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Richard Whiteley was the victim of a practical joke while presenting the show. The contestants and rounds had been planted as part of a "Gotcha!", a regular prank feature on light entertainment show ''[[Noel's House Party]]''. Whiteley did not uncover the joke until ''House Party'' presenter [[Noel Edmonds]] appeared on the set at the end of the programme.<ref>[http://www.channel4.com/community/showcards/C/Countdown_-_Richard_Whiteley2.html Channel 4] Community webchat with [[Richard Whiteley]], explaining his ''Gotcha!'' - URL accessed 21/06/06.</ref>
Richard Whiteley was the victim of a practical joke while presenting the show. The contestants and rounds had been planted as part of a "Gotcha!", a regular prank feature on light entertainment show ''[[Noel's House Party]]''. Whiteley did not uncover the joke until ''House Party'' presenter [[Noel Edmonds]] appeared on the set at the end of the programme.<ref>[http://www.channel4.com/community/showcards/C/Countdown_-_Richard_Whiteley2.html Channel 4] Community webchat with [[Richard Whiteley]], explaining his ''Gotcha!'' - URL accessed 21/06/06.</ref>

==Gallery==
<gallery>
Image:Countdown_logo.jpg|Countdown logo
Image:Whiteleyvord.jpg|[[Richard Whiteley]] and [[Carol Vorderman]]
Image:Richardwhiteley.jpg|The late [[Richard Whiteley]]
</gallery>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:35, 20 September 2006

For other meanings of the term countdown, see Countdown (disambiguation).
Countdown
File:Countdown logo.jpg
Created byArmand Jammot
StarringDes Lynam
Carol Vorderman
Susie Dent
Country of originUK
No. of episodes4,193 to 18 September 2006
Production
ProducerGranada Yorkshire
Running time45 minutes
Original release
NetworkChannel 4
Release2 November 1982 –
present

Countdown is a British game show presented by Des Lynam and Carol Vorderman. It was the first programme aired on Channel 4, and over fifty series have been broadcast since its debut on 2 November 1982. With over 4,000 episodes, it is one of the longest-running game shows in the world. The programme was presented by Richard Whiteley for over twenty years, until his death in 2005. A celebrity guest also features in every programme, and provides a brief interlude before the first advertisement break.

The two contestants in each episode compete in three disciplines: eleven letters rounds, in which the contestants attempt to make the longest word from nine randomly chosen letters; three numbers rounds, in which the contestants must use arithmetic to make a random target number from six other numbers; and the "conundrum", a buzzer round in which the contestants try to be first to solve a nine-letter anagram. During the series heats, the winning contestant returns the next day until he or she has accumulated eight wins. The best contestants are invited back for the series finals, which are decided in knockout format. Contestants of exceptional skill have received national media coverage, and the programme as a whole is widely recognised and parodied within British culture.

History

Richard "Twice Nightly" Whiteley

Origins

Countdown is based on the French game show Des Chiffres et des Lettres (Numbers and Letters), created by Armand Jammot. The format was brought to Britain by Marcel Stellman, a Belgian record executive, who had watched Des Chiffres... and believed the show could be popular overseas. Yorkshire Television purchased the format and commissioned a series of eight shows under the title Calendar Countdown, which were to be part of their regional news programme Calendar. As the presenter of Calendar, Richard Whiteley was the natural choice to present Calendar Countdown - his daily appearances on both shows earned him the nickname "Twice Nightly".[1] These shows were only broadcast in the Yorkshire area.[2]

An additional pilot episode was made, with a refined format, although it was never broadcast.[3] A new British television channel, Channel 4, was due to launch in November 1982, and bought the newly-renamed Countdown on the strength of this additional episode.[3] Countdown was the first programme to be broadcast on the new channel.[4]

As the countdown to a brand new channel ends, a brand new Countdown begins.

