Sportscall

(Host: dates are wrong, apparently - more details from the show's writer to come soon, I hope...)
(Synopsis: not so, says writer Bill Matthews.)
Line 20: Line 20:
== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
-
''Sportscall'' was originally created as a cheap piece of radio to fill the gap between Radio 5's Saturday morning children's programes and the afternoon's sports commentaries. Items included the phone-in quiz, alphabet quiz, archive quiz and sudden death quiz. It soon emerged that listeners weren't tuning in for the games - topics such as "name the year" / "what happened next" / "who am I describing" were familiar to viewers of [[A Question of Sport]]. No, people were tuning in because the presenter, [[Danny Baker]], was making the show entertainment, even for people who didn't really like sport.
+
''Sportscall'' was originally created as a cheap piece of radio to fill the gap between Radio 5's Saturday morning children's programes and the afternoon's sports commentaries. Items included the phone-in quiz, alphabet quiz, archive quiz and sudden death quiz. It soon emerged that listeners weren't tuning in for the games - no, people were tuning in because the presenter, [[Danny Baker]], was making the show entertainment, even for people who didn't really like sport.
In 1991, Baker was given an after-match phone-in show, ''606'', and became Radio 5's breakfast presenter in 1992. He moved to Radio 1 in late 1993, creating a vacancy for the lunchtime sports quiz. [[Dominik Diamond]] turned out to be the presenter to continue in Baker's footsteps. Already a familiar voice from [[Gamesmaster]], Diamond expanded the programme's range, making it as much a commentary on the week's sports news as a phone-in quiz.
In 1991, Baker was given an after-match phone-in show, ''606'', and became Radio 5's breakfast presenter in 1992. He moved to Radio 1 in late 1993, creating a vacancy for the lunchtime sports quiz. [[Dominik Diamond]] turned out to be the presenter to continue in Baker's footsteps. Already a familiar voice from [[Gamesmaster]], Diamond expanded the programme's range, making it as much a commentary on the week's sports news as a phone-in quiz.

Revision as of 13:21, 27 July 2010

Contents

Host

Danny Baker (original host)

Nicky Campbell

Dominik Diamond

Jamie Theakston (regular stand-in)

Broadcast

BBC Radio 5, 2 September 1990 to 25 March 1994

BBC Radio Five Live, 2 April 1994 to 2000 (independent production in final years)

Synopsis

Sportscall was originally created as a cheap piece of radio to fill the gap between Radio 5's Saturday morning children's programes and the afternoon's sports commentaries. Items included the phone-in quiz, alphabet quiz, archive quiz and sudden death quiz. It soon emerged that listeners weren't tuning in for the games - no, people were tuning in because the presenter, Danny Baker, was making the show entertainment, even for people who didn't really like sport.

In 1991, Baker was given an after-match phone-in show, 606, and became Radio 5's breakfast presenter in 1992. He moved to Radio 1 in late 1993, creating a vacancy for the lunchtime sports quiz. Dominik Diamond turned out to be the presenter to continue in Baker's footsteps. Already a familiar voice from Gamesmaster, Diamond expanded the programme's range, making it as much a commentary on the week's sports news as a phone-in quiz.

Diamond hosted a spin-off show, Newscall, which was not renewed after a four-week broadcast pilot in 1994. He remained with the original programme until it came to a natural end in 2000.

See also

Popcall

A Question of Sport

Feedback

To correct something on this page or post an addition, please complete this form and press "Send":
If you are asking us a question, please read our contact us page and FAQ first.

Name: E-mail:   
A Labyrinth Games site.
Design by Thomas.
Printable version
Editors: Log in