Now You See It (Australian game show)

Now You See It was an Australian children's game show that aired on the Seven Network from 1985-1993. It is based on the US show of the same title and was originally hosted by Mike Meade from 1985 and 1990 and "co-hosted" by a robot named "Melvin" who was a Tomy Omnibot toy, and pitted individual children against each other. Melvin's uncle Morton (another Omnibot) had his own segment on the show entitled "Morton's Mouldy Movies", in which Morton would narrate stories in a grandfatherly voice accompanied by footage from silent film shorts.

Now You See It
GenreGame Show
Presented byMike Meade (1985-1990)
Sofie Formica (1991-1993)
Scott MacRae (1998-2000)
Narrated byGary Clare (1985-1993)
Lisa Barry (1998-2000)
Country of originAustralia
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons12
No. of episodes780
Production
Executive producer(s)Bill Davidson (1998-2000)
Producer(s)Tony Ryan (1998-2000)
Production location(s)Brisbane, Queensland
Running time24 minutes
Production company(s)All American Fremantle International (1998-2000)
Becker Entertainment (1998-2000)
Release
Original networkSeven Network (1985-1993)
Nine Network (1998-2000)
Picture format4:3 PAL
Audio formatStereo
Original release20 May 1985 – 24 September 1993
15 June 1998 
11 February 2000
Chronology
Followed byDownload (game show)

From 1991, the show was hosted by Sofie Formica, and ran as a week-long competition between two primary schools. The winning students in each episode would win individual prizes, and the overall winning school would win a larger prize, typically valued at around $2,000.

In 1998, Becker Entertainment along with All American Fremantle International revived the show. Broadcast on the Nine Network, it was hosted by Scott MacRae and produced by Tony Ryan, with Bill Davidson as Executive Producer. In 2000 the show was replaced with another game show, titled Download, which was also hosted by McRae.

Free games The host read a clue, and the answer was revealed one letter at a time, sometimes using one or more letters of the previous word. Letters were revealed until someone buzzed in and gave the correct answer and score or if only one letter was left in the word. Each subsequent word uses one or more letters of the previous word until that line is filled. The first player to guess five words correctly (seven in the 1998 revival) won the round and a prize package.

Two line games are played and the winners of the line game play the Big Board round.

Big Board

The host read a question and the first player to buzz in guesses the line number. If correct he/she then gives the position number and the word. Players score based on the line number & position of the first letter. In the 1998 revival, points are doubled for the final 60 seconds of the game. The player with the most points when time runs out wins the game.

Solo Round

The solo round player needs to find seven words in 60 seconds with the help of the clues read by the host.

Products

A board game was released by Crown and Andrews in 1993.

(Credited) Best Champion of Champions Andrew Rankin (Milton State School)

gollark: The "flies" are all *people*, though.
gollark: Like with politicians now it appears that the whole thing selects for somewhat terrible people.
gollark: I think this is conflating vaguely sympathetic/understandable/ethical somewhat.
gollark: According to most ethical theories, that still wouldn't justify killing millions+ of people.
gollark: I think that killing vast numbers of people was still bad, as they could just have not done that and it was an entirely predictable result, personally.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.