MXC

MXC
Created by Paul Abeyta
Peter Kaikko
Larry Strawther
Developed by Paul Abeyta
Peter Kaikko
Larry Strawther
Starring Victor Wilson
Christopher Darga
John Cervenka
Mary Scheer
Opening theme Firebrand by Bumblefoot
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes 81 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Paul Abeyta
Peter Kaikko
Larry Strawther
Producer(s) Victor Wilson (supervising, season 3)
Mary Scheer (supervising, seasons 4-5)
Christopher Darga
John Cervenka
Running time approx. 20 minutes
Production company(s) RC Entertainment, Inc.
Release
Original network TNN/Spike
Picture format 480i
Original release April 13, 2003 (2003-04-13) – February 9, 2007 (2007-02-09)

MXC (an initialism of Most Extreme Elimination Challenge) is an American comedy television program that aired on Spike TV from 2003 to 2007. It is a re-purpose of footage from the Japanese game show Takeshi's Castle which originally aired in Japan from 1986 to 1990 and starred "Beat" Takeshi, a very popular and "hip" Japanese entertainer. The re-purposed "MXC" created a new completely new premise, storyline and characters. The original '"Takeshi's Castle" started with a glob of about 40 contestants competing against each other in challenges for the honor of being the five finalists who would attempt to storm the castle and defeat the powerful Count Takeshi and his crew of underlings. The MXC re-purpose created two teams competing against each other a la a typical Saturday afternoon network football game broadcast, with players trying to win points for their teams by surviving through different challenges. In the original program the Count and his underlings would follow the progress of the players as they moved through the course. In the repurpose Count Takeshi became veteran network announcer Vic Romano (think Keith Jackson) and the count's flunky became young upstart (and related to the boss) Kenny Blankenship.

MXC was created and produced by RC Entertainment, Inc. (Paul Abeyta and Peter Kaikko) in Los Angeles, California and Larry Strawther (a writer and producer on a number of network sitcoms). The three were friends who had worked together at Merv Griffin Productions in the late 1970s. Strawther was the staff on the "Dance Fever" pilot which Abeyta took over as Executive Producer the following season, while Strawther stayed with "Jeopardy!". Between jobs they would occasionally try to create their own projects. One of these was the 1990s talk show spoof "Night Stand." MXC is the property of both Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) and RC Entertainment. The 2004 special episode MXC Almost Live is the property of Viacom International, which was filmed in Orlando, Florida by the producers of MXC. In addition to this, MXC's DVD distributor is Magnolia Home Entertainment.

Episodes

Season Episodes Originally aired
Season premiere Season finale
1 13 April 19, 2003 July 19, 2003
2 13 July 31, 2003 November 6, 2003
3 27 April 22, 2004 April 7, 2005
4 15 October 20, 2005 March 9, 2006
5 13 November 9, 2006 February 9, 2007

The premise of MXC (as distinct from Takeshi's Castle) is a game show that is hosted by the eccentric characters Vic Romano (Vic Wilson) and Kenny Blankenship (Chris Darga), along with the field marshal Captain Tenneal (John Cervenka) and the field reporter Guy LeDouche (John Cervenka). The announcer (John Cervenka) would begin each episode with this standard introduction. However, this would be dropped in later seasons:

"What are these people running from? They're not! They're running TO the World's Toughest Competition in Town!"

When the show was transitioning away from its full name, it briefly added "Most Extreme Elimination Challenge!" to the end of the opening.

Eventually the opening introduction was changed to:

"Get fired up for MXC! The world's most toughest competition in town!"

Usually, two or three teams of contestants compete in several turn-based and head-to-head challenges. The only episode done without a competitive team base was the first episode ever made, which was simply centered around the stereotypical antics of college girls. Even though this was the first episode made,[1] it was the seventh episode of season one to air. Most other competitive teams do not truly have a real-life rivalry (e.g., Season 1, Episode 2 "Donors vs Addicts"), while others such as Democrats vs Republicans vs Third Party do.

