WOW: The CatholicTV Challenge

WOW: The CatholicTV Challenge

2008 logo for WOW: The CatholicTV Challenge.
Created by Fr. Bob Reed
Developed by Charles Green
Mark Quella
Directed by Peter Kaminski
Presented by Fr. Robert Reed
Narrated by Kevin Nelson
Country of origin  United States
Production
Executive producer(s) Fr. Robert Reed
Jay Fadden
Producer(s) Peter Kaminski
Broadcast
Original channel CatholicTV
Picture format NTSC
480i (SDTV - 4:3 {cropped})
Original run September 6, 2004 – Present
External links
Website

WOW: The CatholicTV Challenge is a game show that has aired on CatholicTV, plus other channels in the United States and Canada, since September 6, 2004. The series was developed to teach the basic facts of the Catholic Faith through the lives of young children.

The series was created by its host and executive producer, Father Robert Reed,[1] who is also the President of CatholicTV (the show's title was conceived by Sean Ward, coordinator of new media at CatholicTV). Peter Kaminski produces and directs the show, while CatholicTV senior producer Kevin Nelson is announcer.

Since the purpose of the show is to convey an understanding of basic Catholic beliefs to viewers both young and old, the series actively gives prospective contestants any and all questions with the answers for study one month in advance of the taping.

Gameplay

Format #1 (2004–2007)

The original format, simply called WOW, was used for the first three seasons and styled after Kids Say the Darndest Things. Participants discussed the theme of the day, getting "Wowsers" (simple foam representations of the show’s logo) for saying the "deepest" things. At the end, the child with the most Wowsers received a prize.

Format #2 (2007-Present)

Beginning in 2007, the format changed to a question-answer game show. Three children, introduced by the animated canine "Nosey the Know-it-All Dog", attempt to answer questions around the day's common theme, called a "Wudabout"; Nosey also asks any tie-breaker and "Super Challenge" questions.

After five minutes, the high scorer moves on and another set of three contestants is introduced; after three rounds, each five minutes long, the three winners compete in the Final Challenge. The winner of this round receives a prize.

References

  1. Catholic Kids On TV, Boston Globe, September 4, 2005

External links