Double Dare (Nickelodeon game show)
Double Dare | |
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Also known as |
Super Sloppy Double Dare (1987, 1989) Family Double Dare (1988, 1990–93) Double Dare 2000 (2000) |
Created by |
Geoffrey Darby Michael Klinghoffer Dee LaDuke Robert Mittenthal |
Presented by |
Marc Summers (1986–93) Jason Harris (2000) |
Narrated by |
Harvey (1986–92) Doc Holliday (1992–93) Tiffany Phillips (2000) |
Opening theme | "On Your Mark"[1] |
Composer(s) | Edd Kalehoff |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons |
7 (1986–93) 2 (2000) |
No. of episodes |
525 (1986–93)[2] 67 (2000) |
Production | |
Location(s) |
WHYY Television Studios Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1986–89) Manhattan, New York (1987) Nickelodeon Studios, Orlando, Florida (1989–92, 2000) |
Running time | 21–24 minutes |
Production company(s) | Nickelodeon |
Distributor |
Fox Television Stations (1988–89) Viacom (1988–89, 2000) |
Release | |
Original network |
Nickelodeon (1986–87; 1990; 1992–93; 2000) Syndication (1988–89) Fox (1988) |
Picture format | NTSC (480i) |
Original release |
Double Dare & Super Sloppy Double Dare October 6, 1986 –March 15, 1991 (Nickelodeon) February 22, 1988 –September 8, 1989 (syndication) Family Double Dare April 3, 1988 –July 23, 1988 (Fox) August 13, 1990 –February 6, 1993 (Nickelodeon) Double Dare 2000 January 24, 2000 – November 10, 2000 (Nickelodeon) |
Double Dare is a children's game show, originally hosted by Marc Summers, that aired on Nickelodeon. Two teams compete to win cash and prizes by answering trivia questions and completing messy stunts known as "physical challenges." TV Guide named the show as one of the "60 Greatest Game Shows of All Time".[3]
Gameplay
Main game
Each team consisted of two children. Originally, both teams wore red uniforms, but after Double Dare entered syndication in 1988, one team wore blue uniforms while the other wore red (Finders Keepers, a Nickelodeon game show that premiered one year after Double Dare, played a role in this change). Each team received their own name (except for on the original Fox version of Family Double Dare, in which the teams were simply designated by the families' respective last names). Even though this was the case, the host usually called both teams "The Red Team" and "The Blue Team."
Each round began with a toss-up challenge in which both teams competed, with the winning team receiving both initial control of the round and money as shown below. After the toss-up, the host began asking trivia questions to the team in control. Each correct answer awarded money and allowed the team to maintain control, while a miss or a failure to respond within a given time turned control over to the opponents. However, the team could dare their opponents to answer the question, doubling its value; in response, the opponents could double-dare for quadruple the original value. When the team in control received a double dare, they had to either answer or compete in a physical challenge. An incorrect answer on a dare or double dare awarded both control and the appropriate amount of money to the team that issued it.
After the toss-up challenge at the start of the first round, Summers explained the rules as follows:
“ | I'm going to ask you a question, and if you don't know the answer, or think the other team hasn't got a clue, you can dare them to answer it for double the dollars. But, be careful, because they can always double dare you back for four times the amount, and then you'll have to either answer that question or take the physical challenge. | ” |
Scoring
Version | Toss-Up | Normal Question |
Dare | Double Dare/ Physical Challenge |
Triple Dare Challenge |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Double Dare | $20 | $10 | $20 | $40 | N/A |
Super Sloppy Double Dare | |||||
Family Double Dare (1988) | $50 | $25 | $50 | $100 | |
Family Double Dare (1990–93) | $25 | ||||
Double Dare 2000 | $300 + Bonus Prize | ||||
All values were doubled during the second round. The Triple Dare Challenge was only available during a second-round physical challenge on Double Dare 2000.
