, although this rarely happened when a victory was imminent.
All players received a 'Blockbusters' Concise Oxford Dictionary and sweatshirt in the original ITV series. By 1985, the Blockbusters computer game was added. Within a year, the sweatshirt had been replaced by a 'Blockbusters' branded cardigan in a choice of colours and a 'Blockbusters' embossed filofax accompanied the dictionary (replaced by an electronic organizer by 1988). In the first Sky One series in 1994 it was a Blockbusters Encyclopedia and T-shirt. In the BBC Two 1997 series it was a fountain pen. In the second Sky One series it was a Blockbusters Dictionary and a CD ROM. In the Challenge series the players receive an ElonexE-book reader.
Gold Run[edit]
The winner of the match went on to play the Gold Run bonus round; if the pair won, only one player on the team could play, with the turns alternating at each Gold Run. The board consisted of a pattern of green hexagons similar to that of the main game, but the hexagons had 2 to 4 letters inside them; those letters were the initials of the correct answer. (For instance, if a contestant chose 'BS' and the host said 'Where people kiss in Ireland', the correct answer would be 'Blarney Stone.') When the contestant guessed correctly, the hexagon turned gold. However, if the contestant passed, it turned black, blocking the player's path; it was then up to the contestant to work around it. The object was to horizontally connect the left and right sides of the board within 60 seconds (or before blocking off all possible horizontal connections).
If the players were successful they won a special prize. If the Gold Run was not won, each correct answer paid £10. Defending champions could keep going for up to five matches undefeated, in order to win an even bigger prize. From the seventh ITV series, it was reduced to three, so that more contestants could take part over the course of a series. In the first Sky One series this was changed back up to five matches and reduced to three again on BBC Two. In the second Sky One series, it increased to five again. For the Challenge series, the maximum amount remains at five matches.
A famous short piece of music (three sharp notes on a synth-like horn in a slapstick style) was played if a contestant ran out of time on a Gold Run, often producing amused reactions in the studio; the same three notes played on an electric guitar act as the time's-up buzzer on the Challenge version.
Champion Blockbusters[edit]
4 series of Champion Blockbusters were made from 1987 to 1990, in which gold-run winners were invited to return to battle against other gold-run winners.
Other versions[edit]
Sky One[edit]
In 1994, Sky One created a new series with original host, Bob Holness. It was produced by Central, which had made the programme since 1983, and sponsored by Thomas Cook. This series featured a bonus question for any player who chose a particular letter and correctly answered that question, thereby earning the right to answer a £5 follow-up question. Sky One brought the series back again in 2000, this time produced by Grundy (which owned the format) and presented by Liza Tarbuck, but it failed to capture the same degree of popularity as the Holness incarnation. The format stayed the same in both versions.
BBC Two[edit]
BBC Two used adult contestants, instead of sixth formers. This version was broadcast in 1997 and presented by Michael Aspel; the show stayed with the same format. Famous contestants included Stephen Merchant.
This is the only version to use purple hexagons; all other versions still used blue to represent the pair of players. The solo player still played white hexagons. The Gold Run used a blue background in this version and the Liza Tarbuck version.
Gameshow Marathon[edit]
On 14 April 2007 at 20:40, Vernon Kay hosted a networked edition of Gameshow Marathon on ITV1 in which celebrity contestants revived the classic 1980s Holness version of the show. It also featured an edited version of the show's opening titles.
Challenge[edit]
It was announced on 10 November 2011 that game show channel Challenge would revive the show in 2012, under the name 'All New Blockbusters', with adult contestants rather than students. Forty episodes were recorded from 9 to 19 February 2012[6] with Simon Mayo hosting the show.[7]
The series started airing on 14 May 2012[8][9] with the first episode dedicated to the memory of original host Bob Holness, who died on 6 January 2012. The series also featured contestant Claire Scott who made her third appearance on Blockbusters.[10]
The show aired at 20:00 every weekday with an omnibus showing split over Saturday and Sunday mornings, plus a repeat showing of the previous night's episode at 17:00. The series was put on hold for a few weeks and resumed transmission on 9 July 2012, starting with a celebrity special featuring Konnie Huq (who had previously been on the original Blockbusters) amongst others. During the break, the first 20 episodes were repeated, with the 'All New' removed from the title.