Richard Whiteley introducing the first episode of Countdown.[5]


Presenters

Calendar Countdown was presented by Richard Whiteley, with Cathy Hytner and Denise McFarland-Cruickshanks managing the numbers and letters rounds respectively.[6] When Countdown was commissioned for Channel 4 the number of hostesses expanded further: Cathy Hytner and Beverley Isherwood selected the letters and numbers tiles respectively, and calculations in the numbers rounds were checked by Linda Barrett or Carol Vorderman on alternate days.[7] Vorderman, a Cambridge graduate and member of MENSA,[8] was appointed as one of the numbers experts after responding to an advertisement in a national newspaper which asked for a young woman who would like to become a game show hostess; unlike almost any other game show hostess of the time, however, the advertisement also made it clear that the applicants' appearance would be less important than their being a talented mathematician.[9]

Gradually the tasks performed by the extra presenters were taken over by Carol Vorderman, whose role within the show is now essentially that of co-presenter.[10] The show was briefly taken off air following Whiteley's death in June 2005, but reappeared in October 2005 with Des Lynam as presenter.[11]

Diagram of the Countdown studio illustrating the position of:
1 - Carol Vorderman;
2 - Susie Dent;
3 - the celebrity guest;
4 - the champion;
5 - the challenger;
6 - Des Lynam

The other studio mainstay is Dictionary Corner, which houses a lexicographer and that week's celebrity guest. The role of the lexicographer is to verify the words offered by the contestants (see Letters round rules) and relay any longer or otherwise interesting words available. The lexicographer is aided in finding these words by the show's producers, currently Michael Wylie and Damian Eadie.[12] Many lexicographers have appeared over the years, but since her debut in 1992, Susie Dent has become synonymous with the role, and has now made over a thousand appearances.[13] The celebrity guest, sometimes known as the "Dictionary Dweller", also contributes words, and provides a short interlude at the end of the first section of the show. Dwellers have included Jo Brand, Martin Jarvis and Geoffrey Durham, providing poems, anecdotes, puzzles and magic tricks.[14]

A Countdown teapot, the prize for any contestant who wins a game.

Character

Countdown quickly established cult status within British television[15] - an image which it maintains today,[16] despite numerous changes of rules and personnel. The programme's audience comprises mainly students, housewives and pensioners,[15] due to the "teatime" broadcast slot and inclusive appeal of its format and presentation.[16] Countdown has been one of Channel 4's most-watched programmes for over twenty years, but has never won a major television award.[17] In its 3.30pm broadcast slot, the show draws about 1.7 million viewers every day — around half a million more than with Richard Whiteley presenting[18] — and the Series 54 final, on the 26 May 2006, attracted 2.5 million viewers.[19] Up to 2 million viewers had watched the show daily in its previous 4.15pm slot. The drop in viewers following the scheduling change, coupled with the show's perceived educational benefits, even caused Labour MP Jonathan Shaw to table a motion in the UK Parliament, requesting that the show be returned to its later time.[20]

In keeping with the show's friendly nature, contestants compete not for money but the Countdown winner's teapot, which is custom-made and can only be obtained by winning a game on the programme.[21] The prize for the series winner is a leather-bound copy of the twenty-volume Oxford English Dictionary, worth GB£4,000.[22] However Series 31 winner David Acton refused this prize on account of his strict veganism, instead opting for a CD-ROM version of the dictionaries and donating the monetary difference to charity.[23]

Though the style and colour scheme of the set has changed many times, the clock has always provided the centerpiece and, like the clock music composed by Alan Hawkshaw, is an enduring and well-recognised feature of Countdown. Executive producer John Meade once commissioned Hawkshaw to revise the music for extra intensity; after hundreds of complaints from viewers, the old tune was reinstated.[24]

The studio before the start of the game.