Physical challenges
Physical challenges were stunts, usually messy, that a team had to perform in a specified time, usually 20 or 30 seconds, although occasionally 10 or 15 seconds. All physical challenges on Double Dare 2000 were 30 seconds in length, unless a time reduction was in play due to the Triple Dare Challenge.
Most challenges involved filling a container past a line with one of a variety of substances: water, uncooked rice, green slime, whipped cream, milk, etc. Others involved catching a certain number of items before time ran out. For example, during "Pie in the Pants," a contestant had to catch a set number of pies in a pair of oversized clown pants within the specified time limit, while his/her teammate launched them from a foot-operated catapult at the opposite end of the stage.
The team won money and retained control for completing the stunt; otherwise, the money and control went to their opponents.
On Double Dare and Super Sloppy Double Dare, both contestants of a team competed in all physical challenges. On the 1988 version of Family Double Dare, all four members of a team compete in the challenges. On the 1990–93 version of Family Double Dare and on Double Dare 2000, two members of a team competed in round one, and all four members competed in round two.
Double Dare 2000 introduced the "Triple Dare Challenge." Available only in round two, this allowed a team to make their physical challenge more difficult, increasing its value to $300 (instead of $200) and putting a bonus prize at stake. Sometimes this included reducing the time limit (turning a 30-second challenge into a 20-second one), adding an extra item to the stunt (catching more pies), or increasing the overall difficulty of the stunt (blindfolding the contestants or requiring the contestants involved to use only one hand). The actual modifier was not revealed unless the team decided to accept the Triple Dare Challenge. If the team did not successfully complete the challenge, the money, prize, and control went to their opponents.
Obstacle Course
The team with the highest score at the end of round two went on to the bonus round, the obstacle course (renamed the Slopstacle Course for Double Dare 2000). If there was a tie, both teams ran the course. This only happened once (on Double Dare 2000). Regardless of the outcome, both teams kept all money earned. A guaranteed minimum of $100 was instituted in 1987; Double Dare 2000 and the Fox version of Family Double Dare used minimums of $200 and $500, respectively.
The course consisted of eight obstacles which had to be completed within 60 seconds. Each obstacle had an orange flag either at its end or hidden within it. One team member ran the first obstacle, then passed its flag to his/her partner (or the next team member in line on Family Double Dare and Double Dare 2000), who then moved on to the next obstacle. The team continued to alternate in this manner until they completed the course or until time ran out. For safety reasons, team members were given helmets and elbow/knee pads to wear while running the course.
The team won a prize for each obstacle completed, escalating in value up to a grand prize for completing the entire course. On the original and Super Sloppy versions, the grand prize was usually a vacation or a scholarship to United States Space Camp, and each member of the team received identical prizes. All eight prizes were usually worth a total of $3,000 to $4,000, with some episodes featuring a prize package exceeding these figures. On the Fox version of Family Double Dare, as well as the first season of the Nickelodeon run, the grand prize was a car (making all eight prizes usually worth over $15,000). In the final season, the grand prize was changed to a vacation (making all eight prizes usually worth over $5,000); however, the family that won the tournament held that season had the chance to run the Obstacle Course for a car.
On the Fox version of Family Double Dare (1988), the seventh obstacle offered a cash prize that was worth an amount ranging from $2,500 to $5,000.
Production
Personalities
Marc Summers served as host for all episodes from 1986–93. Additionally, Summers received a credit as producer in 1992, and as an executive consultant for Double Dare 2000. John Harvey ("Harvey") served as announcer from 1986–92, with Doc Holliday replacing him in 1992. Jason Harris hosted Double Dare 2000, and Tiffany Phillips served as announcer for that version of the program.
Several stage assistants appeared on-camera and assisted in setting up physical challenges and/or obstacles, including Robin Marella (1986–93), Dave Shikiar (1986–89), Jamie Bojanowski (1990–92), and Chris Miles (1992–93). Greg Lee, who later went on to host Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, was a contestant coordinator from 1986–90.
