Uh Oh! | |
---|---|
Format | Game Show |
Created by | Rick Watts Frank Young |
Starring | Wink Yahoo Slashin' Sam Jumpin' Joe (season 1) Tearin' Aaron Quizmaster Patricia Slime Master Shaun (season 1-4) Slime Master Ryan (season 5-6) Christian Hagen Erin Strimatis Akua Otupiri The Punisher |
Country of origin | Canada |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 6 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | YTV |
Original run | 1997 – 2003 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | It's Alive! |
Uh Oh! was a Canadian game show, featuring children ages 10–15 aired from 1997 to 2003 on YTV; the series was taped in Toronto, Ontario. It was a spin-off of the popular variety show It's Alive!, where Uh-Oh! was part of its game show segment. Reruns of the show (except the first season) were aired on Discovery Kids; airings ceased when the station became Nickelodeon.
Contents |
Uh-Oh! was created off of a sketch on It's Alive! in its second season as a game show parody where contestants were chained up and answered questions. If a contestant answered incorrectly, a man called "The Punisher" (Erick O'Connor) would pour slime on the contestant from the rafters.
In the show's third season, realizing that the game show parody could actually work as a real game show, Uh-Oh! debuted as part of the slate of game shows during the show's game show segment. The game was much shorter than its spin-off, with the game consisting of one round of two spins each. Quickly becoming the most popular game show in the segment, the game was played more frequently than its other games. After It's Alive!' cancelled on May 1997, Uh-Oh! became its own show in the fall of that same year, playing with the exact same rules as when it was on It's Alive!, except that there were now two rounds, with an additional round between the two rounds called Slime Tour, which was basically the obstacle course segment from It's Alive! involving different teams whom were competing against each other in their own competition. (See Round 2 section below)
The game was played with three colour-based teams that would be pitted against each other in each episode. The goal of the game was to have more points than the other two teams. Teams would consist of two players each and would be either Blue, Green, or Red. Audience members would also pick sides and wear clothes of the colour they supported. Team members would either spin the wheel for half of the episode or, participate in whichever activity the wheel would choose. The team members would participate in games which would nearly always involve goo and would be silly. If won, games would provide points for the respective team. On each round the Blue team took their turn first, then Green and Red.
Every episode began with an uncredited announcer (known only as “Mr. Voiceman”) who asked the audience a question such as “What do you say when ... ”, usually with a predicament a kid would get into; the audience would respond “UH-OH!” In approximately two minutes, Mr. Voiceman would introduce host Wink Yahoo with a statement themed to his opening question such as “The only (Canadian/North American) TV personality who ... ” with a response of cheering from the audience. Yahoo would respond in kind to Voiceman, and then in turn introduce the other onset officials, after which he would ask Mr. Voiceman to introduce the players, who were thereupon introduced (again in sync with the question that opened the episode). After this Voiceman's duties were very small: to announce the prizes won by the studio players, Round 2 players, and lucky audience members. During the first three seasons of the show, the Kelowna band Kingdom Cloud were featured at the end of every episode. They usually played one or two songs while buckets of ooze were dumped on the crowd.
During round 1, one teammate from each team was designated to spin a 12-space segmented wheel which featured a variety of possible activities or results that could occur. Their partner was designated to perform the activity that the wheel landed on. Each team took turns spinning the wheel, with two cycles through the three teams.
In the first round, the wheel itself spun, and had pegs around the circumference. The chosen spot was denoted by a spring-loaded pointer that "clicked" past the pegs. Distribution of the spaces on the wheel changed through the series, but the first round spaces remained constant. Spaces on the wheel in the first round included 3 "Uh Oh!" spaces, 3 "Mayhem" spaces, 2 "Speed Round" spaces, a "The Dump" space, 2 "Win and Spin" spaces, and a "Trade and Spin" space. At the end of this round, Mr. Voiceman would announce the grand prize on the next episode.
The second round featured the Slime Tour, later renamed Field Games, which was footage shot at another location elsewhere across Canada; in its first season, the Slime Tour was mainly in Yukon. Three contestants, dressed in purple, yellow or orange, competed in a themed obstacle course race. After they were introduced, the three teams in the studio had to select which colour contestant they thought would win the race. If they were correct, they earned 35 points. If they were wrong, they earned nothing.
The obstacle course was generally made up of several activities separated by a distance that would have to be run. Some of the activities required a physical skill; others simply required speed at completing a task. There was usually at least one task in each course that would get the contestant messy, and usually a task that required carrying something or wearing something through the rest of the race. The winner of the course won a prize for himself or herself.
In season 5 the Slime Tour games in Barrie, Ontario were run in partnerships, with the contestant and one of their parents running the course in activities designed for pairs.
The third round was played essentially the same as the first round, with the players switching roles with their partners. The wheel itself was replaced with an entirely different design. The wheel in the third round was stationary, and the indicator spun. The indicator was designed like a three-blade propeller; each blade was the colour of one of the teams, and framed the space on the wheel it landed at. A team landed on the space marked by the indicator of their colour. Spaces on the wheel were occasionally changed between seasons. Fixed spaces included 3 Mayhem, 2 Speed Round, 1 The Dump, 1 Win and Spin, 1 Lose and Spin and 1 Trade and Spin.
Season 1 had 3 Uh Oh! spaces, while in seasons 2-4 one was replaced with the Uh Oh! Deluxe space. Season 5 it was changed to Pick It, and Season 6 saw it become Fruit Gushers.
During season 1, both partners would be interviewed by Wink before starting the game action. It would often involve the previous round's action, and opinions for revenge on partners.
The Team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
If the game ended in a tie, a 50 point Jump-in question was read. Whoever buzzed-in first with the correct answer won. If the wrong answer was given, the opponent would automatically win. If three way tie, the other two teams would have a shot at the question.
Prizes were awarded to the winning team at the end of each show and over the course of the series included Super Soakers, Mountain bikes, Bop It (later, Bop It Extreme) and stereos. Members of the audience would always receive Hubba Bubba bubble gum.