Format

Countdown has occupied a tea-time broadcast slot since its inception. Currently an episode lasts around 45 minutes including advertising breaks. During the normal series, the winner of each game returns for the next day's show. If a player wins eight games, they are declared an "Octochamp" and retire until the series finals. At the end of the series, the eight players with most wins (or the highest total score in the event of a tie) are invited back to compete in the series finals. They are seeded in a knockout tournament, with the first seed playing the eighth seed, the second playing the seventh, and so on. The winner of this knockout, which culminates in the Grand Final, becomes the series champion. Each series lasts around six months, with about 125 episodes.[25]

Approximately every four series, a Champion of Champions tournament takes place. For this, sixteen of the best players to have appeared since the previous Championship are invited back for another knockout tournament. The producer, former contestant Damian Eadie, decides which players to include, but typically the tournament includes the series winners and other note-worthy contestants.[26] Series 33 was designated a "Supreme Championship", in which 56 of the best contestants from all the previous series returned for another knockout tournament. Series 10 champion Harvey Freeman was declared Supreme Champion after beating Allan Saldanha in the final.[27] There are also occasional special episodes, in which past contestants return for themed matches. For example, David Acton and Kenneth Michie returned for a rematch of their Series 31 final, while brothers and former contestants Sanjay and Sandeep Mazumder played off against each other on December 20, 2004.[28]

The game is split into three sections, separated by advertising breaks. The first two sections each contain four letters rounds and a numbers round, while the last section has three letters rounds, a numbers round and a final "Conundrum". At the end of the first two sections, Lynam poses an eight-letter anagram with a cryptic clue for the viewers at home, called the Teatime Teaser - the solution is revealed at the start of the next section.

Letters round

Letter tiles are arranged face-down into two piles; one all consonants, the other vowels. The contestant chooses a pile, and Vorderman reveals the top tile from that pile and places it on the board. A selection of nine tiles is generated in this way, and must contain at least three vowels and four consonants.[29] Then, the clock is started and both contestants have thirty seconds to come up with the longest word they can make from the available letters. Each letter may be used only as often as it appears in the selection.[29] The frequencies of the letters within each pile are weighted according to their frequency in natural English, in the same manner as Scrabble. For example, there are many Ns and Rs in the consonant pile, but only one Q.[30]

Contestants write down the words they have found during the round, in case they have the same one. After the thirty seconds is up, the players declare the length of their chosen word, with the player who selected the letters declaring first. If either player has not written their word down in time, he or she must declare this also. The words are then revealed. If either player has not written their word down, that word is revealed first - otherwise, the shorter word is shown first. Only the contestant with the longer word scores points; both score in the event of a tie. One point is scored per letter, except for nine-lettered words, which score eighteen points. If a contestant offers an invalid word then they score no points. Finally, Dictionary Corner reveals the best word they could find from the selection, aided by the production team.[31]

Any word which appears in the Oxford Dictionary of English is allowable,[32] as well as some inflections. Standard inflections of nouns and verbs - for example, escapes, escaped and escaping - are accepted though not explicitly stated in the dictionary. Comparative and superlative forms of monosyllabic adjectives - for example, greater and greatest - are valid although these too are not explicitly stated. For longer adjectives, the inflections must be stated explicitly.[33] However, some words given in the dictionary are not permitted: proper nouns (Kurdistan), hyphenated words (re-embark), some plurals of mass noun (mankinds), and words that occur only in combination - for example, mistle is invalid as it is used only in mistle thrush. Also, only British spelling is permitted - American spellings and inflections, such as flavor and signaled, are invalid.[29]

Example:
Contestant One chooses five consonants, then three vowels, then another consonant.
Selection is:
D N G H R O U E Y.
Contestant One declares 7, while Contestant Two declares 8.
Contestant One reveals younger, but Contestant Two has hydrogen and scores eight points. Contestant One receives no points for this round.
Dictionary Corner note greyhound, which would have scored eighteen points.

Numbers round

One contestant selects six of twenty-four shuffled tiles. The tiles are arranged into two groups: four "large numbers" (25, 50, 75 and 100) and the remainder "small numbers", which comprise two each of the numbers 1 to 10. The contestant dictates how many large numbers are in the selection; anywhere from none to all four. A random three-digit target is generated by an electronic machine, "CECIL" (which stands for Countdown Electronic Calculator In Leeds).[34] The contestants then have thirty seconds to get as near to the target as possible by combining the six numbers selected with addition, subtraction, multiplication and division.[29] Numbers can be used as many times as they appear in the selection, and need not all be used. Decimals and fractions are not allowed - only integers may be used at any stage of the calculation.[29]

Points are awarded for the closest solution, and again both contestants score if the solutions are equally close. 10 points is given for an exact answer, 7 points for a non-exact solution up to 5 from the target, and 5 points for a solution between 6 and 10 from the target. If neither contestant can get within 10, no points are awarded.