Music
All of the original Double Dare music was composed by Edd Kalehoff (who, coincidentally, had earlier composed the theme for Goodson-Todman's unrelated 1976–77 game show Double Dare) and was basically the same throughout the show's run with some minor changes to the music. The main theme also made a very brief appearance in The Lego Movie.
From 1986–88, the music had a synth lead. From 1988—starting with Fox Family Double Dare and the 2nd half of the syndicated run of Double Dare through the end of the run—all music was remixed with a horn lead (however, the 1986 variation theme was used for the opening from 1988–90).
For Double Dare 2000, the music was composed by former Crack the Sky guitarist Rick Witkowski. However, the theme song had the same arrangement from the original. Witkowski had previously composed music for Nickelodeon Guts and Figure it Out.
Merchandise
Reebok was a major sponsor of the show throughout its run, and every contestant and stage crew member (including Summers) wore a pair of the company's shoes.
Double Dare's popularity led to a variety of products made available for sale. In addition to games and toys, T-shirts, hats and other apparel was sold featuring the show's logo. Lunch boxes and folders with scenes and the show's logo were also marketed to schoolchildren.
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Broadcast history
Double Dare first aired on Nickelodeon on October 6, 1986, and new episodes aired Monday through Friday through January 2, 1987. Production initially originated at the studios of the PBS affiliate WHYY-TV in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the 65-episode first season was recorded in a 23-day period from September to October 1986.[4] After the success of the first 65 episodes, a second 65-episode season was ordered.[5] These were taped from January to February 1987.[6]
A short-lived, 40-episode Sunday morning edition titled Super Sloppy Double Dare was taped near the end of July 1987,[7] and began airing on August 2, 1987.[8] Super Sloppy Double Dare featured gameplay identical to the original format; however, physical challenges and obstacles were designed to make a larger mess. Viewers were encouraged to send in a post card with their contact information and could win a prize if their card was selected and a team performing a physical challenge completed the stunt successfully.[9][10] Episodes of the original Super Sloppy Double Dare were taped in New York City before production moved back to WHYY-TV.
In the fall of 1987, Fox announced they had partnered with Viacom to purchase the distribution rights to the program. New episodes of Double Dare aired in syndication on independent stations and affiliates of the Fox Network from February 22, 1988 to September 8, 1989.[11] There were 130 first-run syndication episodes in 1988.[12] Fox also produced a 13-episode Saturday night edition titled Family Double Dare, which aired from April 3, 1988 to July 23, 1988. Teams on this version consisted of four family members, most often a mother and father and two children. The prizes featured during the obstacle course often totaled over $20,000, and frequently the prize for the eighth obstacle was a new car.[13][14]
On January 23, 1989[11] following a sneak preview episode that aired on Super Bowl weekend, a new version of Super Sloppy Double Dare premiered in syndication, with the first half originating from Philadelphia at the WHYY Forum Theater and the second half originating at Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida.[11] This version of the show had a bigger set that had its own floor for toss ups and physical challenges due to their (usually) large size as well the bigger messes these challenges made. There were many new obstacles in the obstacle course that were large in size as well. Some include "Gum Drop" (which looked like a huge gumball machine), and "Kid Farm" (which looked like a huge ant farm). While new episodes were airing in first-run syndication, reruns of many of the 1986–89 kids' version episodes continued to air on Nickelodeon until March 15, 1991.[11]
Family Double Dare returned to Nickelodeon on August 13, 1990.[11] The cash obstacle was removed, but the car was retained as the grand prize, which was later replaced by a trip. Nickelodeon produced the series at Nickelodeon Studios in Orlando. The series continued until early 1993 and aired during weekend evenings. The original broadcasts were reruns of the Fox version, following which Nickelodeon launched its own version of Family Double Dare on weekends in September 1990. Production began in July 1990 and ended in July 1992.[15] This series taped at Nickelodeon Studios and ended its run on February 6, 1993 with a one-hour Tournament of Champions episode. Approximately 80 episodes (40 for each season) were taped, along with 2 Super Special episodes in February 1992.[15]
A short-lived version titled Super Special Double Dare aired in early 1992 featuring episodes with celebrities, sport teams or cast members from other Nickelodeon shows. These episodes used two teams of four contestants, with all winnings going to charity. One special consisted of the cast from both Clarissa Explains it All and Welcome Freshmen paired with two civilian contestants. Another special was titled NBA All Star Double Dare.