Comedy Central[edit]
On 22 October 2018, it was reported that Blockbusters would return once again. Produced by Thames TV, the format will remain the same. It was announced on 3 December 2018 that Dara Ó Briain would host the revived version for Comedy Central. 20 new episodes, broadcast over two series, were recorded in the winter of 2018 and will include two celebrity specials.[11] The first episode will air on 21 March 2019.[12]The new reboot aired on Comedy Central at 20.00 on Thursday 21 March 2019 with Dara O'Briain. The format has been modified so that each episode is a standalone contest between a complete panel of three contestants. The prize money has been increased from previous incarnations, to £20 per correct answer in the main game (£100 for celebrity edition) and £50 per correct answer in an unsuccessful Gold Run (£150 for celebrity edition). Spot prizes exist in this series, occurring once per episode when a certain hex is selected. If each side wins one game each, the deciding game of past formats has been replaced with a sudden death playoff entitled the Hexagon Standoff. The two teams try to answer one question, if they get it correct they go to the Gold Run, however if they answer incorrectly the opposition goes through. In the Gold Run the contestant has a choice of two categories for their question board. All contestants take away a Blockbusters-branded hoodie and 'reusable cup'. This version uses a white background during the Gold Run and passes turn the space dark blue.
Merchandise[edit]
Blockbusters spawned a number of items of merchandise. 12 quiz books were released from the show[13] which also led to a spin-off: 'Blockbusters Gold Run Volumes 1–5' being produced.[14]
In 1986, Waddingtons created a board game version of the show, which was named Game of the Year in 1986 by The British Association of Toy Retailers.[15] This led to several successful spin offs; a 'Gold Run' Card Game, a Junior Blockbusters board game (a children's edition) and a Super Blockbusters board game (essentially, a second edition standard game with its own set of 'Gold Run' cards).[16] A computer game version of the show was also created for the Amstrad CPC, BBC Micro, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum.
In 2006, a DVD Interactive Game version was released with Bob Holness reprising his position at the helm. The DVD is based on the same format as the TV show, with virtual set design and game graphics matching the original version of the programme.[17]
In 2012, FremantleMedia's gaming division launched an online slot game based on the British game show. The game is featured at many of the UK's leading gaming sites including Sky Vegas and Bet365.
Transmissions[edit]
Regular series[edit]
Champion Blockbusters[edit]
|
Regional transmissions information[edit]
Blockbusters was one of the first British game shows to run in a 'straddling' format, which allowed for games to last a different length of time, meaning that episodes would often begin and end mid-game, and matches often crossed over into two episodes. The show was generally screened at 5:15pm Monday to Friday, filling the half-hour timeslot between Children's ITV and the ITNNews at 5:45, with a similar timeslot allocated on Saturdays for a while. The show was always aired on the ITV network, although the first series was repeated on Channel 4 during the summer of 1984, in the Countdown slot. Blockbusters was never networked across ITV's sixteen regions, this meant that it was occasionally possible to retune the television to a neighbouring region and watch a different episode. Blockbusters did share its time slot with other game shows such as Ask No Questions, Connections, and Winner Takes All. Episodes were recorded in two blocks one during the summer and another during November.[2]
1983[edit]
All regions aired Series 1, some stations moved Blockbusters to an earlier slot because the 5:15pm slot was taken up by soap operas.
- Border, Central, Granada, HTV, TVS, UTV and Yorkshire: Started on 29 August and finished on 4 November 1983. Mondays to Fridays at 5:15pm.
- Anglia, Channel, Grampian, Scottish, Thames, TSW and Tyne Tees: Started on 5 September and finished on 11 November 1983. Mondays to Fridays at 3:30pm.
1984–88[edit]
Blockbuster The Game
- Border, Central, Granada, HTV, Tyne Tees, UTV and Yorkshire: Mondays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm.
- Anglia, Grampian, and Scottish: Wednesdays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm. Mondays and Tuesdays were filled with either Emmerdale Farm or Sons and Daughters. In 1987 Series 5 was held back until 12 September.
- Thames/LWT: Wednesdays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm. It was then changed from September 1985 on Mondays to Wednesdays and Fridays to Saturdays at 5:15pm.
- TVS: Wednesdays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm. Mondays and Tuesdays were filled with Sons and Daughters. From Series 5 (September 1987) TVS switched to Mondays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm.
- TSW: Most of Series 2 was not transmitted at all because the 5.15pm slot was taken up on all dates with Crossroads, The Young Doctors and Emmerdale Farm, which was later moved into early peaktime in 1985 (as it was on Thames). 49 episodes of Series 2 did air in the mornings during the summer holidays (Mondays to Saturdays) from 1 July to 24 August 1985. Series 3 aired on Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays at 5:15pm. Series 4 and 5 aired on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 5:15pm.
- Channel: Same as TSW's schedule until January 1986, it was then switched to TVS's schedules. This meant that approximately 16–20 episodes were skipped as TVS were further ahead.
