The Mole (TV series)
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The Mole | |
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The Mole UK Logo |
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Genre | Reality, Game Show |
Presented by | ABC |
Country of origin | Belgium |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | VRT |
Original run | 1999 – 2008 |
External links | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
The Mole is a reality television game show which was originally created in 1999 by Woestijnvis and broadcast on VRT in Flanders, Belgium, and won the Golden Rose of Montreux in 2000. It was conceived by Michiel Devlieger, Bart de Pauw, Tom Lenaerts and others, and the format was later licensed in 40 countries.
Players in The Mole must work together to complete various physical and mental challenges to build up a significant cash prize for the winner. One of them, however, is "the Mole," a double agent hired by the producers to sabotage the efforts of the group. The Mole must be careful to avoid drawing suspicion. Using journals, players must track vast amounts of minutiae about the person(s) they suspect of being the Mole, such as seating positions, clothing colors, minor discussion topics, and so on. The quiz at the end of each episode tests players' knowledge of the Mole, and determines by lowest score (or slowest time, in the event of a tie) who is eliminated from the game.
Contents |
[edit] Format
Each installment of The Mole involves a number of contestants, averaging around twelve. During each episode, the contestants participate in a number of challenges, each assigned a monetary value. If the contestants, as a team, complete the challenge, that money is added to the final prize for the game. However, one of these contestants has been selected by production to be the Mole; his or her job is to try to prevent the other players from winning challenges without revealing himself to others. The Mole may be told ahead of time of how to do this or what challenges to expect, while at other times the Mole must decide whether to intervene or not.
At the end of each episode, the contestants individual take a quiz regarding the identity of the Mole and his or her involvement in the previous activities. The player who scores the lowest on this quiz, or was slowest to answer in case of a tie, is eliminated from the game. The winner of the game is the one that answers the most questions correctly on the final quiz given when there are only three players remaining (including the Mole), and is awarded the total amount of money won over the course of the game.
While success in the challenges is important in order to build up potential winnings, it is also critical to stay in the game by scoring better than opponents on the quiz, usually by attempting to draw their suspicions of the Mole's identity toward oneself. Since the Mole must use subterfuge to misdirect attention from his/her attempts to derail the team, disingenuous attempts to emulate the Mole must be subtle, while still noticeable and suspicious. Players sometimes sabotage themselves so much that the Mole rarely has to tilt the table.
[edit] Challenges
Like other reality shows, The Mole features challenges in which the players received money that was added to a group pot which only one person could win. However, unlike challenges in other reality shows, the ones seen on The Mole offered players ways to disrupt the game, as well as ways of disguising their betrayal. Below are some of the more popular recurring challenges seen throughout the series:
- Tandem Skydiving - Usually the introductory challenge in inaugural seasons, each player must jump from an airplane to win money toward the group pot. If any player refuses, the prize money is forfeited. (USA - Season 1, Australia - Season 1, UK - Season 1)
- VARIATION: The majority of the players have the additional task of memorizing number combinations prior to each jump, while two others (who are not asked to jump) must predict who will or will not jump. (Australia - Season 4)
- Hostage Rescue - The producers abduct a player at night and then hold them hostage. The remaining players must find and free the hostage within a certain amount of time. The hostage is generally kept locked up in a castle or prison of a nearby city. The remaining players must split into groups and use different modes of transportation (car, boat, helicopter) to find the hostage. Within each mode of transportation is a hidden key, which, when combined with the other keys, can unlock the doors that imprison the hostage. (USA - Season 1, UK - Season 1, Netherlands - Season 3, Australia - all seasons)
- Library Game - Players are taken to a library, where they are given a series of clues. The clues point to specific books on the shelves which contain a ticket to ride a horse-drawn carriage. If they can find the book and take the ticket to a specific stop on the ride, they can board the carriage at that point. If all players get on board and finish the ride the challenge is won. (USA - Season 1, Belgium - Season 2, Netherlands - Season 2)
- Fortress Test - Players are taken to an abandoned fort and told they must defend it from trained aggressors. The target is a glass bowl, illuminated by two spotlights on the roof. The aggressor's objective is to either disable both spotlights or move the glass bowl out of the light. To succeed, the players must keep the bowl illuminated from sunset to sunrise, or shoot and hit all the aggressors, preventing further attacks. (USA - Season 1, UK - Season 2, Australia - Season 2)
- GPS Game - In variations of the game, contestants must use a Global Positioning System unit, and simply utilize it to find a final destination. The UK version had the Mole sabotage the other contestants' units. The US version gave the contestants two options at the final destination: add the prize money to the pot or examine the Mole's dossier. In the Dutch version, the talking GPS gave strange directions, such as "Drive to Swiss" while the show was filmed in Mexico. (UK - Season 1, Belgium - Season 1, USA - Season 2, Netherlands - Season 8)
- Riddle Challenge - Logic puzzles have been used extensively across all editions of The Mole, in several variations, usually splitting the players into teams.
