Chic-a-Go-Go
Chic-a-Go-Go is a public-access television cable television children's dance show that airs on Chicago Access Network Television (CAN-TV). The show bills itself as "Chicago's Dance Show for Kids of All Ages".
Chic-a-Go-Go | |
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Chic-a-Go-Go logo | |
Created by | Jake Austen Jacqueline Stewart |
Starring | Jake Austen Mia Park |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | over 1,000 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Jake Austen Jacqueline Stewart |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Release | |
Original network | Chicago Access Network Television |
Original release | May, 1996 |
Show description
The show invites members of the public to participate in tapings at CAN-TV studios. A typical episode features dancing to prerecorded music, as well as musical guests lip syncing to their own songs. Each show is hosted by Jake Austen, who portrays Ratso, a teenage puppet rat, and Mia Park as human sidekick Miss Mia.[1]
Among the show's regular features are the "El Train Line" (based on Soul Train's "Soul Train Line"), the "Fantasy Dance" (which features dancers in front of a green screen), and videotaped interviews with guests.
History and influences
Austen got the idea for the show when he published a story in his magazine Roctober about Kiddie-a-Go-Go, an all-kids dance show produced in Chicago between 1963 and 1970. Austen and Stewart met the show's creators, Jack and Elaine Mulqueen, and were inspired to complete a certification course that would allow them to use the facilities of Chicago Access Corporation. They shot the first episodes of the show in March 1996.[2]
In addition to Kiddie-a-Go-Go, the show is influenced by well-known dance shows such as Soul Train, American Bandstand, and Solid Gold.
In the 2004 movie The Big Bounce, Morgan Freeman's character is seen watching the show.[3]
Artists who have appeared on Chic-a-Go-Go
See also
- Kiddie-a-Go-Go
- Soul Train
- American Bandstand
- Solid Gold
- Pancake Mountain
- Yo Gabba Gabba!
References
- About Chic-a-Go-Go! Archived May 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- "CHIC-A-GO-GO: Building Their Own Bandstand", Peter Margasak, Chicago Reader, June 12, 1998
- "Chicago Reader". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 23 January 2018.