1988–89[edit]
- All regions expect TSW broadcast the show from : Started on 2 September 1988 and finished on 10 February 1989. Mondays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm. However, Anglia and Scottish aired some episodes on Sundays on instead of Saturdays.
- TSW: Started on 3 October 1988 and finished on 10 February 1989. Mondays to Fridays at 5:15pm and Saturdays at 5:05pm.
- No episodes aired on ITV between 19 September to 3 October due to the 1988 Summer Olympics.
1990–92[edit]
The show was delayed by all ITV regions until January 1990 as no slots were available to air the show. This was because Home and Away took over the 5:10pm slot and Emmerdale was now being aired at 6:30pm, before it was moved to 7:00pm in January 1990. Anglia, Central and TSW were airing repeats from September to December 1989.
- Anglia, Central and Thames: Blockbusters aired three times a week from January 1990 onwards on Mondays to Thursdays at 5:10pm and aired Home and Away at 6:00pm. Days of the week changed and additional episodes were added as well to make it four per week on occasions.
- LWT: No longer aired any episodes from this point onwards.
- Scottish: Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:30pm from 3 January to April 1990. From May 1990, it was moved to a daytime slot around 1:30pm three times a week. In 1992, it was aired from Mondays to Thursdays at 1:45pm.
- Grampian: from 3 January 1990, Wednesdays and Thursdays at 6:30pm.
- Border, Granada, HTV, TVS, TSW, Tyne Tees, UTV and Yorkshire: Tuesdays to Thursdays at 6:30pm.
Granada moved the time slots around during this period, It was moved to 5:10pm in Autumn 1990, on occasion moved 15.25 to allow episodes of Families to have the 17.10 slot. The series was moved again to 6:00pm from Wednesdays to Fridays in 1992. UTV reduced its time slots to one episode a week from January to October 1992, then from 26 October 1992, it was aired at 3:20pm from Mondays to Fridays. TVS reduced its time slots to two episodes a week for most of 1990, but during 1991–92, it went back to three episodes plus an additional episode around Saturday lunchtimes. TSW also dropped its time slots to two episodes per week every so often; however, in a bid to catch back up the series, it was moved to 5:10pm from Mondays to Fridays in September 1992. For around 18 months in 1991–92, Tyne Tees started airing its more local output during its 6:30pm time slot, which resulted in fewer episodes per week. When Tyne Tees and Yorkshire decided to merge their scheduling from January 1993, Tyne Tees increased its output to catch up (In November 1992, it was airing four times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays), but had to drop over 50 episodes.
1993[edit]
A number of new ITV companies come into being, which resulted in regional news being extending to a full hour from 6:00pm in some areas, meaning a number of stations moved the series back before CITV and, in some areas, it petered out with only one edition being shown per week.
- Anglia and Central: Mondays to Wednesdays at 5:10pm, then switching to Wednesdays to Fridays at 5:10pm. Completed on 19 May 1993, although repeats were transmitted until Christmas.[39]
- Carlton: Mondays to Fridays at 3:20pm. Completed on 4 June 1993.
- HTV: Mondays to Thursdays at 1:45pm. Completed on 2 August 1993.
- Scottish: Continued to air four times a week. Completed on 2 September 1993. Reappeared daily at 5:25am over Christmas period between 18 December 1993[40] - 7 January 1994.[41]
- Westcountry: Mondays to Fridays at 1:45pm. Completed on 3 September 1993.
- Border, Tyne Tees and Yorkshire: Continued on Tuesdays to Thursdays at 6:30pm. Completed on 28 September 1993.
- Grampian: Mondays to Fridays at 1:45pm. Completed on 21 December 1993.[42]
- Meridian: Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 6:30pm. Completed on 14 December 1993.
- Granada: Aired 2-3 episodes most weeks at 5:10pm. From April - August was moved to 3.20pm. Completed in January 1994.
- Ulster: Mondays to Fridays at 3:20pm until August 1993, then switching to Saturday lunchtime until completed 15 January 1994.
1994–97[edit]
After the tenth series, Blockbusters was no longer networked on ITV. But it continued for one more series on the satellite channel Sky One. Five ITV regional channels showed this series.
- Sky One: Mondays to Fridays at 7:00pm from 18 April to 30 September 1994 before moving to 6:30pm from 28 November 1994[43] to 17 February 1995.
- Anglia and Central: Mondays to Wednesdays at 2:50pm from 18 April to 12 July 1995.