- VARIATION 1: The contestants are split into two groups and taken on a tour. The first group is led to a room, where they must answer a series of riddles to earn money. They are then led to another room and can watch the other team try to solve the same riddles, only each riddle the other team answers successfully costs them money they just won. The first team must send one of their own to try and stop the other team from solving the riddles before all money is lost. (USA - Season 1, BEL - Season 2, NL - Season 2)
- VARIATION 2: The contestants are split into two groups and must solve the same set of riddles. Both teams must complete the riddles within a shared time limit, but incorrect answers will cost them additional time. (UK - Season 1, Australia - Season 1, Belgium - Season 1)
- Language Barrier Challenge - A common theme in The Mole, since players are taken overseas frequently. They attempt to complete challenges in cities and towns where they do not speak the language, and must find a way to communicate with the locals to gather information. For example, in a challenge from the US version, players are given two watches. One of the watches is genuine, while the other is a fake. However, players can't tell the two watches apart. From speaking with the local watch appraisers, they decide which watch to destroy. When time has run out, they go to a firing range, where a marksman fires a bullet through the watch they deem to be fake. If the fake is destroyed, they win money, but if the real watch is destroyed, they must pay for it with money from the pot. (USA - Season 1: Cartier Test, Laundry Game, Season 2: Pizza Test)
- Three Questions - The "Three Questions" test has become a tradition in the US versions in the finale episode before the reunion. By this point in the game, only three people are left, the exact amount required for this challenge. All players first fill out identical surveys where each question has two different answers to choose from. The answers are the names of the two other players. Later, the host leads one person to hide somewhere in the town. The other two must find their fellow player based on how they believe their teammate answered three questions taken from the survey. Selecting which route to take usually follows this premise: If Player X answered the question with Player Y, go left; otherwise, if the answer is believed to be Player Z, go right. Since no routes overlap, each question has to be answered correctly in order to win money. (USA - Season 1, 2, 3, Australia - Season 2, Netherlands - Season 4)
- Deaf, Mute, Blind - One player is blindfolded and must navigate their way through a building with the assistance of two other teams. In the standard variation of this challenge, the mute team is able to see what the blind player cannot through his or her camera-mounted headset. However, as the team name suggests, they can't communicate verbally with anyone. Instead, they must pantomime directions to the deaf team through a different camera. The deaf team is able to speak to the blind player, but can't hear anything that anyone says. (UK - Season 2)
- The Blueberry Game - A cake is be presented to the players during dinner. All but one piece has a blueberry topping. The player who eats the slice of cake without the blueberry is visited at night by the host, who offers that player an exemption. They must then convince a certain number of players to break the rules and visit them at night. This game tends to hurt players emotionally, since they are often very trustful of their deceivers.