Example:
Contestant One requests two large numbers and four small numbers.
Selection is:
75, 50, 2, 3, 8, 7.
Randomly generated target is:
812.
Contestant One declares 813, while Contestant Two declares 815.
Contestant One is closer and so reveals: 75 + 50 - 8 = 117. 117 × 7 - 3 × 2 = 813, which scores seven points.
Carol Vorderman notes: 50 + 8 = 58. 7 × 2 × 58 = 812, which would have scored ten points.

For some games, there are many ways to reach the target exactly. However not all games are solvable, and for some selections it is impossible even to get within 10. There is a tactical element in selecting how many large numbers to include. One large and five small numbers is the most popular selection,[35] despite two large numbers giving the best chance of the game being solvable exactly.[36] Selections with zero or four large numbers are generally considered the hardest.[36]

Conundrum

The final round of the game is the "Countdown Conundrum". A board revolves to reveal the "conundrum" - a jumbled nine-lettered word. The contestants have thirty seconds to find the word. The first contestant to buzz with the correct answer is awarded ten points, but each contestant may guess only once. Once a contestant guesses correctly or the time expires, a second board rotates to reveal the answer. Each conundrum is designed to have only one solution but if, unintentionally, the conundrum has two answers (e.g. CARTHORSE and ORCHESTRA) then either is accepted.[37]

A "crucial Countdown conundrum" occurs if, before the conundrum, the leading contestant is ahead by ten points or fewer. The studio lights are dimmed and the first contestant to answer correctly wins the game. If the scores are level after the conundrum, additional conundrums are used until the match is decided.[38]

Example:
Conundrum is revealed:
C H I N A L U N G.
Contestant One buzzes, and says launching, which scores 10 points.

Evolution

The rules of Countdown are derived from those of Des Chiffres et des Lettres. Perhaps the biggest difference is the length of the round; DCedL's rounds are each 45 seconds long to Countdown's 30. Also, DCedL has a standard letters round as its final round, so there is no analogue to Countdown's Conundrum finale. However DCedL has an alternative two rounds, called "duels", in which players compete to solve a mental arithmetic problem or extract two themed words. Other minor discrepancies include a different numbers scoring system (9 points for an exact solution, or 6 points for the closest inexact solution in DCedL) and the proportion of letters to numbers rounds (11 to 3 in Countdown, 8 to 4 in DCedL).[39][40]

The pilot episode followed significantly different rules to the current ones. Most noticeably, only eight letters were selected for each letters round. If two contestants offered a word of the same length, or an equally close solution to a numbers game, then only the contestant who made the selection for that round was awarded points. Also, only five points were given for an exact numbers solution, three for a solution within 5, and one point for the closer solution, no matter how far away.[41]

A significant change in the format occurred in September 2001, when the show was expanded from nine rounds and 30 minutes to the current fifteen rounds and 45 minutes.[42] The older format was split into two halves, each having three letters and one numbers game, with the conundrum at the end of the second half. When the format was expanded to fifteen rounds, Richard Whiteley jokingly continued to refer to the three segments of the show as "halves". Under the old format, Grand Finals were specially extended shows of fourteen rounds,[43] but now all shows follow the same format.[44]

The rules regarding which words are permitted have changed with time. American spelling was allowed in early shows,[45] and more unspecified inflections were assumed to be valid.[46]

Until the end of Series 21, if the two contestants had equal scores after the first conundrum, the match was considered a draw and they both returned for the next show.[47]

Notable contestants

Since Countdown's debut in 1982, there have been over 4,000 televised games and 54 complete series. There have also been twelve Champion of Champions tournaments, with the most recent in June 2006.[48] See List of Countdown Champions.

