You Bet!
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<div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen01.jpg]]''ToDAY's panel are a double act and her from EastEnders.''</div> | <div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen01.jpg]]''ToDAY's panel are a double act and her from EastEnders.''</div> | ||
- | Members of the public bet they can do a particularly whacky, impressive or just plain dangerous feat. 100 members of the audience bet on whether they think they can do it, as do | + | Members of the public bet they can do a particularly whacky, impressive or just plain dangerous feat. 100 members of the audience bet on whether they think they can do it, as do a panel of celebrities. The celebs try to guess the correct outcome, thus earning points, which are later turned into pounds for charity, mate. |
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- | The celebs try to guess the correct outcome, thus earning points | + | |
<div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen02.jpg]]''The odds are looking...decent.''</div> | <div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen02.jpg]]''The odds are looking...decent.''</div> | ||
- | The challenges on the show can be categorized into stunts (doing a wheelie in a truck for 1 mile), memory tests (identifying a Madonna song from 5 seconds of the backing track), and skill games (scoring 50 basketball hoops while riding on a motorcycle). | + | The challenges on the show can be categorized into stunts (doing a wheelie in a truck for 1 mile), memory tests (identifying a Madonna song from 5 seconds of the backing track), and skill games (scoring 50 basketball hoops while riding on a motorcycle). The reward for a successful challenge was awarded a "You Bet Betsy/Trophy" (in one series "The Kelly") or a reward for a failed challenge was awarded a scroll (in later series a medal). The outside challenges were filmed during the summer months and slotted in, everyone involved in the filming having sworn on their grandmother's grave that they wouldn't say the result. |
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- | The outside challenges were filmed during the summer months and slotted in, everyone involved in the filming having sworn on their grandmother's grave that they wouldn't say the result. | + | |
<div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen03.jpg]]''Now we know why series 19 of [[The Krypton Factor]] didn't go ahead.''</div> | <div class="image">[[File:Youbet-screen03.jpg]]''Now we know why series 19 of [[The Krypton Factor]] didn't go ahead.''</div> | ||
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A good show that wore well in the Saturday night TV battles. | A good show that wore well in the Saturday night TV battles. | ||
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+ | === Bruce's Big Bet === | ||
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+ | So, where do we start? From the beginning of course. The original German version began in 1981 where it was a variety show that featured a mix of chat, music, comedy, performances and of course games. The show ran for approximately 3 hours, when LWT made their own version in 1988, they had to condense it to an hour by just focusing on the game part of the show. | ||
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+ | Unlike the original German version, which was a series of one-off specials, the UK version was given a six week pilot run during the winter months. | ||
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+ | The game format of the show is quite similar to the original German version but there were a panel of three celebrity guests and four challenges in each show. On each challenge, the celebrity would back the challenger(s) they were sponsoring and if they failed their challenge, the celebrity would have to do a forfeit that they have chosen themselves before the start of the show, which is either recorded on location to be shown on the next show or right here, right now in the studio. | ||
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+ | So, you're probably thinking right now "Four challenges? But there are three celebrity guests backing three challenges." A-ha! This is where we bring out the host of the show [[Bruce Forsyth]] plucked straight out of his comfort zone on [[Play Your Cards Right]]. Now remember when we said that the celebrity guests had to do a forfeit if the challenger(s) failed? Well, it's a little different with Bruce because the audience have the power to decide his fate and the one with the highest percentage, Bruce will always go with the higher percentage of the audience vote whether. If the one with the highest audience percentage gets it wrong (and yes, even if the challenger(s) succeed), Bruce would have to do a forfeit. However, unlike the three celebrity guests who pick their forfeits before the show, Bruce pulls out three envelopes and then picks out a member of the audience to pick one, Bruce doesn't know what the forfeit is going to be in the envelope until he opens it up and reads it out loud. | ||
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+ | The first series was received so well with audiences, it was given an extended run of ten episodes the following year mostly because audiences were blown away by the variety of challenges that ordinary members of the public were challenging themselves to do and partially because of Brucie being the Bruciest he's ever Bruce'd the Bruce. | ||
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+ | As always with Bruce at the helm, he had to have a female co-host with him and her name is Ellis Ward. Ellis was hired to host the pre-recorded outdoor challenges on location whenever a challenge too big to do in the studio and she did a really fine job doing it. | ||
+ | When the year 1990 came, Bruce was called by the BBC to host the revival of [[The Generation Game]], which was filmed around the same time as ''You Bet!'' meaning he would no longer host the show. | ||
+ | --> | ||
== Key moments == | == Key moments == | ||
Revision as of 00:36, 1 September 2023
Contents |
Host
Bruce Forsyth (1988-90)
Matthew Kelly (1991-95)
Darren Day (1996-97)
Co-hosts
Ellis Ward (1988-91)
Diane Youdale (1996)
Sarah Matravers (1997)
Announcer:
Bobby Bragg (1996-97)
Broadcast
LWT for ITV, 20 February 1988 to 12 April 1997 (101 episodes in 10 series + 4 specials)
Synopsis
Well made and sometimes stunning stunt show, a precursor to the more extreme Don't Try This at Home!.
