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Five Game Shows No One Talks About Anymore

Once upon a time television stations gave game shows that were aimed for kids. Those were the days of “Double Dare,” and “GUTS,” “Wild and Crazy Kids,” and “NICK Arcade,” and these days the television form has all but become extinct. Back in the eighties and nineties there was just no shortage of kids game and variety shows, and these are five of the shows of that kind that I vividly remember watching almost all of the time that no one ever really talks about. It’s sad since they are unusual relics of a time that seems so long ago. Here are five I remember with confusion and fondness.
Xuxa (1993)
If you’re forgetting this show,
it was a variety series that usually began with a large audience of kids
chanting the hosts name like a cult. Pronounced “Shoo-sha,” she was a Brazilian
pop star who was popular enough to warrant a kids show that eventually made its
way to America
for a short while. She danced, and sang, and had interviews and activities. She
also hosted alongside two men dressed as a giant panda and a giant cheetah who
spoke in English; and she did a good job pretending to understand them. It was
random, and kind of silly, but heck, my brother and I watched “Xuxa” because
frankly, she was very, very good looking. Xuxa came and went like a bolt of
lightning in the nineties. One minute she premiered her own syndicated TV show
for kids filled with music and dancing. The next minute she’s gone and that’s
all she wrote. But she did have enough of a pop influence to bring on the then
juggernaut stars The Olsen Twins for an interview as well as the American
Gladiators. She was even spoofed in “The Simpsons” episode “Marge Be Not
Proud.”

Steampipe Alley (1987)
Comedian and actor Mario Cantone
once hosted a wacky and weird kids game show on WWOR TV here in New York, that was a mix
of Monty Python and Double Dare. The writers for the show created some the most
unusual obstacles of all time, including making kids find Sammy Davis Jr.’s
fake eye in various foods. Cantone had a great rapport with the kids in his
audience, despite insisting on staging some great comedy skits and references
probably only about two percent of his audience understood. There was even a
long segment called “Nerdfellas” where he plays a kid trying to become a
mobster in his grade school. I fondly remember the show being so surreal and funny, and it always
ended on an obstacle course a la “Double Dare” that oddly enough every contestant won without
fail. According to Cantone, the show was aimed at 8-15 year old kids, but 52% of the show's audience was adult. Weird, wild stuff.
Brains & Brawn (1993)
One of the many teen oriented
shows that ran on NBC, “Brains & Brawn” was kind of a fun mess of a game
show that inspired education and physical activities. Mark Paul Gosselaar co
hosted with Danielle Harris (then Tatyana Ali) in sets that were mostly outside
and brought on young celebrities from various shows (mostly NBC shows) to
compete with a trivia contest and then engage in a ton of physical courses
including free throwing and hockey. The show was never too good, and even then
I remember finding it incredibly cringe inducing to sit through. But at least
it’s the closest we got to seeing California Dreams cross over with Zack
Morris! “Wild & Crazy Kids” was just a better summertime game show all
around. The show was mainly a mid-season place holder and never took off beyond the fall season.

Gladiators 2000 (1994)
Having no cable in the early
nineties wasn’t always a huge deal as every now and then in early morning
Saturdays, Nickelodeon would syndicate some of their programs for kids. One of
the many shows was “Gladiators 2000,” a preteen version of the popular nineties
sports competition hosted by a very young Ryan Seacrest. This version was
centered on athletic performance and education, with some of the gladiators
coming on to help the contestants. There were even asides where the gladiators
would lecture kids about the benefits of a proper diet, and learning how to
properly prepare for physical activities. One thing that always bugged me is if
this was as staged as the actual “American Gladiators” was. It was a very good
idea to spin off a very successful show, but “NICK Guts” always had a lot more
going for it.

Masters of the Maze (1994)
Before Freeform, there was ABC
Family, which was FOX Family, which was just the Family Channel. And in the
nineties the Family Channel would air some fun programs that included the
delightfully clumsy kids game show “Masters of the Maze.” Hosted by JD Roth and
then Mario Lopez, the show was an elaborate maze like game show based around
creating the illusion of immersing viewers in to a video game and some kind of
virtual reality. Think “Nick Arcade” meets “Legends of the Hidden Temple”
and you have what was a pretty okay kids show, overall.
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