Talk:The Zone

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this is useless---Wikipedia is not a TV Guide

no, the zone is an important part for kids growin up in Canada, I've spent so many hours watching it, lol

I think this article is useful, but needs to cover a bit more of the history of The Zone to be interesting. -Dunro

I added some info on the Zone hosts in the past, I'm so proud of it, nearly 90% of it is from my memories of watching The Zone ^_^ For the rest I checked up some names using the Internet Archive --Phred Levi 18:59, 17 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Wow, your description almost seems to start around when I stopped *l*. I can't remember if Snit was the first "puppet co-host" after The After-School Zone became The Zone ... for some reason, I'm pretty sure that Warren (the green Grog?) was around after the show became The Zone. -- However, my brain is going more by my memories of set changes than anything else right now. (The original after school zone set, a grey one, a blue one, and... the current one). Dunro 11:24, Mar 19, 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] Stuff to add

I remember Daren Jones (from the Buzz) was on there for a while too.

How is the zone determined to be a "success" while breakfast zone and the others are a "failure" ? This goes into the question of why they even have the zone in the first place. Is it to slightly raise the amount of viewers, or to get people to keep watching after one show and stay for the rest? It must be important. That time could be easily used for lucrative commercials. --Havermayer 22:08, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)


It says in the YTV article: "popular imported programming would run a few minutes short due to fewer ads being permitted compared to US stations. Instead of filling the time with public service announcements or other filler material, the idea of devoting several minutes between programs to interaction between live-action hosts was utilized, and has proven successful to this day." The purpose wasn't just to keep people watching, they needed to fill that free time in between shows, so hence "The Zone" was created --Krakko 22:58, 30 November 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Tito Lemmey=Carlos

At one point in The Zone while Sugar and Carlos were hosting, they brought in a guest host with a lie detector. At the end of that particular block, they used it to prove that Carlos was indeed Tito Lemmey.

It wasn't a real lie detector. It was just a joke. Lie detectors look and work way different.
Yeah, I kinda thought that. But if they were maintaining that Carlos wasn't Tito Lemmey until then, and they "proved" themselves wrong out of nowhere, wouldn't that mean something? Random the Scrambled 14:41, 23 August 2006 (UTC)

What about the meaning of "i'm in the zone"? this seems to be completely forgotten. -- Pete_I

[edit] Where they are now

A user at a forum [1] posted information he found about the hosts about where they are as of now - though, he couldn't find information on two of the PJs. Should this information be posted? Or would it merit another page? Or should it even be posted at all? Firehawk12 14:59, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Heavily revised and added history

I personally watched the first episode of the Afterschool Zone (although I can't recall the exact date, I think 1991 or 92) and I was quite a rabid follower. I've tried to include as much history as can remember and find regarding the early years. I've removed the references to Phil and Snit being the first incarnation of the program and written in the grogs and Warren. I have Warren's coup of YTV partially taped. I would appreciate more information on PJ Jenn however, the blonde female host from around '92/93 to maybe '97 as well as what the Saturday morning block (now called the Vortex) used to be called since it used to be directly tied into the Zone and featured the same PJs albeit on a different set. I can check my tapes later.

And yes, this is very crucial information to many Canadians from ages 5-30 who have all grown up with some incarnation of the Zone and the various PJs over the last 15 years. The Zone's cultural significance to maybe two generations of young Canadians is still very important and deserves more information.

The purpose of the Zone is to provide a segue-way into the next block of programming to retain viewers and it's grown a following for current viewers and strong nostalgia for many Canadians for whom the Zone was integral to their childhoods and young adult life. In the late 80s and early 90s, this was already popular practice on Saturday morning blocks and on targeted cable channels. By using these segueways, channels targeted at children or the youth market assuaged parental concerns about commercialism (which was rampant since the 80s in so-called "toy-oriented 30-minute violence commercials" as they were labled. These gave a chance to provide educational and inspiration stimulation (early YTV in 1988 was full of educational, health, and inspiration videos for young audiences - something the current YTV is seriously lacking). But the Zone was quickly simply just a variety entertainment segment that focused on the PJs and the other hosts (grogs, Snit, etc.) talking to the audience like those prevalent on other channels. As the 90s wore on the "get wierd" and "funky" image of YTV was probably most influenced by the Zone.

That said, what's the background on the "Keep It Wierd" part of YTV not being popular? I didn't like it, but this stems from the wierdness already in the show from the 1995-96 era which is markedly different from the wierdness of the current zone. I don't think it should be there as it's just viewer conjecture.

I'm afraid, I know almost nothing about the current Zone though, as I've grown up and stopped watching after the Phil and Paul era. I tried to fix some of the writing regarding the newer Zone (with Sugar, etc.), as it sounded somewhat "immature" and there were plenty of grammatical errors and framents...which is to be expected since those familiar would be younger audiences. I haven't really watched the Zone since the millenium so I can't verify or add any information to those sections.

I've also added a picture of Phil and Snit to provide more representation.

This article can be improved greatly by the addition of more information about the early 90s Zone and perhaps some more clarified and professional information regarding the Zone's more modern incarnations. If possible, an accurate listing of all PJ's would be helpful.

[edit] pj Phil

I've been looking for a while for more info on him, as an actor and musician (Razed In Black).