Slime Time Live

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Slime Time Live
Genre Live Action
Created by Richard Barry
Starring Dave Aizer
Jonah Travick
Jessica Holmes
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 8
Production
Executive
producer(s)
Kevin Weist
Location(s) Orlando, Florida
Running time 120 (counting commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel Nickelodeon
Original run 20002003
Chronology
Preceded by Nick in the Afternoon
Followed by U-Pick Live
Related shows Nickelodeon SPLAT!
ME:TV
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary
Slime Time Live Logo January 2000-May 2002
Slime Time Live Logo January 2000-May 2002

Nick Slime Time Live was a television series that aired on Nickelodeon from 2000 to 2003, lasting 8 seasons. During its run it was hosted by Dave Aizer, Jonah Travick, and Jessica Holmes and Produced/Directed by Jason Harper. The show was located outside of (or if weather did not permit, inside) the former Nickelodeon Studios at Universal Studios Florida. The show was used as filler during regular commercial time. Slime Time Live was known to have to slime their audience as well; when they did this they'd pick someone, sit them in a chair and ask them a question. If they answered correctly they would be pied in the face, if they answered otherwise a big bucket of slime would be poured atop of them (which was eventually changed to two buckets and finally three) By the end of the series the show had completely abandoned this.

Contents

[edit] Interactive games

During the show, viewers would phone in to play interactive games with players on the show. The most common game was to make a match of "Nicktoons" (Nickelodeon's original animation series) from off a tic tac toe grid. The board was scrambled before game play and if a match was made the home player would win a prize and the contestant would be slimed and often pied as well. If no match was made, host Dave Aizer would receive a pie in the face. The show holds a world record in the most people pied in 3 minutes, 1,000, year 2001, and most people slimed year 2003 (the episode in which this happened wound up to be the final episode. This sliming was done outdoors in front of the studios.

Over the seasons, more interactive games would be played, many celebrities from other Nick shows appeared often, and in most shows, the end game would play off called the Big Shaboozie, formally known as the Super Sloppy Slime Off where 2 teams of three (teams included 2 home players) sat in a machine where above them a long trough was located and the home player winners would win a grand prize and the in house contestants would win the grand prizes as well as get dropped with 15 gallons of slime.

[edit] Guests on Slime Time Live

Past guests have included: The American Juniors, Aaron Carter, *Nsync, Jump5, Amanda Bynes & Frankie Muniz, Christina Vidal, O-Town, Dream Street, The Spy Kids, Tony Hawk, 3LW, Dream, A*Teens, Dana Carvey, David Arquette, Anthony Anderson, Lil Romeo, Lil Bow Wow, Jason "Weeman" Acuna, Lemony Snicket.

[edit] Final season

In the last season of STL, the show began recording prior to the days it was set to air, and aired in the AM hours This was the second to last show that was recorded at Nickelodeon Studios Florida. As said above, Nickelodeon had tried to gain young viewers in the morning hours, but this was impossible as most children were getting ready for school, and ratings declined shortly there after and it was cancelled later in 2003.

Near Slime Time Live's final season it would often connect with U-Pick Live (Florida to New York) and U-Pick Live would take over as Slime Time Live would end.

Slimetime broke the world record (still standing) for most people slimed at one time.

[edit] Friday Night Slimetime

A few years after STL's cancellation, Friday Night Slimetime premiered on Nickelodeon, but unlike the original version, its segments were pre-recorded. It lasted for one full season and was hosted by Lil JJ and Chloe Dolandis. The most common prizes on these shows were either a bicycle or athletic balls. It was still produced/directed by Jason Harper, and was written and occasionally announced by Dave Aizer.