X-Man (TV series)

X-Man
Genre Game show, Comedy, Psychological
Starring Yu Jae-suk
Kang Ho-dong
Lee Hyuk-jae (S.60-90)
Kim Jae-dong (S.1-23)
Gong Hyung-jin (S.24-34)
Park Kyung-lim (S.35-59)
Country of origin South Korea
Language(s) Korean
No. of seasons 90
No. of episodes 178 (List of episodes)
Production
Running time 50-80 minutes
per episode
Broadcast
Original channel SBS
Original run November 8, 2003 – April 8, 2007
Chronology
Followed by Haja! GO (하자!GO)
Related shows Good Sunday
Real Situation Saturday
External links
Website

X-Man (Hangul: X맨) was a popular South Korean game show which ran from November 8, 2003 to April 8, 2007 on SBS. Its popularity peaked in 2004, but a decline in ratings led to its cancellation. It was hosted by Yu Jae-suk, Kang Ho-dong, Kim Jae-dong, who was later replaced by Gong Hyung-jin, Park Kyung-lim, and Lee Hyuk-jae; only the first two were on the program since its inception.

X-Man started out as a program in Real Situation Saturday on November 8, 2003, and it was a huge hit. During its period in Real Situation Saturday, it was referred to as "Real Situation: Finding X-Man" (실제상황 X맨을 찾아라). Because of its unique concept and interesting games, X-Man quickly gained an audience. X-Man contained main games and mini-games, all referred to as "Missions". Eventually, missions were reduced due to the addition of a Couple Event that took up 3/4 of the 2nd episode in a season. Due to high ratings, it later moved on to Sunday on October 10, 2004, under the program Good Sunday, in an attempt to revive the sinking show.[1] X-Man is loosely based on The Mole.[2]

Contents

Format

Each season was divided into two episodes, airing in consecutive weeks. The first season was divided into six episodes, with three chances to find the X-Man. The second and third season was divided into four episodes, with two chances. As of the fourth season, challengers only had one chance (two episodes) to find the X-Man.[3] The various celebrities were divided into two teams, with one led by Kang Ho-dong (Kang Team) and the second by the other main MC (initially Kim Jae-dong, then Gong Hyung-jin, then Park Kyung-lim, then finally Lee Hyuk-jae). Yu Jae-suk served as the show's mediator and main MC. At the start of each episode, one celebrity would be chosen by the producer to be the X-Man, whose main mission was to disrupt teamwork in his or her team and purposely throw challenges while keeping his or her identity a secret. Winning teams of each mission would be awarded 1 million [nb 1].

After all the missions, the guests then voted on who they think is the X-Man. The celebrity participant who was chosen was then digitally "fingerprinted" to see if the others chose correctly. If the others chose correctly, any money earned by the teams was donated to charity, under the names of the various guests. If they failed to find the X-Man, the X-Man was considered to have succeeded and the money donated to charity was given under the X-Man's name.

Missions

X-Man has featured many missions that have become very popular with the general audience. Missions consisted of various physical and mental games that changed every few months.

Reception

During the later months of 2005, there was a decline in ratings. Rival shows like KBS's Happy Sunday lineup and MBC's Sunday Sunday Night were gaining in popularity. Good Sunday's previous ratings of around 19.5% on January 2, 2005[4] and 23.5% on October 9, 2005[5] had dropped to 11.8% on July 23, 2006[6] after a year. In order to regain viewers, X-Man had many special episodes, which had contestants either going to various places (Japan, Germany for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, China) or had special, unique guests (Michelle Wie, TVXQ). However, ratings did not rebound to their previous levels, and the show was finally overhauled for the Fall 2006 season and dubbed New X-Man.

New X-Man

Due to low ratings, the shows format changed. Although the hosts remained the same, the concept changed; instead of being the team disrupter, the X-Man became the top choice among various celebrities for a various topic.

Therefore, the objective of the game was to guess who would be the #1 vote-getter and trade the X-Man over to the other side. The only time this was possible was when the team won the mission, after which they would have the chance to either retrieve someone from the other team or send someone over. At certain points in the show, the lower positions would be revealed a few at a time, with only the top few remaining before the final mission. The team who has the X-Man loses the entire "game".[7]

Teams were chosen through a lottery system, with MC Yu serving as the "divider". The number he picked served as the dividing line between the teams (with MC Kang getting the guests with earlier numbers, and MC Lee getting the later numbers). In the event of an unfair division (for example, if the number 10 was chosen), the teams would simply be divided in half.

Although New X-Man occasionally entered the Top 20 chart, the new audience was not sustained and its final episode aired on April 8, 2007. It was replaced first by Haja! Go! (하자!고)[8], then by Old TV (옛날TV)[9], both shows hosted by Yu, but neither shows could garner ratings and Good Sunday was revamped once again.[10]

List of episodes

Trivia

Awards & achievements

Year Awards
2007
  • 2007 SBS Entertainment Awards (December 30)[11]
    • Korean Wave Program Award - X-Man
    • Grand Award (Daesang) - Kang Ho-dong

Notes

  1. ^ Actual amounts were undisclosed after earlier seasons.

References

  1. ^ (Korean) "MBC와 SBS, 예능 프로그램도 전면전". Naver News. 15 October 2004. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=106&oid=001&aid=0000791247. Retrieved 16 April 2011. 
  2. ^ (Korean) "SBS '실제상황…' 美프로 베꼈나". Naver News. 24 November 2003. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=103&oid=038&aid=0000208473. Retrieved 16 April 2011. 
  3. ^ (Korean) "기억에 남는 X-맨은?". Naver News. 16 April 2004. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=106&oid=073&aid=0000003419. Retrieved 16 April 2011. 
  4. ^ (Korean) Ratings Jan. 2, 2005, TNS Media Korea, Retrieved on September 13, 2007
  5. ^ (Korean) "'일요일이 좋다'에도 '동방신기 효과'". Naver News. 11 October 2005. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=106&oid=111&aid=0000019942. Retrieved 16 April 2011. 
  6. ^ (Korean) Ratings July 23, 2006, TNS Media Korea, Retrieved on September 13, 2007
  7. ^ (Korean) "`뉴X맨` 심리 버라이어티 쇼 변신". Herald Economy. 5 April 2010. http://biz.heraldm.com/common/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20061127000106. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 
  8. ^ (Korean) "강호동 '일요일이 좋다' 하차…유재석 단독 MC". My Daily. 30 March 2007. http://www.mydaily.co.kr/news/read.html?newsid=200703302130231111. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 
  9. ^ (Korean) "SBS '일요일이 좋다', 두 달 만에 포맷 교체". Naver News. 23 June 2007. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=106&oid=001&aid=0001665329. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 
  10. ^ (Korean) "SBS '일요일이 좋다', 11일 야심 찬 변신". Naver News. 1 November 2007. http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=106&oid=001&aid=0001804250. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 
  11. ^ (Korean) 2007년 SBS 연예대상 수상작 SBS. Retrieved January 5, 2010.

External links