Double Dare 2000 premiered on January 24, 2000 (following a sneak preview episode on the 22nd), and continued to air new episodes until November 10, 2000. 41 episodes were filmed in January 2000, with an additional 26 taped later that same year in July. Double Dare 2000 followed the Family Double Dare format with a revamped set and bigger physical challenges. It also featured the new "Triple Dare Challenge" option in round two (which would be worth $300 and an additional prize), and referred to the obstacle course as the "Slopstacle Course". Five episodes were shot in widescreen HD in sponsor of electronic company Sony.
In April 2012, it was announced that the Nickelodeon Suites Resort in Orlando would be reviving Double Dare as a nightly live stage presentation, Double Dare Live.[16] As part of the "Studio Nick" feature of the hotel, shows are performed each night for families staying in the hotel. The show features elements and updates from the various versions of Double Dare, including remixed music, physical challenges and an obstacle course featuring obstacles, old and new, from Double Dare. Like the most recent formats of the program, eight contestants are selected to participate for the game-playing teams while additional audience members play additional physical challenges throughout the program. Previews of Double Dare Live began on May 21, 2012 with an official launch date of May 25. Participation in the program is exclusive to the hotel's guests.[17]
Double Dare: The Inside Scoop
Double Dare: The Inside Scoop | |
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Directed by | John Wilson |
Produced by | Nickelodeon |
Written by | Bob Anderson |
Starring |
Marc Summers Geoffrey Darby Harvey |
Production company |
Nickelodeon |
Distributed by | Kids Klassics |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Inside Scoop, a 1988 release under the "Kids Klassics" brand, explained the conception of Double Dare and featured clips from its early years. Included are Summers' host audition, and clips of the original pilot with Geoffrey Darby as host and a very basic set.
The video also includes unused footage from the very first episode taped of the series (taped September 18, 1986). Four takes were needed on the first item of the Obstacle Course, titled "Nightmare"; while the object was simple—finding the flag hidden within a giant pillow—the flag itself was not in the pillow at all for the first two takes. For the third take, not only did the clock not start, but one of the show's cameramen accidentally fell, blocking the contestants' progress. The fourth take is the one seen in the episode as aired.
There are some naming conflicts with this video. Printed material and the opening titles refer to this as "The Inside Scoop", though Marc and Harvey refer to it as "The Inside Slop," which is also seen in the ending credits.
Episode status
All versions and episodes of Double Dare still exist and have been seen on Nick GAS, including one episode of the Fox version of Family Double Dare.
On October 9, 2015, the kids only version of Double Dare debuted on The Splat programming block on TeenNick, making it the first time the original series is airing on a Viacom network since leaving Nick GaS in 2004. It currently airs on the block on an occasional basis.
Current ownership of the series is split between Nickelodeon (all original episodes from 1986–87, the 1987 "Super Sloppy" version, and all episodes from 1990–92; 1988–89 episodes were reruns) and CBS Television Distribution (entire syndicated run). The Fox version is co-owned by the two companies.
International versions
On all international versions of the show (except for Brazil, Canada, and India), teams play for points rather than cash due to specific laws stating that contestants under the age of 18 can't win cash on a game show.
