Nanny 911

Nanny 911
Starring Stella Reid
Deborah Carroll
Yvonne Shove
Yvonne Finnerty
Lilian Sperling
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 72
Production
Executive producer(s) Paul Jackson
Bruce Toms
Producer(s) Suzanne Ali
Karyn Benkendorfer
Stacey Dowdy Travis
Thomas Loureiro
Paulette Terry
Stacey Travis
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) Granada America (now branded ITV Studios)
Distributor 20th Century Fox Television (2004-2007)
CMT Productions (2009-present)
Release
Original network Fox (2004-2006)
CMT (2009-present)
ITV2 (2004-present (UK))
Rai 2 (Italy)
Original release November 3, 2004 (2004-11-03) – June 6, 2009 (2009-06-06)
Chronology
Related shows Supernanny
Little Angels

Nanny 911 is a reality television show in the United States, which originally aired on FOX (and airs in the UK on ITV2, whose sister company, Granada America, produces the show).

On February 27, 2008, FOX announced that it sold the rights to Nanny 911 (as well as its partnered FOX show, Trading Spouses) to CMT.[1] The show has also had reruns on ABC Family in 2008 (where it no longer airs). New episodes of the series began airing on CMT in April 2009 until June 2009.

Synopsis

Nanny 911 is loosely based on the British television programme Little Angels, in which American families with unmanageable children are reformed by British nannies, including one who served for the royal family.

The introduction features montages of several clips of unruly children (and the nannies' surprised reactions), whereupon stock footage shows a "call" being made to Nanny 911 where "Head Nanny Lilian" (Lilian Sperling, featured as "Nanny to the British Royal Family") answers "Nanny 911" (on an old rotary dial phone).

After the intro the selected family is featured on a separate clip. Head Nanny Lilian and the other nannies "Nanny Deb" (Deborah Carroll), "Nanny Stella" (Stella Reid), and "Nanny Yvonne" (originally Yvonne Shove, later replaced by Yvonne Finnerty for unspecified reasons) discuss the clip, whereupon Lilian announces (based on the major need; each nanny specializes in one area, such as proper etiquette or controlling temper tantrums) which nanny will visit the family. The nannies are featured visiting the family in traditional nanny dress (similar to that worn by Mary Poppins).

The nanny's first day is spent solely in observing the family dynamics in order to determine a suitable plan of action for changing the children's behavior; at the end of the day the nanny discusses what needs to be done. The remainder of the week shows the plan being implemented, along with the parents' reactions (which can be quite negative, especially when the nanny mentions how the parents' actions have resulted in the problem). At the end of the week, the nanny generally compliments the family for the changed behavior. The last segment shows the family receiving a substantial gift from the nanny (such as a new car or a home renovation).

The families that are eligible for the show usually have four or more children (though some episodes show homes with fewer children), and the children are usually younger than 9 years of age (though also not always the case). The parents usually have an income that allows them to be upper middle-class.

After Season Two, the gift portion was removed. In Season Four, Nanny Yvonne did not appear due to budgetary reasons and the format changed. Rather than showing a clip to the nannies then deciding which one would go, Lillian just called one of them and sent them to the family. In some episodes this season, the nanny observes for two days rather than one.

International versions

Nanny 911 has been broadcast or slightly adapted in other countries.

See also

Supernanny

References

3. http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081227/NEWS/812270328

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