The contestants compete in a variety of challenges, usually four per episode, but occasionally as many as six. The challenges are extremely hard, and a majority of the contestants fail to complete the challenges. Throughout the show, painful failures to complete challenges are reviewed by Vic and Kenny in the "MXC Impact Replay" (briefly given sponsor names like the "Snickers Satisfies Replay" and the "Slim Jim Snap of the Day"), which is essentially a sports-themed playback feature. Occasionally, the Impact Replay is used for Kenny's pleasure, in looking at the female contestants, items, or random events in the series which he finds funny or disappointing. Contestants who do complete a challenge earn one or two points for their team (maybe even more). The team with the most points at the end of the episode wins the competition. At the end of each episode, Kenny counts down the ten "Most Painful Eliminations of the Day", which usually focus on the events shown in the Impact Replay, but sometimes includes random events that involved the main or recurring characters.

Kenny and Vic, along with any other people around them at the end of the show, all end the episode by saying: "Don't get eliminated!"

MXC Almost Live and other special episodes

On April 22, 2004, Spike TV aired a special edition of the show to start the third season, featuring skateboarder Tony Hawk and snowboarder Tara Dakides. The special was taped at the Universal Orlando Resort in Orlando, Florida using students from nearby colleges and appropriately dubbed MXC Almost Live. The special edition is not based on the original Takeshi's Castle footage, but only has some added in for Vic, Ken, the Captain, and Guy LeDouche. Actors were hired to play those who would replace the roles of the latter two, named "Major Babe" (Michelle Sorrell) and "Gip LeDouche" (Eric Esteban). While everyone in the episode is American, everything said by any contestants besides Hawk and Dakides is still dubbed.

Three other special episodes aired, all from Season 2, including a special nighttime episode, a "Monsters vs. Mascots" episode, and a special winter episode.

Spike initially held a contest in 2005 or 2006 where the winner would have his name and the name of five of his friends used in an episode of MXC and would also receive a viewing party of said episode for up to 50 people at a place of his choice. However, this contest never fully materialized and is assumed to have been canceled for unknown reasons.

Characters

Most of the characters and contestants on MXC are voiced by the producers and series' writers: Victor Wilson, Christopher Darga, John Cervenka, and Mary Scheer who did all of the female voices.

Main characters

Recurring characters

The following are characters who have established a semi-consistent name. However, their names may change to fit in with a show's theme or style of game.

Although uncredited, Jamie Alcroft was the announcer for the first four episodes of MXC before John Cervenka took over that role for the remainder of the series.

Production

In the show, the contestants' names are usually names of celebrities, network bosses, or family members and friends of the producers or voice actors. Several recurring names appear in the show; the most common family name is Babaganoosh, since the producers of MXC were given short deadlines for producing episodes, therefore giving them limited time to write the scripts. Babaganoosh comes from Darga as his family is from the Middle East, where Baba ghanoush is the name of a local eggplant dish.[7]

During the production of the show, the network bosses stated that they did not want the producers to repeat games from episode to episode, but ythe producers ignored this, knowing 1) they didn't have the rights to enough episode at the time to not repeat, but 2) some of the games (especially "Log Rollers" and "Sinkers or Floaters") to be interesting and funny every time. Some fan-favorite and recurring games included Log Drop, Wall Bangers, Dope on a Rope, Rotating Surfboard of Death, and Sinkers and Floaters, amongst many others. Due to the high viewership and popularity of MXC in the United States, several of the original Japanese actors whose acting careers were failing at the time MXC aired in the United States got massive career re-boots because of the US fan base.