- Tyne Tees and Yorkshire: Around 70 episodes; Tuesdays to Thursdays at 6:30pm from 11 July to 29 December 1995.
- Border: Around 50 episodes aired up to twice a week at 5:10pm.
Reruns[edit]
Challenge TV aired Blockbusters starting from September 1996 during the final months of The Family Channel and was the first game show broadcast on the relaunch from the Family Channel to Challenge TV on 3 February 1997 showing reruns from Series 9, it was repeated in February to June 1997, January to May 1998, September 1998 to January 1999 and May to September 1999.
Play Tv Game Shows Online
In 2004, Saturday Night Takeaway showed clips from a 1992 episode with a contestant who was in the audience did not get very far on the show and only won £10. Following requests on the (now 'defunct') Challenge forums to air the show, Challenge managed to acquire Blockbusters from June 2004 to June 2006, but they only showed the first 25 episodes from Series 10, which generated low ratings. Carlton Select also showed old shows while that channel was still operational.
Challenge reacquired Blockbusters but this time, they acquired 72 episodes from Series 10, and broadcast them during 2011. On 8 May 2014, they acquired the very first series,[44] which aired from 26 May.[45] On 4 January 2016, Challenge began showing Series 11 (the first Sky One series), acquiring 179 of the 180 episodes in the series.
Notable contestants[edit]
- Tim Harford (1991)
- Jesse Honey (1990s)
- Konnie Huq (1992, 2012)[46]
- Naomi Long (1989)
- Kerry McCarthy[47]
- Stephen Merchant (1997)
- Ian Payne (1990s)
- Richard Lloyd Parry (1986)
- Tom Scott (2000)[48]
- Jon Tickle (1991)
Wheel Of Fortune Game
Other countries[edit]
The format has been remade in a number of countries during the 1980s and 1990s:
- Australia – The Australian version of Blockbusters, hosted by Michael Pope, was broadcast on the Seven Network from 1990 to 1993. It had schools competing against other schools. Additionally, it also had an intro that looks similar to the Holness era from the UK version, although the theme song was different.
- Germany – A German version called Supergrips (originally called Grips before it) aired from 1988 to 1995 on the Bavarian TV network. Frank Laufenberg was the show's original host from 1988 until 1990, then was later replaced by Ingo Dubinski from 1991 until 1995.
- France – The French version was called Parcours d'enfer (Course of Hell) aired on TF1 and hosted by Pierre Bellemare.
- Indonesia – The Indonesian version called Aksara Bermakna (Meaningful Literacy) aired on two networks, first on TVRI from 1989 to 1996 with Kepra as host, then on antv for a brief period from 1997 to 1999, this time with Anton Gemilar as host. It was created by Ani Sumadi.
- Israel – The Israeli version, called Nuts, ran on Israeli Educational Television from 1985 to 1994 with teenagers playing. Hosts of the Hebrew version were Shosh Atari, Avri Gilad, Ito Aviram, Anat Dolev, Mennachem Perry and Nahum Ido. An Arabic language version, called Sara, aired on the same network in 1996.
- Italy – The Italian version is called Doppio Slalom (Dual Slalom) aired on Canale 5 from 1985 to 1990, originally hosted by Corrado Tedeschi from 1985 to 1990. Followed by Paolo Bonolis in the 1990 series.
- Netherlands – A Dutch version of the show called Blokletters (Block Letters) ran for a brief period from 1986 on AVRO with Fred Oster at the helm. Its set with a mix of half light and dark colours and gameplay is very similar to that of the short-lived 1980–82 U.S. original.
- Paraguay – In Paraguay, called Blockbuster, like the Australian version, where two schools competed against each other. It aired on Telefuturo for a brief period in 1999, its hosts were Clari Arias and Leti Medina.
- Saudi Arabia – The Saudi Arabian version is called ABC Program/Competitions Letters, hosted by Ibrahim al-Qasim, Majid Cub, Ghanem Al Saleh and Ghalib Full. The network for this version in particular aired on First Channel Saudi Arabia from 1987 until 1994. Then it was revived again three years later from 1997 until 1998. Twenty years later, a version hosted by Salman Al-Otaibi aired in 2017.
- Sweden – SVT in Sweden had their own version very similar to the UK one. 2 mot 1 (2 to 1) was a weekly afternoon programme forming part of SVT's youth output. The programme was produced in Malmö airing from 1998 to 1999 and was hosted by Stellan Sundahl, until he died from a heart attack in 1999 at the age of 52.
- Switzerland – The Swiss version, also called Blockbusters, was hosted by Sven Epiney and aired on SF from 1997 to 2000.