Members of the public bet they can do a particularly whacky, impressive or just plain dangerous feat. 100 members of the audience bet on whether they think they can do it, as do a panel of celebrities. The celebs try to guess the correct outcome, thus earning points, which are later turned into pounds for charity, mate.
The challenges on the show can be categorized into stunts (doing a wheelie in a truck for 1 mile), memory tests (identifying a Madonna song from 5 seconds of the backing track), and skill games (scoring 50 basketball hoops while riding on a motorcycle). The reward for a successful challenge was awarded a "You Bet Betsy/Trophy" (in one series "The Kelly") or a reward for a failed challenge was awarded a scroll (in later series a medal). The outside challenges were filmed during the summer months and slotted in, everyone involved in the filming having sworn on their grandmother's grave that they wouldn't say the result.
A good show that wore well in the Saturday night TV battles.
Key moments
The two types of fanfare for the end of the challenge: the "happy happy" one and the "oh dear, it's all gone pear-shaped" one.
In an outtake eventually shown on Alright on the Night's Cockup Trip, while Matthew Kelly was filming a trailer explaining the rules for the Celebrity Challenge phone-in competition, he got tongue tied on some of the words and accidentally blurted out an expletive - to his own visible shock.
A fan of The Bill claims she can identify twenty-five characters from the show by just seeing a small area of their face in two and a half minutes, but only got three right and passed on one in twenty-one seconds.
What a shame!
The Red Devils were memorable challengers on the show, mainly because they failed three challenges in a row. They did however finally complete their fourth challenge.
Ooh, so close and yet so far
At last, we can now celebrate
Two memorable forfeits from Matthew Kelly when he had to do one that involved sumo wrestling and one that involved a tight rope walk.
Ain't he 'Game for a Laugh'
Catchphrases
Brucie got the show off to a strong start, despite the decidedly un-streetwise "You Bet Rap", dropped after series 3 but recorded here for posterity:
Bruce: You wanna bet on it?
Audience: You Bet!
Bruce: When you better get on it?
Audience: You Bet!
Bruce: So don't fret, get set, are you ready?
Audience: You Bet!
Another Brucie quote went: "You're now betting for the fate of Forsyth in the form of a forfeit. If you're right - I'm alright, but if you're wrong - I'm right in it!"
Before the ad break, Brucie used to say "We'll be back in a bit, you can bet on it!". Matthew Kelly changed this to "See you in a bit. Ta-ra!". Which isn't as good, but he did redeem himself by improving on the next one...
"Make your bet!", which was changed to "Place your bets now!" when Matthew Kelly took over.
Inventor
Based on an idea by Frank Elstner. it was originally a German show called Wetten dass...? See the ZDF web site for more information.
Theme music
1988: Alan Lisk
1989-96: Jonathan Sorrell
1997: Simon Webb
Trivia
11 years after its UK swansong, Ant & Dec took the format to the States with their presenting debut, Wanna Bet?.
Before they were famous, Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller took part in a challenge during the Matthew Kelly years, where the two of them alongside My Parents Are Aliens star Tony Gardner each took several roles in the same play, and had to speed dress whilst off stage so that they could come back as the relevant character without missing a beat. They succeeded!
Malandra Burrows was the show's highest celebrity guest scorer. She appeared during the final series and scored 401.
Annabel Giles was the most frequent celebrity guest, appearing five times.
The show originally aired on Saturday nights for the first four series, it was then aired on Friday nights from Series 5 until the first half of Series 7 and was finally moved back to Saturday nights from the second half of Series 7 until the show's end.
Web links
Pictures
Videos
An episode from 1996