Several of Countdown's most successful contestants have received national media coverage. Teenager Julian Fell set a record score of 146 in December 2002.[49] More recently, fourteen-year-old Conor Travers became the youngest series champion in the show's history, gaining wide newspaper interest.[50][51][52] At eight years old, Tanmay Dixit was one of the youngest players ever to appear on the show when he achieved two wins in March 2005.[53] He also received press attention for his offerings in the letters round, which included fannies and farted.[54]

In 1998, sixteen celebrities were invited to play Celebrity Countdown, a series of eight games broadcast every Thursday evening over the course of eight weeks.[55] The celebrities included current presenter Des Lynam, who defeated Sian Lloyd.[56] The highest and lowest scores were posted in the same game when Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall defeated Jilly Goolden 47-9.[56]

Richard Whiteley and Carol Vorderman competed in another special episode on Christmas Day 1997. For this game, the presenter's chair was taken by William G. Stewart, the host of fellow Channel 4 game show Fifteen To One. Susie Dent took over Vorderman's duties, and Mark Nyman occupied Dictionary Corner.[56] The game was close-fought, and decided only by the crucial Countdown conundrum mistletoe which Vorderman solved in two seconds.[57]

The letters of the infamous round in which both contestants declared wankers.

Countdown is often referenced and parodied in British culture. In the 2002 film About a Boy, protagonist Will Freeman is a regular viewer of Countdown.[58] The programme is mentioned in an episode of British sitcom Father Ted entitled The Old Grey Whistle Theft[59] and is also referenced in the very first episode of Little Britain from 2003.[60] BBC impression sketch show, Dead Ringers, parodies Countdown numerous times,[61] and another television programme, the Big Breakfast, parodied Countdown in a feature called "Countdown Under".[62] Comedy show Fry and Laurie further lampooned Countdown in a sketch entitled Countdown to Hell. Fry played Richard Whiteley, while Gyles Brandreth got the word sloblock — an anagram of bollocks.[63]

Countdown has also generated a number of popular outtakes, with the letters producing the occasional word that was deemed unsuitable for the original broadcast. A round in which Dictionary Corner offered the word gobshite featured in TV's Finest Failures in 2001,[64][65] and in one episode, contestants Gino Corr and Lawrence Pearse both declared the word wankers. This was edited out of the programme but has since appeared on many outtakes shows.[66][67] Other incidents with only marginally rude words have made it into the programme as they appeared, such as those with Tanmay Dixit referred to above, and a clip from a 2001 episode in which the word fart appeared on the letters board, which also featured on 100 Greatest TV Moments from Hell[68][69]

Richard Whiteley was the victim of a practical joke while presenting the show. The contestants and rounds had been planted as part of a "Gotcha!", a regular prank feature on light entertainment show Noel's House Party. Whiteley did not uncover the joke until House Party presenter Noel Edmonds appeared on the set at the end of the programme.[70]