[edit] Quiz and Eliminations
The quiz is the primary device of eliminating contestants across all series. Traditionally between ten and twenty questions, the quiz asks the players to identify the Mole and several pieces of information regarding the Mole, including the Mole's activity in challenges, biographical profile, their fashion and/or culinary choices during the show, etc... The player scoring lowest on the quiz (and taking the longest time to do so, in the event of tied scores) is eliminated from the game. The US version saw a format change from twenty questions to ten questions from Season 2 on, usually with all questions available to the public. Season 5 of the Australian series had contestants answer five questions about the Mole (not filmed), plus a further five questions for the live eliminations. On two separate occasions, the live elimination computer quiz system malfunctioned and didn't record some contestants' responses. The rules stated that if this were to happen the elimination would be based on the five questions answered before the live show.
Depending on the edition, players have occasionally had the chance to alter their scores, and thus their chances of surviving the elimination. In Season 1 of the UK edition, players were given chips to replace incorrect answers on their quiz in one of the challenges. In the latest editions of The Mole in the Netherlands, players can earn "jokers" to be used at any point in the series to erase incorrect answers. In 2008 the show in the Netherlands introduced "topito's", a 1/8 piece of a full circle ("Topo"). If a player has a full topo of the same color or with 8 different colors, the player will get a free pass for the next test. Only the first full and correct topo will be rewarded with a free pass for the next test.
In most editions of The Mole, however, players are usually given the chance at "exemptions" or "free passes". Should a player earn an exemption, he or she is not required to take the quiz and thus safe from elimination. Traditionally, an exemption must be earned by preventing the team from winning their challenges. Season 2 of The Mole in the US saw the most prevalent use of exemptions, with nearly one every episode, and two on occasion.
A standard elimination checks each of the players' statuses on whether they are continuing to the following episode. In most formats, a computer shows a green screen to signify they are continuing or a red screen to show they have earned the lowest score. Poland used red and green feathers, and some versions have used an eye instead.
Many editions have seen special eliminations. A player, for example, may be given a second chance in the game, should they redeem themselves in a challenge. In one edition, the remaining players had a chance to stop the elimination, if they surrendered their prize money up to that point. There have been several editions where either no players or multiple players were eliminated. Buy-out offers may also be presented during executions, in which a player may opt out of the game and take a guaranteed monetary offer.
[edit] Clues
A staple of The Mole franchise includes the various obscure and subtle clues planted by the producers. For example, in one challenge on the second US series, host Anderson Cooper was eating an apple. Apples are the official fruit of Washington, the Mole's home state. Rumor has it that not even the Mole spotted this clue until it was revealed during the finale[citation needed]. Similarly, in the UK's first season, the first word that the presenter said in each episode was to be linked together to reveal the identity of the Mole. Some players in later series chose to seek out clues, most often in vain. Allegedly, this is what led to the demise of Corbin Bernsen in Celebrity Mole Hawaii, as he was too distracted searching for clues that he didn't focus enough attention on the game.
Clues are generally planted for viewers to catch, rather than the players themselves. Some clues are only given to the viewing audience, added in during post-production. For example, two episodes of the second US seasons featured words quickly displayed in the title sequence. However, their cryptic meanings often remain hidden to everyone until they are revealed at the end of the season.
[edit] The Mole in Different Countries
[edit] Australia
The Australian version of the program that aired on Seven -- hosted by former Blue Heelers star Grant Bowler -- began in 2000 and has since been followed by four more seasons.
The producers offered to tell Bowler who the Mole was, but he declined the invitation, believing that he could better host the show and play around with the contestants if he didn't know. Some reports, however, claimed that he was told the identity of the Mole in the fourth season.
Like the UK version, the first two Australian seasons included a 'special episode' which revealed all the clues as to the identity of the Mole and how close each player had been to finding them. Unfortunately, it wasn't particularly popular with audiences and so, in subsequent seasons, it was replaced by a five-minute segment at the end of the final episode in which all of the clues were briefly revealed.
