It's a Knockout (Australian game show)

It's a Knockout was an Australian game show that was adapted from the original British version of the same name, which in turn was adapted from the French show, Intervilles. It originally ran from 17 April 1985 to 11 September 1987. It was later briefly revived albeit less successfully on 27 November 2011 on Network Ten and hosted by HG Nelson and Brad McEwan with Charli Robinson.[1]

It's a Knockout
GenreGame show
Presented byOriginal (1985-1987)
Billy J Smith
Fiona MacDonald
Reboot (2011-2012)
HG Nelson
Charli Robinson
Brad McEwan
Voices ofMax Rowley (1985–1987)
Opening theme"It's a Knockout" by Rick Turk
ComposerRick Turk
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3 (1985–1987)
1 (2011–2012)
No. of episodes107 (1985–1987)
8 (2011–2012)
Production
Production locationsDural, New South Wales (1985–1987)
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (2011–2012)
Running time60 minutes
Production companiesGrundy Television (1985–1987)
Spring (2011–2012)
DistributorFremantle
Release
Original networkNetwork Ten
Picture format4:3 (1985–1987)
576i (SDTV) (2011–2012)
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseOriginal series:
17 April 1985 – 11 September 1987
Revived series:
27 November 2011 – 20 January 2012
Chronology
Preceded byAlmost Anything Goes

History

An Australian version of It's a Knockout ran on Network Ten from 1985 to 1987. The teams were divided into the Australian states: New South Wales (NSW), Victoria (VIC), Queensland (QLD) and South Australia (SA). The show was hosted by Queensland-based personalities, including voiceover Billy J Smith (born 1945/1946 - 2019)[2] and Fiona MacDonald (the sister of Hey Hey it's Saturday's, Jacki MacDonald), with Max Rowley as announcer, for the duration that it aired in Australia. They would arrive to the show in a golf buggy with the show's mascot Combat the Dog (an Old English Sheepdog), and introduce the teams to compete in various athletic timed tasks. The show was filmed in a field in Dural, New South Wales, however due to numerous noise complaints from local residents the show was dropped in 1987.

This version also aired in Mexico on the TV Cable Network Multivisión and was a success during 1992, as well as the United States on KCAL-TV in Los Angeles, CA & WWOR-TV in New York, NY in 1990–91. It was also adapted and shown in Argentina known as Supermatch. This version was heavily edited, and the anchors were replaced by off-screen commentators. In Chile was aired by "La Red" in the summer of 1992, known as "Esto es Supermatch", based on the Argentinian version.

In the original series, an individual game win was awarded 4 points and second place 2 points (any ties were split between all tying teams). A nightly winner gave a team 6 points for the individual state ladder and $1,000 (first runners-up win 4 points and second runners-up win 2 points). After each team in each division played three times, the leading team in each state qualified for the semi-final worth $5,000. After each of the three semi-finals were conducted, the champions of each state qualified for the preliminary final worth $10,000. The same process was conducted again in pursuit of the teams for the grand final worth $20,000.

A famous feature of this run was called the "Joker" which was used by a team to double any points they could get in only one individual game. The use of the Joker was self-contained to the individual episode.

2011/12 return

On 17 October 2011, it was announced that Channel 10 Australia was re-launching a new version of It's a Knockout for its 2011/12 Summer programming lineup hosted by HG Nelson, Charli Robinson and Brad McEwan. In each episode, Nelson and McEwan arrived on-set in a golf buggy and announced each team and the points tally, in addition to commentating each match whilst Charli introduced each game and explained the rules. Due to insurance costs however the show was recorded offshore in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and it ran for eight 1-hour episodes and featured teams of 15 from each state of Australia. The teams competed for the Billy J. Smith cup as the grand prize.[3] It premiered on 27 November 2011.

Notes

  1. It's a Knockout, retrieved 9 February 2019
  2. MIKE COLMAN. "Billy J. Smith dead after fall in city street". The Australian.
  3. Geoff Shearer (17 October 2011). "Ten sets up knockout blast from past". The Courier-Mail.

The teams for the 1985-87 seasons were members of APEX clubs from around the various states. Funds raised by the competing clubs were then distributed throughout their communities.

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