Masterteam (1)
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The gripping ''Masterteam'' leader board, with gold, silver and bronze positions for two, three or four consecutive wins. The contestants apparently also won book tokens of increasing value, depending on which medals they won - possibly £50, £100 and £200? | The gripping ''Masterteam'' leader board, with gold, silver and bronze positions for two, three or four consecutive wins. The contestants apparently also won book tokens of increasing value, depending on which medals they won - possibly £50, £100 and £200? | ||
- | The team names were often memorable, one of the best being "The Peripatetic Pedagogues" - "just to confuse me!" declared Angela! Others included "The Triple Connection", "The Garbologists" (apparently a term for people who study communities by analysing their waste), "The Master Cutlers from Sheffield", "The Blackpool Illuminaries", "Ron's Raiders" and "The Magic Roundabout from Hemel Hempstead", (apparently named after a well-known roundabout in that town, rather than a certain children's programme). | + | The team names were often memorable, one of the best being "The Peripatetic Pedagogues" - "just to confuse me!" declared Angela! Others included "The Triple Connection", "The Garbologists" (apparently a term for people who study communities by analysing their waste), "The Master Cutlers from Sheffield", "The Blackpool Illuminaries", "Ron's Raiders" and "The Magic Roundabout from Hemel Hempstead", (apparently named after a well-known roundabout in that town, rather than a certain children's programme). Teams also quite often appeared in uniform/work gear - these included "The Fulham Firemen", "The Harpenden Ventures" (Venture Scouts) and "The Micklebarrow Morris Men". |
In the last-ever edition of the show, the above-mentioned team 'The Garbologists' was in the final and one of them was a dustman. The answer to his final 'Spotlight' round question was, appropriately enough, 'My Old Man's A Dustman'. | In the last-ever edition of the show, the above-mentioned team 'The Garbologists' was in the final and one of them was a dustman. The answer to his final 'Spotlight' round question was, appropriately enough, 'My Old Man's A Dustman'. | ||
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+ | Occasionally, there were celebrity teams - these included "Lightning Strikes" (BBC weathermen, including Michael Fish and Ian McCaskill), "The Honourable Members" (3 MPs, including Austin Mitchell) and another celebrity team that consisted of [[Johnny Ball]], Patrick Moore and the late Johnny Morris. | ||
The finals of 1986 and 1987 included In a Spin rounds with curious selections of letters. In 1986, one selection was the letters JIM. The Antrim Coasters could only declare JIM; their opponents (Good Guessers) came up with JURIMETRICS. In 1987, there was the more obscure selection of EKU. Neither team could come up with anything, and Angela proudly declared that their spell checker could only come up with three! | The finals of 1986 and 1987 included In a Spin rounds with curious selections of letters. In 1986, one selection was the letters JIM. The Antrim Coasters could only declare JIM; their opponents (Good Guessers) came up with JURIMETRICS. In 1987, there was the more obscure selection of EKU. Neither team could come up with anything, and Angela proudly declared that their spell checker could only come up with three! |
Revision as of 22:12, 11 July 2008
Synopsis
Tea-time team version of Mastermind. Rounds were:
Team Challenge - basically, questions on the buzzer, which commenced on Angela's instruction, "Let's play!" Contestants had to beware of incorrect interruptions, as that meant a bonus point went to the opposing team, together with the full question for a further point. This system was also used in the almost identical quiz The Great British Quiz.
In A Spin - Teams had to make the longest word from three given letters, supposedly selected at random, starting with the first and including the others in order within the word declared. Essentially Catchword before its time.
Spotlight - Teams choose a member of the opposition to answer questions on their own from a list of specialist subjects, including the Pot Pourri category ("a tough general knowledge", Angela would always remind us). It is worth noting here that, as Angela sometimes pointed out, the teams were not allowed to watch each other playing, so new teams did not get to find out which members of the surviving teams were particularly good in that round. Only the initial "Team Challenge" round could give an indication - and of course not necessarily a true one at that!
It's All Yours - This only happened from quarter-final onwards. Each team in turn was allowed to confer for answers.
The winners of each series were Warrington Sports Club, Antrim Coasters and Carrick Plus One. When the programme schedulers decided what we should watch before the Six O'Clock News, Masterteam was dropped in favour of a new Australian soap - Neighbours.
Key moments
The gripping Masterteam leader board, with gold, silver and bronze positions for two, three or four consecutive wins. The contestants apparently also won book tokens of increasing value, depending on which medals they won - possibly £50, £100 and £200?
The team names were often memorable, one of the best being "The Peripatetic Pedagogues" - "just to confuse me!" declared Angela! Others included "The Triple Connection", "The Garbologists" (apparently a term for people who study communities by analysing their waste), "The Master Cutlers from Sheffield", "The Blackpool Illuminaries", "Ron's Raiders" and "The Magic Roundabout from Hemel Hempstead", (apparently named after a well-known roundabout in that town, rather than a certain children's programme). Teams also quite often appeared in uniform/work gear - these included "The Fulham Firemen", "The Harpenden Ventures" (Venture Scouts) and "The Micklebarrow Morris Men".
In the last-ever edition of the show, the above-mentioned team 'The Garbologists' was in the final and one of them was a dustman. The answer to his final 'Spotlight' round question was, appropriately enough, 'My Old Man's A Dustman'.
Occasionally, there were celebrity teams - these included "Lightning Strikes" (BBC weathermen, including Michael Fish and Ian McCaskill), "The Honourable Members" (3 MPs, including Austin Mitchell) and another celebrity team that consisted of Johnny Ball, Patrick Moore and the late Johnny Morris.
The finals of 1986 and 1987 included In a Spin rounds with curious selections of letters. In 1986, one selection was the letters JIM. The Antrim Coasters could only declare JIM; their opponents (Good Guessers) came up with JURIMETRICS. In 1987, there was the more obscure selection of EKU. Neither team could come up with anything, and Angela proudly declared that their spell checker could only come up with three!
One member of the Warrington Sports Club team was a rather elderly lady called Olive. She became something of a star in the first series. The show's most memorable moment of all came in an open round, when Angela asked the question "Who is the lead singer of Motorhead?", to which Olive confidently replied "Lemmy"! She had done a lot of research into pop music, which was not otherwise a specialist subject.
One member of the Antrim Coasters was asked in his 'Spotlight' round, 'In which children's television series does the character Hazel The McWitch appear?' He answered, "Masterteam". Angela said afterwards, "I'm sure he didn't mean me!"
The "Team Challenge" round always ended with a strangely tinkly jingle, which Angela once rightly described as sounding like something from "The Magic Roundabout".
Theme music
Theme specially recorded by Graham Preskett.
Web links
See also
Masterteam is also the title of a Radio 4 general knowledge quiz, presented by Peter Snow.