References

  1. ^ BBC.co.uk obituary for Richard Whiteley - URL accessed 24/06/06.
  2. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 9 - 15.
  3. ^ a b Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 20.
  4. ^ IMDB.com on Countdown trivia - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  5. ^ UK Game Shows on Countdown's first episode - URL accessed 26/06/06.
  6. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 17 - 18.
  7. ^ UK Game Shows on the five-presenter system - URL accessed 24/06/06.
  8. ^ IMDB on Vorderman's Cambridge graduation and MENSA membership - URL accessed 08/07/06.
  9. ^ Scotland on Sunday on the advertisement to which Vorderman responded - URL accessed 06/07/06.
  10. ^ Independent.co.uk on viewer dissatisfaction with Vorderman's expanded role - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  11. ^ BBC.co.uk on Des Lynam as the new presenter of Countdown - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  12. ^ Channel4.com on the production team helping with the words.
  13. ^ The Countdown Page on lexicographers].
  14. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word, (Granada Media, 2001), p. 119 - 131.
  15. ^ a b Scotsman.com on Countdown establishing cult status
  16. ^ a b BBC.co.uk Richard Whiteley obituary on the show's audience and cult status. URL accessed 24/06/06.
  17. ^ Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001), p. 74.
  18. ^ DailyRecord.co.uk on viewing figures.
  19. ^ UKGameshows.com on Series 54 final viewing figures - URL accessed 10/07/06.
  20. ^ Jonathan Shaw's official website, detailing his parliamentary motion - URL accessed 10/07/06.
  21. ^ Nebagram.co.uk on the prizes - URL accessed 24/06/06.
  22. ^ Amazon.co.uk on the leather-bound Oxford English Dictionary - URL accessed 24/06/06.
  23. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 147.
  24. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 33.
  25. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 87.
  26. ^ The Countdown Page Julian Fell's Countdown "experience" - URL accessed 24/06/06.
  27. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word (Granada Media, 2001), p220.
  28. ^ The Countdown Page list of special episodes and their themes - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  29. ^ a b c d e Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 24.
  30. ^ The Countdown Corral on letter frequencies - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  31. ^ UK Game Shows on production team aid - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  32. ^ The Countdown Page on dictionaries - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  33. ^ The Oxford Dictionary of English (2005, Oxford University Press), p. xvii.
  34. ^ UK Game Shows on game equipment - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  35. ^ Countdown Statistics on the frequency of each numbers games' selection - URL accessed 19/06/06.
  36. ^ a b Crossword Tools on analysis of the numbers game - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  37. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 26.
  38. ^ The Countdown Page game recap involving a tie-break conundrum - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  39. ^ cybercl.free.fr rules of Des Chiffres et des Lettres (in French) - URL accessed 07/07/06.
  40. ^ New Improved Head rules of Des Chiffres et des Lettres - URL accessed 07/07/06.
  41. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word (Granada Media, 2001), p. 18.
  42. ^ The Countdown Page showing the expanded format - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  43. ^ The Countdown Page showing a fourteen-round final - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  44. ^ The Countdown Page showing a fifteen-round final - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  45. ^ New Oxford Dictionary of English Guidelines on the change in rules regarding American spelling - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  46. ^ The Countdown Page series final recap in which dominater was deemed valid - URL accessed 20/06/06.
  47. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word (Granada Media, 2001), p. 133.
  48. ^ Countdown: Spreading The Word (Granada Media, 2001), p. 220.
  49. ^ The Countdown Page on Julian Fell's record score - URL accessed 25/06/06.
  50. ^ Daily Mail on Conor Travers - URL accessed 25/06/06.
  51. ^ The Independent on Conor Travers - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  52. ^ The Guardian on Conor Travers - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  53. ^ Daily Mail on Tanmay Dixit - URL accessed 25/06/06.
  54. ^ Sky.com on Tanmay Dixit - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  55. ^ Countdown: Spreading the Word (Granada Media, 2001) p. 34.
  56. ^ a b c The Countdown Page on Celebrity Countdown - URL accessed 25/06/06.
  57. ^ The Countdown Page recap of Whiteley vs. Vorderman Christmas special - URL accessed 25/06/06.
  58. ^ IMDB About a Boy movie connections page - URL accessed 18/06/06.
  59. ^ IMDB Father Ted movie connections - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  60. ^ IMDB Little Britain movie connections page - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  61. ^ YouTube clip of Countdown parody - URL accessed on 21/06/06.
  62. ^ UK Game Shows list of game show spoofs - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  63. ^ Countdown to Hell transcript - URL accessed 23/06/06.
  64. ^ IMDB TV's Finest Failures movie connections page - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  65. ^ YouTube clip of the gobshite incident - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  66. ^ Snopes on the wankers incident - URL accessed 21/06/06.
  67. ^ Telegraph.co.uk on the wankers incident - URL accessed 20/07/06.
  68. ^ IMDB 100 Greatest TV Moments from Hell movie connections page - URL accessed 19/06/06.
  69. ^ YouTube clip of Countdown 'FART' incident - URL accessed 19/06/06.
  70. ^ Channel 4 Community webchat with Richard Whiteley, explaining his Gotcha! - URL accessed 21/06/06.