In the second season it was decided to alter the structure of the beginning of the game by bringing in 16 (4 from Brisbane, 4 from Sydney, 4 from Hobart and 4 from Canberra) contestants with an early challenge deciding which 10 of them got to continue playing. This elimination process was not continued in later seasons. The second season was replayed during the day in December 2006.
In the third season, the contestants were spontaneously sent on a trip during the play of the game, but not knowing why. They were blindfolded for the entire trip back, and all was revealed when they found themselves at Seven Studios on the set of Weakest Link. They had to play a game, as well as endure host Cornelia Frances, for a shot at $100,000 added to their kitty. In the end, they achieved $14,100, which was touted as the lowest amount ever won on the Weakest Link. However, as all amounts have been rounded off to the highest thousand, $15,000 was added to the kitty instead.
The program's fourth season, in 2003, was set on the Pacific island nation of New Caledonia and entitled The Mole: in Paradise. In an attempt to steer any suspicion from her being the Mole, Petrina was eliminated in one episode but returned on the next episode after accepting an offer from the host to buy her way back into the game. While this worked for a short time, it was not as successful as had been hoped, with some of the other contestants even more convinced that she was the Mole. This series was replayed during the day in April 2007.
Poor ratings resulted in there being no 2004 season but in July 2005 The Mole returned to Australian TV for its fifth season, subtitled as The Amazing Game. Tom Williams (Co-host of The Great Outdoors and winner of the Australian edition of Dancing with the Stars) was chosen to take over as host from Bowler, as he was not available for the project due to family commitments. This was met with mixed reaction from fans. This season also introduced a new concept to the show - live eliminations. The contestants spent the weekend in New Zealand working on various challenges, and then their actions were broadcast on TV the following Thursday night, with a live elimination following directly after.
Season | Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | Destination |
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1 | 2000 | Alan | Jan | Abby | Australia (Tasmania) |
2 | 2001 | Michael | Brooke | Hal | Australia (Victoria) |
3 | 2002 | Alaina | Crystal-Rose | Marc | Australia (Gold Coast) |
4 | 2003 | Petrina | Shaun | Nathan | New Caledonia |
5 | 2005 | John | Liz | Craig | New Zealand |
Despite strong rumors that a sixth series (which would be an All Stars series) had been given the go ahead and filmed, there has still been no announcement as to when, or even if, it will be forthcoming. Other rumours have suggested that the sixth season of The Mole would be a celebrity edition, However in 2006, channel 7 created Celebrity Survivor instead, and it broadcast at the same time of year that The Mole had the preceding year.
However on an episode of Good as Gold there was a segment on The Mole, whilst playing clips from the show, 2000-2005 was written next to the title, this would suggest that there will be no more seasons of The Mole in Australia.
[edit] Belgium
The show originated in Belgium, in 1999. There were three series, all hosted by Michiel Devlieger. The show was extremely popular with the Belgian audience. The original plans were to only make 2 series, in order to avoid milking and stretching out the format too much. In 2003 the producers caved in under huge popular demand and made one final series, which once again had very high ratings.
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
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1999 | Magda | Hugo | Mon | France |
2000 | Hugo | Marianne | Niki | Spain |
2003 | Marc | Stijn | Sandra/Inge | Italy |
[edit] Catalonia
In Catalonia, the program was called El talp. The season was recorded in September, 2003 and watched the following autumn by TV3, the television of Catalonia. Pol Izquierdo was the showman. Players could win a maximum quantity of €90.000, but they only managed to retain 44,500 of the potential pot. Gemma was revealed as the Mole and Nùria won. Manél was the runner-up although he was the first one who correctly identified the Mole.
[edit] Germany
The German version of The Mole, called Der Maulwurf: Die Abenteuershow aired on ProSieben. It ran two seasons: the first season in 2000 was hosted by former professional tennis player Michael Stich, and the second season in 2001 was hosted by Steven Gatjen.
