You've Been Framed!

Contents

Host

Richard Madeley (pilot)

Jeremy Beadle (original host)

Lisa Riley

Jonathan Wilkes

Harry Hill (voiceover)

Broadcast

Granada for ITV, 1989 to present

Synopsis

The UK's gold standard in clip shows which, like America's Funniest Home Videos, occasionally had a game show segment.

In You've Been Framed! (exclamation mark obligatory), contributors compete to get their funny home videos on TV - for every clip that makes it to the screen, contestants are awarded £250.

During the first three years of the series, the studio audience voted for the funniest clip in every show to go through to a season finale where £5000 and a shiny new camcorder were up for grabs. In Series 15 the weekly competition returned entitled Clip For A Trip, giving three finalists the chance to win a £1000 holiday if they could win over the studio audience with their funny moment caught on tape.

Prankster Jeremy Beadle presented the show for 8 years with Emmerdale's Lisa Riley taking over, with some controversy, for five further series from 1998. Jonathan Wilkes took the reins in 2003 for one series in studio (very much influenced by the 'zoo' formula of Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway - featuring kids talking about their favourite clips, surprises for audience members, holiday competitions & Naming and Shaming clip fakers) and one series on location for a daytime transmission.

Comedian Harry Hill is the current host. Members of the public who have 87-year-old uncles likely to put up a rickety shed in the back garden, or grannies with a particularly high centre of gravity at weddings, can lob their VHS, Mini-DV's, CD-Roms, DVD's & Hi-8s to FREEPOST - YOU'VE BEEN FRAMED!

Catchphrases

Jeremy Beadle: "Next week, the star of our show could be you!"

"Bundle it off to Beadle!"

Lisa Riley: "Don't do anything silly, unless you're being framed!"

Jonathan Wilkes: "I don't have a catchphrase!"

Theme music

Ray Monk

Trivia

Up to 180 clips are used in each show.

Little known fact - Richard Madeley presented the untransmitted pilot. Hmm, Richard Madeley. We can't see it - can you?

One 1992 episode managed to rake in 19.3 million viewers, making it the 13th most highest rated programme of the 1990s.

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