Something for the Weekend
(→Videos: Show is sufficiently raunchy as to be not safe for school. To avoid censorious blocks, prefer to link rather than embed.) |
(Add title; think we have the show summed up already.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | [[File:Something for the weekend title.jpg|250px]] | ||
+ | |||
<div class="box"> | <div class="box"> | ||
Line 16: | Line 18: | ||
There was also a game where a member of the audience would be quizzed on their parents' sexual habits for cash and prizes. Most people involved in it have subsequently preferred to forget this format and move on to better things, even though it somehow got a second series. | There was also a game where a member of the audience would be quizzed on their parents' sexual habits for cash and prizes. Most people involved in it have subsequently preferred to forget this format and move on to better things, even though it somehow got a second series. | ||
- | |||
- | |||
== Theme music == | == Theme music == |
Revision as of 18:35, 12 August 2015
Contents |
Host
Broadcast
Tiger Aspect Productions in association with Whack 'em Out Productions for Channel 4, 17 September 1999 to 21 July 2000 (13 episodes in 2 series + 1 special)
Synopsis
This was a Friday night late-and-loud show based on, well, sex. Not much is remembered of it save for the one thing that always comes up on clip shows: the game they'd play occasionally where a girlfriend tries to guess which one of four or five people is their boyfriend looking only at their privates.
There was also a game where a member of the audience would be quizzed on their parents' sexual habits for cash and prizes. Most people involved in it have subsequently preferred to forget this format and move on to better things, even though it somehow got a second series.
Theme music
Denis Ingoldsby, Paul Meehan, James Gordon, James Loughrey