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Sabine | Edeltraud | Edgar | France |
2001 | Jens | Sven | Esther | Canary Islands |
[edit] Italy
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Italy took a very original approach to the game, modifying lots of the elements of the normal versions of The Mole. First of all, the Italian version of the show wasn't recorded: it was broadcast live. Contestants were celebrities who had to live together for about 60 days in a home, called "Hacienda" in the first series in Mexico, and "Shamba" in the second series in Kenya: every day a 20-25 minutes recap of what happened the day before in the home was broadcast on TV. Then, once a week, there was a prime-time live show with the contestants linked from the location of the game.
Every week, contestants had to participate in various extreme challenges, where the Mole could act against the rest of the team to add money to her Loot: different types of games were classified in this way :
- Missione Settimanale - Weekly Mission: usually a physically-based challenge recorded during the week
- Notte della Talpa - Night of the Mole: a special long-resistance challenge recorded in a casual night of the week (generally contestants had to resist for some hours in a very particular and tiring position/situation)
- Cerimonia speciale - Special Ceremony (in the 1st series): a prime-time challenge where the contestants had to undergo a particular ceremony, traditional of the place hosting the game (for example eating a particular food or drink typical of the local tradition). If the Team passed a challenge of these, then some money were decanted from the Mole Loot to the Team Pot.
- Prova d'accesso - Access-Challenge (in the 2nd series): the corresponding of the "Special Ceremony" used in the first series of the game: the main difference between the two challenges is that in the first series this particular game was only proposed to the contestants, by a production crew decision, when the Mole Loot was reaching the same level of money of the Team Pot, while in the second series this was instead a fixed moment of the prime-time live show. Besides, in the second series this challenge didn't have a money value, but it was used to give an extra penalty to the Team in the Weekly Live Challenge, in case the Team didn't pass it, making the Live Challenge more difficult.
- Prova settimanale - Weekly Live Challenge: this was the main moment of the prime-time live show, and was usually the biggest and hardest challenge the contestants had to face every week. It generally was a physical extreme challenge, studied by the production crew to put to the test the limits and the fears of every member of the Team.
Prime-time shows usually presented a half-an-hour talk moment, where contestants discussed about the topics of the week (also for example friendships/love stories developed into the home). Then it was time for the main moment of the show, the Live Challenge (preceded, only in the 2nd series, by the Access-Challenge). Then there were some extra-minutes of talk about the challenge, so it was time for the Execution: the Talpa Execution mechanism presented another big variation from the classic Mole system. First of all, a list of the most audience-suspected contestants was shown: in fact, people watching the show could vote by telephone or SMS which was their suspected Mole; so, the most suspected contestant became the first executable member of the Team. Next, it was time for the Team nominations: each of the participants had to nominate his suspected Mole, with secret votes: the contestant receiving most of the votes became the second executable Team member; in case of draw between some contestants, the one of them who received most of the votes by the audience was declared the Team suspected contestant. So, the 2 suspects had to answer a 10 questions questionnaire about the Mole identity: the contestant who got most of the answers wrong had to leave the game. In case of draw, in the first series the contestant spending more time answering the questions was eliminated from the game; in the second series, during the questionnaire contestants heartbeat was controlled by a "cardio frequency meter", so the contestant having the fastest average heartbeat was executed: that made the Mole executable too! In this eventuality (never happened), a new Mole had to be selected by the production crew. Another little special nature of the Italian Mole was that the Mole didn't know his role until the real start of the game: in fact, the Mole was only informed of his identity in the first prime-time show, with a particular ceremony: each contestant had to open a folder containing a secret paper with a "No" or "Yes" inscription: so, the contestant receiving the "Yes" paper could know to be the Mole. Then, contestants had to burn in a brazier that paper (Typical of the show the tag "Apri, leggi, e brucia!" - "Open, Read, then Burn!").