While the basic premise of MXC is that of a legitimate game show, its true premise is that of a comedy not intended to be taken literally. All original audio was stripped from each show for legal reasons, and all audio was added by producer-writers and an audio technician, leaving none of the original audio from Takeshi's Castle. The script is completely unrelated to the original Japanese dialogue; Both Abeyta and Strawther's original notes deliberately avoided any references to Japanese or Asian culture. The characters could be from Iowa. Some thought the only Japanese-related, albeit loosely, term used for the show was the name Most Extreme Elimination Challenge, which has a Japanese-like naming style. But Strawther noted that the title -- pitched by Abeyta -- was a spoof on network buying tendencies of the time -- "Extreme sports were big and the term was being thrown around everywhere. We thought it was funny to use "Most Extreme." All the producers and writers admit that they had no knowledge of what the contestants or actors were originally saying during the filming of Takeshi's Castle. MXC's early scripts spoofed pop culture, or mocked various celebrities, athletes, sports announcers, politicians, with the occasional sexual pun. In later seasons, with network encouragement, sexual puns and references took on a much larger role, to the dismay of some of the show's producers who felt the cheap jokes led to its demise earlier than necessary. Contestants are given seemingly incongruous but humorous names and occupations based on their team and physical appearance (e.g. Sal Bloomberg from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, a meat handler team member in the Season 1 episode "Meat Handlers vs. Cartoon Voice Actors", aka "Network Boss"). In addition, the various challenges are all given humorous names, such as Sinkers & Floaters or Wall Bangers. Any water or mud used in a challenge is given humorous names from Kenny and Vic, notably "septic sludge", with Kenny usually following it with a more specific name (e.g. "runoff from a local chili cook off"). The footage for a single episode of MXC can come from multiple episodes of Takeshi's Castle, and occasionally the same footage, including challenges, will be used in multiple episodes with different character names and dialogue. Unlike international editions of Takeshi's Castle, the original text that appeared on screen is left as is, with the characters often playing off of it.

Production Team Trivia - All four of the Producers / Performers / Writers on the series are alums of the famous Groundlings in Hollywood: John Cervenka, Christopher Darga, Mary Scheer, and Victor Wilson. The creators/Exec Producers Paul Abeyta] and Larry Strawther had worked together at Merv Griffin Productions in the late 1970s. Strawther had worked on the company's pilots for the re-boot of Jeopardy! and Dance Fever in 1978. When both shows sold Strawther went with Jeopardy as its head writer and Abeyta came over Merv's talk show to exec produce Dance Fever. Kaikko worked for Dance Fever's distributor 20th-Century Fox and while overseeing that show he struck up a longtime friendship and business partnership with Abeyta. Strawther went on to write and produce network sitcoms, imcluding Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley, Night Court and My Sister Sam and some movies like Without a Clue, but between jobs he would work with Abeyta and Kaikko on spec projects that seemed like they would be fun.

Home video releases

Season Region 1 DVD
release date
1 October 3, 2006[8]
2 April 17, 2007[9]
3 (Half 1) November 6, 2007[10]
3 (Half 2) November 11, 2008[10]
4 November 11, 2008[10]

Lawsuits

The American gameshow Wipeout on ABC was accused of being "a blatant copycat" of shows such as Takeshi's Castle and MXC, and a copyright infringement lawsuit was filed by Tokyo Broadcasting System against ABC in late 2008, claiming the obstacle-course game show closely resembled several Japanese shows. It alleged Wipeout violated its copyrights to shows such as Takeshi's Castle and Ninja Warrior.[11]

The Japanese network later sued Dutch entertainment giant Endemol, which produces Wipeout.

The companies settled the case on November 30, 2011, after meeting with a federal magistrate judge in Los Angeles. No settlement terms were filed with the court.[12]

References

  1. DVD Audio Commentary for Season 1, Episode 7
  2. "Wall Bangers (Wall Buggers) 1 - Most Extreme Elimination Challenge (MXC)". YouTube. 2010-12-26. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  3. 1 2 3 "The Best of the Best of MXC - Dash to Death". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  4. "Buck Off 1 - Most Extreme Elimination Challenge (MXC)". YouTube. 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  5. "Most Extreme Elimination Challenge (MXC) - Top 25 Most Painful Eliminations of Season 3". YouTube. 2011-02-23. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  6. "Little Man in the Boat 1 - Most Extreme Elimination Challenge (MXC)". YouTube. 2010-12-30. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  7. March 11th, 2012 (2012-03-11). "The Grammarphobia Blog: The spicy history of baba ganoush". Grammarphobia.com. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
  8. "MXC – Most Extreme Elimination Challenge Season One". Amazon.com. Retrieved April 29, 2015.
  9. "MXC: Most Extreme Elimination Challenge – Season 2". Amazon.com. Retrieved April 29, 2015.
  10. 1 2 3 "Most Extreme Elimination Challenge DVD news: Release Date for MXC: Most Extreme Elimination Challenge - Volumes 4 and 5". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
  11. Archived December 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  12. "ABC, Endemol Settle 'Wipeout' Copyright Lawsuit With Japanese Broadcaster". Hollywood Reporter. 2011-12-24. Retrieved 2013-01-23.
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