- Turkey – The Turkish version called Haydi Bastir (Let's Print) aired on Show TV from 1992 to 1993, the host was Mim Kemal Öke. Additionally, its set (and intro) looks similar to the original Holness era.
- United Arab Emirates – Blockbusters (the UK edition) was such a sensation with the entire English speaking expatriate community in Dubai, U.A.E, that the city nearly came to a shut-down during its evenings broadcast on Channel 33. Although there was no separate local TV version, the local paper, Gulf News, ran a yearly Blockbusters quiz competition, often hosted by Holness himself, between 1988 and 1994.[49] The Gulf News Blockbusters show was telecast on Dubai TV too and was broadcast as a month-long event, with the heats during Ramadan and the finals after Eid al-Fitr.
- After a 14-year-long hiatus, the contest was revived in 2008 as part of the newspaper's 30th anniversary celebrations. It was also held in 2009 where the team 'Anonymoys +3' whose members included Rahul Menon and Aayush Rajasekaran of The Indian High School, Dubai stood first place. This marked the second year that a team from the Indian High School defeated one from long-time rivals The Modern High School to claim the first place.[50]
- United States – The original American version of Blockbusters aired twice on NBC. Originally from 1980 until 1982, hosted by Bill Cullen with the '2 in 1' format. This was followed by a brief return of the show in 1987 hosted by Bill Rafferty which dropped the '2 in 1' format and had single contestants instead.
Other foreign versions of Blockbusters have aired in Portugal and Singapore.
References[edit]
- ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuv'Fremantle Archive Sales - BLOCKBUSTERS'. Archived from the original on 19 June 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
- ^ ab'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 14 January 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^'Hedley Verityesque'. Halfmanhalfbiscuit.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2019. 'And I could well do without / The hand-clapping sequence at the end of Blockbusters'
- ^Melaniphy, Mike. 'Central'. Television and Radio 1988: The IBA's Yearbook.
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- ^Bingham, John (10 November 2011). 'Blockbusters back for gold run'. Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 6 January 2016.
- ^Robertson, Colin (6 February 2012). 'Radio 2's Simon Mayo to host Blockbusters'. The Sun. London.
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- ^Simon Mayo to host new series of Blockbusters.Archived 21 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Blockbusters returns to TV screens as Scots champions prepares for third Gold Run - Daily RecordArchived 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- ^White, Peter (3 December 2018). 'Comedy Central UK Reboots Classic NBC Gameshow 'Blockbusters' With 'Mock The Week' Host Dara O'Briain'. Deadline. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
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- ^'BLOCKBUSTERS (Series 10, Episode 1)'. ITN Source. Archived from the original on 29 January 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- ^ ab'BLOCKBUSTERS (Series 10, Episode 104)'. ITN Source. Archived from the original on 29 January 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- ^'BLOCKBUSTERS (Series 11, Episode 1)'. ITN Source. Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- ^ ab'BLOCKBUSTERS (Series 11, Episode 180)'. ITN Source. Archived from the original on 8 August 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
- ^'Blockbusters to launch in March on Comedy Central UK'. 28 February 2019.
- ^The Times Digital Archive
- ^The Guardian - 18 December 1993, Page 154Archived 22 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine, via Newspapers.com
- ^The Guardian - 1 January 1994, Page 96Archived 22 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine, via Newspapers.com
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- ^Satellite. The Times (London, England), Monday, 28 November 1994; pg. 43; Issue 65123.
- ^Challenge TV on Twitter: '*FANFARE* Deal just signed.. BLOCKBUSTERS Series 1 starts 12th May at 10:30am. Bob is back!'Archived 8 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Challenge TV on Twitter: 'Blockbusters Series 1 has sadly had to be pushed back another week due to issues with the tapes. again!! So it will NOT start this Monday'Archived 18 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Radio TimesArchived 19 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine 14 May 2012
- ^Blog of Kerry McCarthy, Labour MPArchived 2 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Scott, Tom. facebook.comhttps://www.facebook.com/tomscott/photos/a.222255651190440.55340.185575528191786/507605005988835/?type=3&theater. Retrieved 13 May 2018.Missing or empty
title=
(help) - ^'Blockbusters contest back for Ramadan'Archived 17 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine, 'Gulf News', 29 August 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2009
- ^'Blockbusters contest back for 2009'Archived 27 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine, 'Gulf News', 20 August 2009. Retrieved 31 August 2009
External links[edit]
- Blockbusters (UK) on IMDb
- Blockbusters (UK) at BFI
- Champion Blockbusters at BFI
- Blockbusters at UKGameshows.com