What Now

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

What Now
Image:Whatnow2.PNG
This is the current What Now logo.
It has been used from 2007-present
Genre Childrens
Starring Serena Cooper, DJ Vinyl Richie, Charlie Panapa, Tamati Coffey, Camilla the Gorilla
Opening theme Get Up Get Out Of Bed
Country of origin Flag of New Zealand New Zealand
Production
Camera setup Multi-Camera
Running time 120 minutes (Including Commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel TV ONE 1981-1989
TV 2 (New Zealand) 1989-present
Picture format PAL
Original run 1981 – Present
Links
Official website
IMDb profile

What Now is a long running New Zealand children's program. It premiered in 1981. It is filmed before two live audiences, one in a studio in Christchurch and another via satellite from a different location each week. This is an effort to allow more children to participate in the show who would not have the opportunity to do so if it were filmed only in Christchurch.

The current show has cartoons such as Camp Lazlo and segments such as House Of Pain, Spy Rider, Snoop Daddy Bling and Triple B, and singers Billy Bobs. There are also weekly competitions. The show is always one of the highest rated shows in New Zealand.

Contents

[edit] History

What Now originally screened on Saturday mornings on TV 1 between 7:30AM and 10AM. Hosted by Steve Parr, he introduced segments covering morning keep-fit exercises, sketches involving recurring characters, such as complaining old man Clive Grumble, simple recipes by Alison Holst, trivia from Frank Flash, law and safety with Constable Keith and Sniff, interspersed with regular Cartoons.

When Steve Parr left the show after a couple of years, the format changed to Live broadcast, which allowed it to be more interactive. The hosts increased in number, usually to three, beginning with Danny Watson (from Spot On), Michelle Bracey, and Frank Flash (Alasdair Kincaid) was given a more central comedic manic role. When Michelle left the show, she was succeeded by similarly named Michele A'Court. Comedy sketches, interactive phone calls and competitions with the viewing audience, plus magazine-style segments going out and about, all became a more central part of the format.

The style remained this way for many years, as hosts evolved and were replaced, until today where the format now involves live audiences of crowds of children, but still is closely faithful with the core concept established early on.

Children tend to have fond memories of the hosts who they grew up with, when the show was aimed at their particular age range of 8 to 12 years old. Thus many think of What Now as being "best" when hosted by, for example, Anthony Samuels and Fiona Anderson, or Simon Barnett and Catherine McPherson.

Cartoons played on the show over the years included: Super Ted, Inspector Gadget, Thundercats, The Trap Door, and Pirates of Darkwater.

In 1989 the show moved to TV 2 and then in 1996 to Sunday mornings. An after school version of What Now also ran on TV 2 during the week between 1997 and 2002.

The show was moved to TVNZ's Avalon studios in Lower Hutt in the late ninties till it was moved back to Christchurch in 2004.

In 2003 the afternoon show was cancelled. But in 2004 a new version of the show was created, known as WNTV.

What Now previously released a Compact Disk titled 'The What Now CD' It contained songs such as Samantha Mumba's "Gotta Tell You" and K'Lee's "Broken Wings".

[edit] Current Presenters

  • Serena Cooper
  • DJ Vinyl Richie (Richard Mills)
  • Charlie Panapa
  • Tamati Coffey
  • Camilla the Gorilla(Erin Simpson)

[edit] Previous Presenters

  • Steve Parr
  • Alasdair Kincaid, A.K.A. Frank Flash (Also returned in the late 90's as "The Answer Guy")
  • Danny Watson
  • Michelle Bracey
  • Michele A'Court
  • Steven Zanoski
  • Catherine McPherson
  • Simon Barnett
  • Stacey Daniels (Cooking segment)
  • Fiona Anderson
  • Anthony Samuels
  • Jason Faafoi
  • Shavaughn Ruakere
  • Props Boy
  • Carolyn Taylor
  • Vicki Lyn
  • Jason Gunn
  • Thingee (Puppet)
  • Darren
  • Aaron
  • Virginie Le Bruin

[edit] External links