Both the series were presented by Paola Perego (the first one on the second Italian state network, Rai Due, the second on the private TV-channel Italia 1). The first series tag for the show was "La Talpa... altro che gioco!" (""La Talpa"... not simply a game!"); the second series tag was instead "A La Talpa niente è come sembra!" ("In "La Talpa" nothing is like it seems!"). The 2 correspondents for the show linked from the location of the game were Guido Bagatta (1st series) and Stefano Bettarini (2nd series). Both the series of the show were followed by an average 4/5 million people audience: that made the Mole format a big success also in Italy.
Talking about the "construction" of the show, we could say that in the first series the main characteristic element was the action-factor (challenges were really harder and more spectacular in first series than in the second), while in the second edition the key element was the plot of finding the Mole, giving the show a more thriller-like look. Famous, from the first series, became a challenge where 3 contestants had to release 3 other Team members buried into 3 very small "graves" under a thick layer of sand before they could finish their breathable air (you can find a video of this challenge following this link: http://tabe2010.altervista.org/puntata_7.htm). The first series was broadcasted in 2004 from January, 30th to April, 2nd (10 prime-time shows, every Friday); the second one in 2005 from September, 20th to November, 22nd (10 prime-time shows, every Tuesday).
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
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2004 | Marco Predolin (tv presenter) | Angela Melillo (showgirl) | Karim Capuano (model/actor) | Mexico |
2005 | Paolo Vallesi (singer) | Gianni Sperti (dancer) | Roberto Ciufoli (actor) | Kenya |
[edit] Netherlands
The Dutch edition is the longest-running iteration of the show, now spanning eight seasons, with a 'junior' (kids) edition upcoming. The show ran for four standard editions, after which four celebrity editions have followed. In the Netherlands, the show is called Wie is... de Mol? (Who is... the Mole?). The first five series were presented by Angela Groothuizen, the sixth and the seventh by Karel van de Graaf and the eighth by Pieter Jan Hagens. In the first four seasons, Groothuizen was informed from the beginning who the Mole was, but in her last series (the first celebrity edition), she was not told. Van de Graaf and Hagens both chose not to know. Before the final episode of the 2006 edition, in which Fréderique Huydts was revealed as the winner, she died of cancer. Huydts chose to donate her money to Kika, a fund for children with cancer. She also expressed her wish for the show to be aired normally.
Season | The Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Deborah | Petra | Robin | Australia |
2001 | Nico | Sigrid | Yvonne | Scotland |
2002 | George | John | Jantien | Portugal |
2003 | Elise | Ron | Chandrika | Canada |
2005 | Yvon | Marc-Marie | Lottie | Australia, Indonesia |
2006 | Milouska | Frédérique | Roderick | Argentina |
2007 | Inge | Paul | Renate, Eva | Thailand |
2008 | Dennis | Edo | Regina | Mexico |
2008 Junior Edition |
Netherlands |
[edit] Poland
In Poland The Mole was called "Agent". It was aired on TVN. All three seasons were hosted by Marcin Meller.
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Agnieszka Królak | Liwia Kwiecień | Jerzy | France |
2001 | Mirosław Pasek | Bartosz Arłukowicz | Hanna | Spain |
2002 | Mirosław Grześkowiak | Małgorzata Goździkowska | Wojciech | Portugal |
[edit] Spain
In Spain The Mole was called "El Traidor". It was aired on Cuatro. The first and only season was hosted by Luis Larrodera and Sergio Muñiz.
Year | Airdates | Mole | Winner | Prize | Runner-up | Destination |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | July 12, 2006 September 8, 2006 |
Eva Pablo | David Rua | 49,000 € | Iria Pose | Spain (Andalusia) |
[edit] Sweden
In Sweden, The Mole is called "Mullvaden" and airs on Kanal 5. It was originally hosted by Pontus Gårdinger. After a six year break, the show is back on Swedish television, but now with Hans Fahlén as the host.