Country | Name | Host | Announcer | Channel | Year aired |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | Double Dare | Gerry Sont Tom Jennings Simon Watt |
Simon Watt Margie Nunn |
Network Ten | 1989–92 |
Family Double Dare | Larry Emdur | Simon Watt | 1989 | ||
Brazil | Passa ou Repassa | Silvio Santos (1987–88) Gugu Liberato (1988–94) Angélica (1995–96) Celso Portiolli (1996–2000; 2013–present) |
SBT | 1987–2000 2013–present | |
Canada French | Double Défi | Gilles Payer | Gino Chouinard | TVA | 1989–91 |
France | Double Dare! | Nickelodeon France (2012 pilot only) TeenNick |
2012–present | ||
Germany | Drops! | Jürgen Blaschke | Sat.1 | 1991–94 | |
India | Nick Dum Duma Dum | Vrajesh Hirjee | Nickelodeon India | 2004 | |
Netherlands | DD Show | Norbert Netten | Toine Stapelkamp | TROS | 1989–90 |
United Kingdom | Double Dare | Peter Simon | Nick Wilton | BBC1 | 1987–92 |
United States | Double Dare | Marc Summers | John Harvey | Nickelodeon | 1986–87 |
Super Sloppy Double Dare | 1987 | ||||
Double Dare | Syndication | 1988 | |||
Family Double Dare | FOX | ||||
Super Sloppy Double Dare | Syndication | 1989 | |||
Family Double Dare | John Harvey (1990–92) Doc Holliday (1992–93) |
Nickelodeon | 1990–93 | ||
Super Special Double Dare | John Harvey | 1992 | |||
Double Dare 2000 | Jason Harris | Tiffany Phillips | 2000 |
References
- ↑ "Double Dare". Museum of Television Production Music. Retrieved 20 January 2016.(subscription required)
- ↑ Brooks, Tim (16 October 2007). The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946–Present (9 ed.). Ballantine Books. ISBN 0345497732.
- ↑ Fretts, Bruce (12 June 2013). "The 60 Greatest Game Shows of All Time". TV Guide. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
- ↑ Kolson, Ann (24 September 1986). "Trivia And Whipped Cream". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
- ↑ Video on YouTube
- ↑ "The Double Dare Story – 1/11/1987". The King of Funny Faces. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
- ↑ Collins, Glenn (25 July 1987). "Children's Game Show Captures Audiences". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
- ↑ New York Times; August 2, 1987 TV listings
- ↑ Shister, Gail (October 13, 1987). "Nickelodeon finds home in Philadelphia". Ocala Star-Banner.
- ↑ "The Slop Behind The 'Dare' Scene – Orlando Sentinel". Articles.orlandosentinel.com. 1989-04-27. Retrieved 2011-11-25.
- 1 2 3 4 5 David Schwartz, Steve Ryan & Fred Wostbrock, The Encyclopedia of TV Game $hows, Checkmark Books, 1999, pp. 60
- ↑ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/hd2/Archive-BC-IDX/87-OCR/BC-1987-11-23-OCR-Page-0052.pdf#search=%22double%20dare%20viacom%22[]
- ↑ "Syndication Marketplace" (PDF). Broadcasting: 52. 1987. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
- ↑ "'Jeopardy!' champ wins by a not-so-trivial $1". Pqasb.pqarchiver.com. 1987-11-23. Retrieved 2011-11-25.
- 1 2 http://www.cmonfwank.com/nicktimeline.html[]
- ↑ "Double Dare Live starts May 21 at the Nickelodeon Suites Resort". Orlando Informer. 2012-05-08. Retrieved 2012-05-22.
- ↑ "Double Dare Show in Orlando". Nick Hotel. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
External links
- Double Dare at the National Film and Sound Archive
- Family Double Dare at the National Film and Sound Archive
- Double Dare 1986–88 (Nickelodeon/Syndication) at the Internet Movie Database
- Super Sloppy Double Dare 1987 & 1989 (Nickelodeon) at the Internet Movie Database
- Family Double Dare 1988 (FOX) & 1990–92 (Nickelodeon) at the Internet Movie Database
- Double Dare 2000 (Nickelodeon) at the Internet Movie Database
- Double Dare at TV.com
- Celebrity Double Dare a 1987 unsold pilot at the Internet Movie Database
- What is Marc Summers up to now? He answers on this podcast