Bargain Hunt

(Key moments)
(Host)
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== Host ==
== Host ==
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[[David Dickinson]] (original host)
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[[David Dickinson]] (13 March 2000 - 13 November 2004) (primetime only from 24 February 2003)
[[Tim Wonnacott]] (daytime, 24 February 2003 to present)
[[Tim Wonnacott]] (daytime, 24 February 2003 to present)
<!--INFAX mistakenly credits him for 17 February, the info from a later show has been inserted into the 17 Feb entry in error.-->
<!--INFAX mistakenly credits him for 17 February, the info from a later show has been inserted into the 17 Feb entry in error.-->
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==Co-hosts==
==Co-hosts==

Revision as of 13:04, 3 February 2010

Image:Bargain_hunt_logo.jpg

Contents

Host

David Dickinson (13 March 2000 - 13 November 2004) (primetime only from 24 February 2003)

Tim Wonnacott (daytime, 24 February 2003 to present)

Co-hosts

Various antiques experts including Kate Alcock/Bliss, David Barby, James Braxton, Michael Hogben, Philip Serrell

Broadcast

BBC West for BBC 1, 13 March 2000 to present (daytime)

BBC West for BBC 1, 22 August 2002 to 13 November 2004 (primetime)

BBC West for BBC 2, 1 December 2008 to present (Bargain Hunt Famous Finds)

Synopsis

Essentially, a cheap version of The Great Antiques Hunt that they could do on a daily basis.

Two teams of two are given £200 to spend at an antiques fair to buy several items which they would later sell. An expert is assigned to each team to help them decide what to buy. The teams each have one hour to buy whatever they wanted with the money.

One week later the items purchased are sold in a real auction. The items are auctioned and the team which makes the most profit (or, more likely, the least loss) is the winner. If the team actually makes a profit then they get to keep whatever profit they made.

It's not startlingly original, but Dickinson was always very watchable. It performed well enough against ITV's This Morning (sans Richard and Judy) to be promoted into a prime-time slot in 2002, the main difference being an increased buying budget of £500. Whereupon Tim Wonnacott took over the daytime version, and amazingly he's now been doing the show for longer than Dickinson did - and very well he does it, too. The primetime version pretty much ran its course and was axed in April 2005 but the daytime version continues.

Format tweaks

The show has gone through numerous variations, viz celebrity editions, live editions, live celebrity editions and a couple of US specials. The primetime show and the 1-hour live daytime editions have incorporated phone-in competitions (the removal of which conveniently allows for the statutory ad-breaks when the shows are repeated on UKTV Antiques & Gardening or whatever it's called.)

Image:Wonnacott_tim_bargainhunt.jpg Tim Wonnacott handles a lovely pair... dunno what of, but they're worth at least £3.

After Tim Wonnacott took over the daytime version, the longer (45-minute and 1-hour) shows included a "swap" option whereby each team could swap one of their three chosen items for another selected by their expert, and purchased using whatever "leftover lolly" remained from the initial budget. More recently, the "swap" has been changed to a "bonus item", which the teams can choose - on the spot, during the auction - to add to their original three, having seen how well (or, more likely, how badly) their original items fared. The initial budget has also been upped to a dizzying £300 for each team, so now they can lose even more money than before.

Key moments

The - all too frequent - shows where both teams lose a packet on their 'bargains'.

On one celebrity special for Children in Need a boxed 007 Aston Martin toy car made a profit over £2000 after being bought for £2.

The best result on an ordinary show we can find was a team of Nottingham students in Series 21 (from 2008) who made a whopping overall profit of £413. This was mainly thanks to a Leon Gauche violin which they bought for £150 and sold for £580 thanks to substantial phone bids. Do let us know if you've seen a better result.

UKGameshows reader Oded Ross remembers the following, probably the greatest profit made on three items outside of the charity shows:

In 2005, a team of two ladies headed by David Barby made a whopping £361 profit, which probably made them the first team to double the money given to them at the start of the show.Their items were: 3 berry silver spoons in their original box, dated around 1900 (bought for £70, sold for £110); A pair of Corinthian silver candle holders, also c. 1900 (£49 -> £70), and a rare flatback ceramic statue of King John signing the Magna Carta at Runnymede, bought for £120, and sold for an unprecedented (at least in the daytime shows) £420!! A swap was possible but not made. The auctioneer was Elizabeth Talbot. Curiously, in the very next show David Barby led another team to a golden gavel, albeit with a much smaller profit.

In 2007, expert James Braxton possibly set the record for the worst ever "bonus buy": some modern Italian glass he bought for £105 were sold for £12, a loss to the contestants of £93.

Catchphrases

Wonnacott version: "Come back for some more Bargain Hunt, yes? Yes!"

Trivia

For a while in the Wonnacott era there was a trophy (of sorts), namely a golden (oak) gavel on a stand, if the team made a profit on all their items, though that seems to have been discontinued.

The show marked its 500th daytime edition on 15 October 2007.

Image:Bargain hunt 500.jpgTim Wonnacott celebrates the 500th daytime show with regular experts (l-r) David Barby, Philip Serrell, Kate Bliss and Charles Hanson

How to apply

Prospective contestants should fill in the online application form or write to:

Contestant Applications
Bargain Hunt
PO Box 229
Bristol
BS99 7JN 

Application details are provided as a service to readers, but please note that all contestant enquiries should be directed to the named production company and not to UKGameshows.com. Addresses can be found on our list of contact details for production companies.

Web links

Bargain Hunt/David Dickinson fan site

Merchandise

Bargain Hunt board game

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