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
Spring 2000 | Christian Rosengren | Hans Buxfeldt | Thomas Mätzsch | France |
Autumn 2000 | Joakim Antelius | Wilhelm Lundborg | Susanne Grundström | Spain |
Autumn 2001 | Christine Borkman | Lena Winterros | Fabian Vreede | Canada |
Spring 2007 | Anna Lundberg | Alexandra Öfverman | Emanuel Roosvald | Portugal |
2008 | Thailand | |||
2009 | Mexico | |||
2010 | Greece |
[edit] United Kingdom
The show had two series in the United Kingdom, hosted by Glenn Hugill on Channel 5. Despite its cult following and despite adverts to appear in the next series appearing at the end of the second, a third series was not commissioned. Both series had a special episode at the end detailing the various clues about the Mole's identity, and general details on the production of the show. The top prize is £200,000 (about USD$396,000).
Year | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | International destination |
---|---|---|---|---|
Spring 2001 | David Buxton | Zi Khan (won £100,000) | Jennifer Waller | Jersey, France |
Autumn 2001 | Tanya Buck | Chris Lintern (won £87,500) | Paul Tregear (Trigster) | Canada |
[edit] United States
The premier season of The Mole on ABC in the United States debuted in January 2001. The second season, Mole 2: The Next Betrayal, debuted in September 2001, but was put on hiatus after only three episodes following disappointing ratings in the wake of 9/11, and the poor Friday time slot. In June 2002, the second season returned, restarting from the beginning, running as a summer replacement series.
In early 2003, a spin-off version, Celebrity Mole debuted. Two seasons were created (Hawaii, and Yucatan). In late 2007, Stone and Co. Entertainment secured the rights to bring back the show, and it will air its fifth season on ABC starting Monday, June 2, 2008.[1] ABC is currently promoting the fifth season of The Mole by quickly flashing the show's logo during commercial breaks of other ABC programming. Jon Kelley (Extra, The National Sports Report, Baseball Today) will succeed former hosts Anderson Cooper and Ahmad Rashad as host for the 2008 incarnation.[2]
Season | # of
Episodes |
Airdates | Host | Mole | Winner | Runner-up | Destinations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 | January 9, 2001-
February 28, 2001 |
Anderson Cooper | Kathryn Price | Steven Cowles ($510,000) | Jim Morrison | United States, France, Monaco, Spain |
2 | 13 | September 28, 2001-
October 12, 2001; June 4, 2002- August 6, 2002 |
Anderson Cooper | Bill McDaniel | Dorothy Hui ($636,000) | Heather Campbell | Switzerland, Italy |
3 | 6 | January 8, 2003-
February 12, 2003 |
Ahmad Rashad | Frederique Van Der Wal | Kathy Griffin ($233,000) | Erik von Detten | United States |
4 | 7 | January 7, 2004-
February 18, 2004 |
Ahmad Rashad | Angie Everhart | Dennis Rodman ($222,000) | Mark Curry | Mexico |
5 | 10 | June 2, 2008-
???? |
Jon Kelley | TBA | TBA | TBA | Chile |
[edit] Other Countries
The Mole series has also been made in the following countries: Austria, Norway (Muldvarpen), Israel, Portugal (O Sabotador) and New Zealand.
[edit] See also
- Celebrity Mole
- List of US television series
- List of UK television series
- List of Australian television series
[edit] External links
- The Mole's Offical ABC Home Page (USA)
- The Mole (TV series) at the Open Directory Project
- Mullvaden (Swedish Mole)
- UK Gameshows Page: The Mole
- The Mole (Belgium) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (The Netherlands) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (US) at the Internet Movie Database
- Celebrity Mole: Hawaii (US) at the Internet Movie Database
- Celebrity Mole: Yucatan (US) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (UK) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (Australia) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (Norway) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Mole (Israel) at the Internet Movie Database
- "The Mole" Returning to ABC"
- The Mole at the National Film and Sound Archive
[edit] References
- ^ "The Mole will return to ABC this summer with a “simplified” format", RealityBlurred, 2008-01-08. Retrieved on 2008-01-08.
- ^ Official ABC Home Page for 'The Mole'