TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes

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TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes
File:TV Bloopers.jpg
Gail Edwards, Ed McMahon, and Dick Clark, host a 1980s episode of Bloopers
Also known as 'Super Bloopers and Practical Jokes
Super Bloopers & New Practical Jokes
Bloopers'
Genre Reality Television
Comedy
Written by Bryan Michael Stoller
Karl Tiedemann
Directed by Bill Davis
Bryan Michael Stoller
Presented by Dick Clark (1982–2004)
Ed McMahon (1982–1998)
Dean Cain (2012–2013)
Narrated by Charlie O'Donnell
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Running time 45 minutes (1984–1986, 1991–2007)
22 minutes (2012–2013)
Production company(s) Dick Clark Productions
Carson Productions (1984–1998)
Distributor Sony Pictures Television (1984–1986 episodes)
Trifecta Entertainment (2012–2013)
Release
Original network NBC (1984–1998)
ABC (1998–2007)
Syndication (2012–2013)
Original release January 9, 1984 (1984-01-09) –
July 1, 2013 (2013-07-01)
Chronology
Preceded by TV's Censored Bloopers (1982–1984)
Television's Greatest Commercials (1982–84)
External links
Website
Production website

TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes is an American television series. Debuting as a weekly series, new episodes have been broadcast as infrequent specials during most of its run. It premiered on NBC in 1984, moved to ABC in 1998, and was revived in syndication in 2012. The NBC run of the series was co-produced by Carson Productions and Dick Clark Productions, and the ABC and syndication runs have been produced solely by Dick Clark Productions.

TV's Censored Bloopers and Television's Greatest Commercials

The series was predated by two separate series of specials, one devoted to television and film bloopers—humorous errors made during the production of film and television programs, or on live news broadcasts—and the other a series of specials featuring classic television commercials. The TV's Censored Bloopers specials were hosted by longtime TV producer Dick Clark starting in 1982 (and were dedicated to 1950s TV producer Kermit Schaefer, who had pioneered the concept of preserving bloopers) and the Television's Greatest Commercials specials, which also started in 1982, were hosted by Ed McMahon (which he continued to co-host even as he moved on to co-host the weekly Bloopers series). Both sets of specials garnered high ratings, and following a combination special (TV's Greatest Censored Commercial Bloopers), in the fall of 1984 it was decided to combine the two programs into one series, hosted by Clark and McMahon. Charlie O'Donnell (who was also Clark's announcer on American Bandstand from 1958 to 1968) would be added as announcer (to intro both McMahon and Clark, and to announce bloopers in the "Coming up next" bumpers).

Regular features

Besides dividing the show between bloopers and classic TV advertisements of yesteryear, the original version of the show also featured at least two practical joke segments per episode, with celebrities caught in Candid Camera-like situations (a forerunner of the later series Punk'd). Like the blooper and commercial segments, the "practical jokes" were first seen in a television special, "Johnny Carson's Greatest Practical Jokes"—hence Carson Productions' involvement in the series.

Other regular features included:

  • Man-in-the-street interviews (sometimes supplemented by child-in-the-street interviews), conducted by David Letterman and, later, Robert Klein.
  • Video segments featuring songs played behind real-life scenes that gave an ironic twist to the lyrics.
  • Len Cella's "Silly Cinemas", a series of absurd short films.
  • Thom Sharp's "Book of Hollywood", a tour of unusual sights of the city.
  • Wil Shriner's Video Vault, where various humorous video clips were screened.
  • Stand-up comedy performances, including appearances by Jerry Seinfeld and Jenny Jones.
  • Throughout its entire run on both NBC and ABC, the series featured animated inserts by cartoonist Sergio Aragones, who is known for his contributions to Mad Magazine.

As the original two-year weekly run of the series progressed, adjustments were made to the format and eventually the commercials were phased out, along with other segments, leaving only the bloopers and practical jokes.

Return to specials format

The weekly series ended in 1986. In 1988, Clark revived it as a series of specials retitled as Super Bloopers and New Practical Jokes, and returned as host. Titles of the specials included TV's Censored Bloopers in 1993, and simply Bloopers, as the practical joke element was ultimately dropped. These specials aired irregularly on NBC until as late as 1998, often appearing as "filler" for cancelled series, and acting as a low-cost summer replacement series; the series even briefly returned to a weekly format in 1998 (as TV Censored Bloopers 98).[1] The specials often drew a larger audience than their competition, which consisted mainly of reruns.

In the later years of the series' run on NBC, the bloopers shown tended to be drawn mostly from programs produced by NBC.

Move to ABC

In 1998, Clark moved the series to ABC. New specials aired periodically until 2004, when Clark suffered a stroke. ABC continued to air reruns of these specials until 2006, and they frequently appeared on TBS as well.[when?] As with the specials from the later years at NBC, the ABC specials mostly focused on outtakes from series produced by ABC itself, or from productions of The Walt Disney Company, which owned ABC. In addition, logos of networks other than ABC, and of stations affiliated with those networks, were obscured.

In March of 2007, ABC aired the special Celebrity A-List Bloopers, produced by Dick Clark Productions, with John O'Hurley as host in Clark's place.[2]

Syndicated revival

In the fall of 2012, the series was revived by Dick Clark Productions and Trifecta Entertainment & Media under the title Bloopers, in a half-hour, syndicated format, airing twice per week.[3] Dean Cain acts as host and comedian Jack Vale stars in the hidden camera pranks and acts as co-producer.[4] Instead of television and movie outtakes, this incarnation of the series focuses on web and user-generated content. However, the practical joke segments in the vein of Candid Camera, which were dropped from the series during the time of the NBC specials, have been reintroduced.[5][6]

Imitator series

During the show's original two-year run on NBC, it sparked a number of imitators on other networks, most notably the ABC series Foul-ups, Bleeps & Blunders. That show aired bloopers from Star Trek for the first time on American network television. ABC's ersatz series never matched the ratings of the original, however. After Bloopers left NBC, the network launched its own similar series, Most Outrageous Moments, which lasted until 2009.

References

  1. Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). TV Censored Bloopers 98 at IMDb
  2. Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Celebrity A-List Bloopers at IMDb
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  6. "'Bloopers' to Premiere in Weekly Syndication This Fall" from Broadcasting & Cable (December 20, 2011)

External links