Timekeepers

m (Web links)
(Web links)
(22 intermediate revisions not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
== Host ==
== Host ==
-
Bill Dod
+
[[Bill Dod]]
== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
-
BBC 1, mid 1990s
+
Action Time and BBC North for BBC1, 3 January 1995 to 2 February 1996 (73 episodes in 2 series)
</div>
</div>
 +
== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
Line 21: Line 22:
''A game of Timekeepers in action''</div>
''A game of Timekeepers in action''</div>
 +
The players' scores were time, and it was always a 5 minute clock, with 72 degrees per minute.  Also, the clock hand made one revolution every time the players score changed, anti-clockwise when losing time and clockwise when gaining time.
 +
 +
The end game was 15 questions in one minute, with a sand timer with 60 seconds of sand in the top part.  The sand drained at one second per second, but a graphic of a bucket was placed above it.  Each correct answer and the bucket tipped ten seconds of sand into the top of the timer.  At the end, the sand drain stopped and the sand still at the top was the player’s score for the leaderboard.  The best scores returned for the final.
 +
The end-game for a place on the leader board was extremely rapidfire, but completely failed to make use of the time the contestant had previously "won" in the game, which is possibly a poor decision.
The end-game for a place on the leader board was extremely rapidfire, but completely failed to make use of the time the contestant had previously "won" in the game, which is possibly a poor decision.
 +
 +
== Champions ==
 +
 +
{|
 +
|1995
 +
|''TBC''
 +
|-
 +
|1995-6
 +
|Bob Thompson
 +
|}
== Key moments ==
== Key moments ==
Line 30: Line 45:
''Master of time - Bill Dod''</div>
''Master of time - Bill Dod''</div>
 +
 +
== Catchphrases ==
 +
 +
(After the contestants had introduced themselves): "They're my three Timekeepers!" (Dod obviously liked to personalise wherever possible).
 +
 +
"Each correct answer earns ten seconds... not from me, but from one of your opponents." That was the prize for a correct answer in the quick-fire finale. 
 +
 +
Also instead of "correct", Bill always said "Ten from?" as a prompt to nominate an opponent to steal time from.
 +
 +
There was also "All lose ten!" when nobody buzzed in for a question, all three players had ten seconds deducted.  Normally the question goes ‘dead’, but is this the only show where this happens?
== Inventor ==
== Inventor ==
-
Created by Toby Freeman and Stephen Leahy.
+
Stephen Leahy and Toby Freeman
 +
 
 +
== Theme music ==
 +
 
 +
Simon Etchell
== Trivia ==
== Trivia ==
 +
 +
The star prize in the second series was an antique carriage clock, and during every episode, one of three or so inserts was aired of an antiques expert describing the timepiece to the viewers.
The title graphics for the show won an award at the Houston Worldfest - whatever that is.
The title graphics for the show won an award at the Houston Worldfest - whatever that is.
Line 42: Line 73:
''Screenshot from the opening titles''</div>
''Screenshot from the opening titles''</div>
 +
 +
The first series aired in the 1.50 slot where it was usually occupied by [[Going for Gold]] and [[Turnabout]] but the second series aired in the 3.05 slot just before Children's BBC programming.
== Web links ==
== Web links ==
-
[http://www.action-time.com Action Time]
+
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timekeepers Wikipedia entry]
-
[[Category:Action Time Productions]]
 
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
 +
[[Category:Action Time Productions]]
 +
[[Category:BBC North West Productions]]

Revision as of 02:00, 20 July 2019

Contents

Host

Bill Dod

Broadcast

Action Time and BBC North for BBC1, 3 January 1995 to 2 February 1996 (73 episodes in 2 series)

Synopsis

Near-perfect lunchtime general knowledge quiz where the main gimmick was that the three Joe Bloggs contestants won or lost time, rather than points.

First round questions were based on the participant's own hobbies. A clever clock-based word game worked well, if rather over-taxed the brain straight after lunch. However, we'd seen the "dirty tricks" final round before in Runway (another Action Time show, incidentally).

A game of Timekeepers in action

The players' scores were time, and it was always a 5 minute clock, with 72 degrees per minute. Also, the clock hand made one revolution every time the players score changed, anti-clockwise when losing time and clockwise when gaining time.

The end game was 15 questions in one minute, with a sand timer with 60 seconds of sand in the top part. The sand drained at one second per second, but a graphic of a bucket was placed above it. Each correct answer and the bucket tipped ten seconds of sand into the top of the timer. At the end, the sand drain stopped and the sand still at the top was the player’s score for the leaderboard. The best scores returned for the final.

The end-game for a place on the leader board was extremely rapidfire, but completely failed to make use of the time the contestant had previously "won" in the game, which is possibly a poor decision.

Champions

1995 TBC
1995-6 Bob Thompson

Key moments

Dod's excellent firm-but-fair hosting - no ajudicators needed here, thank you very much. (And yes, it is Dod, not Dodd.)

Master of time - Bill Dod

Catchphrases

(After the contestants had introduced themselves): "They're my three Timekeepers!" (Dod obviously liked to personalise wherever possible).

"Each correct answer earns ten seconds... not from me, but from one of your opponents." That was the prize for a correct answer in the quick-fire finale.

Also instead of "correct", Bill always said "Ten from?" as a prompt to nominate an opponent to steal time from.

There was also "All lose ten!" when nobody buzzed in for a question, all three players had ten seconds deducted. Normally the question goes ‘dead’, but is this the only show where this happens?

Inventor

Stephen Leahy and Toby Freeman

Theme music

Simon Etchell

Trivia

The star prize in the second series was an antique carriage clock, and during every episode, one of three or so inserts was aired of an antiques expert describing the timepiece to the viewers.

The title graphics for the show won an award at the Houston Worldfest - whatever that is.

Screenshot from the opening titles

The first series aired in the 1.50 slot where it was usually occupied by Going for Gold and Turnabout but the second series aired in the 3.05 slot just before Children's BBC programming.

Web links

Wikipedia entry

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