No Kidding
(→Synopsis: The Noel Edmonds Saturday Roadshow was the incarnation of Wait Til' I Get You Home, so would make sense to have that show as Noel's House Party started a month later.) |
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It was a game show for families. Mum and Dad would be asked questions about their family by Smitty, only their answers had to correspond with what their kids had said, who were off in another room with Copstick. A bit like ''Wait Till I Get You Home'' on [[The Noel Edmonds Saturday Roadshow]], we guess. At the time, it was a stupid concept to put on daytime telly cos kids could never watch it. | It was a game show for families. Mum and Dad would be asked questions about their family by Smitty, only their answers had to correspond with what their kids had said, who were off in another room with Copstick. A bit like ''Wait Till I Get You Home'' on [[The Noel Edmonds Saturday Roadshow]], we guess. At the time, it was a stupid concept to put on daytime telly cos kids could never watch it. | ||
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+ | == Web links == | ||
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+ | [http://www.ravensbourne.ac.uk/bbc-motion-graphics-archive/no-kidding-1991 Opening titles from the BBC Motion Graphics Archive] | ||
[[Category:Family Game]] | [[Category:Family Game]] | ||
[[Category:BBC North West Productions]] | [[Category:BBC North West Productions]] |
Revision as of 03:21, 8 July 2023
Contents |
Host
Broadcast
BBC North for BBC1, 14 October 1991 to 13 March 1992 (92 episodes in 1 series)
Synopsis
BBC1 daytime quiz (10.30am to be exact), part of the radical new 1991 daytime line-up (i.e. when they hired Miriam Stoppard to do People Today).
It was a game show for families. Mum and Dad would be asked questions about their family by Smitty, only their answers had to correspond with what their kids had said, who were off in another room with Copstick. A bit like Wait Till I Get You Home on The Noel Edmonds Saturday Roadshow, we guess. At the time, it was a stupid concept to put on daytime telly cos kids could never watch it.
Web links
Opening titles from the BBC Motion Graphics Archive