- Motormouth
-
For the Marvel UK character, see Motormouth (comics). For the song by The Naked Brothers Band, see Motor Mouth. For the hidden camera show on VH1, see Motormouth (VH1).
Motormouth
Cast of the first series:
Tony Gregory
Caroline Hanson
Neil Buchanan
Julian Ballantyne
Andrea ArnoldFormat Children's magazine show Starring Neil Buchanan
Tony Gregory
Julian Ballantyne
Caroline Hanson
Andrea Arnold
Gaby Roslin
Steve Johnson
Andy CraneCountry of origin United Kingdom No. of series 4 No. of episodes 150 Production Producer(s) TVS Running time Various Broadcast Original channel ITV Network (CITV) Picture format 4:3 Original run 3 September 1988 – 4 April 1992Chronology Related shows No. 73
What's Up Doc?Motormouth was a Saturday morning children's television series that was produced by Television South and aired across the ITV network for four series, running between 3 September 1988 and 4 April 1992.[1][2] Each series generally ran from the autumn of one year to the spring of the next, as was common among many 'main' Saturday morning series.
The programme was launched following the decision to axe No. 73, which had run in the same slot until early 1988. No. 73 had been revamped during its final series as 7T3, with a partially exterior set. However, the new 7T3 set-up was expensive and difficult to produce, and so it was decided to switch to a fully studio-based set-up. The new show was produced as the same studio complex (The Maidstone Studios) as its predecessor, and many of the production team (and several presenters) transferred to the new show. Whereas No. 73 had included an inherent narrative storyline, the decision was taken that Motormouth would have a straightforward magazine presentation format.
The studio set for the first series was dominated by several giant inflatable elements, including a giant motorised mouth, from which the show took its name. In the second series, billed in some cases as Motormouth II or Motormouth 2, there were changes, including the introduction of new graphics and set elements based on [[wikt:cog|cogs] and sprockets. The use of the giant mouth declined following this alteration.
The show's third series - which boasted new graphics and remixed theme music, and was for a brief time billed as All New Motormouth - also had a new, predominantly white set; the giant mouth was removed altogether at this point, along with all other remaining inflatables. This series saw the introduction of a diner-style set (sometimes referred to as 'The Motormouth Cafe') which saw guests and audience members sitting at tables. This format and styling was left largely intact for the fourth series.
Contents
Presenters
The first series was presented by a five-strong lineup of hosts, two of whom had previously appeared on No. 73. Neil Buchanan and Andrea Arnold were joined by new recruits Caroline Hanson, Tony Gregory and Julian Ballantyne.
For the second series, Andrea Arnold ceased to be a main presenter and instead filed location reports from sites around the world which were broadcast into the programme. Hanson and Ballantyne departed the programme, replaced by Gaby Roslin and Steve Johnson. Buchanan and Gregory remained. Generally Buchanan, Gregory and Roslin would present the studio elements with Johnson hosting the gameshow inserts It's Torture, Gunge 'em In The Dungeon and Mouse Trap (based upon the board game of the same name).[3]
By the third series, Andrea Arnold had left the programme entirely, with Tony Gregory also departing, replaced by former CBBC presenter Andy Crane. Crane, Buchanan, Roslin and Johnson remained as presenters until the end of the show's run.
Fictional elements
The first series' episodes included Spin-off, a soap opera parody set behind the scenes of the programme. The cast of Spin-off included Richard Waites, who had previously appeared in the final series of No. 73/7T3. Spin-off was dropped after the first series.
A similar fictional production storyline was reintroduced in the programme's fourth series (though the Spin-off title was not revived). Instead of being separated from the main programme, the comedy-drama element was woven into the main programme, with characters from the fictional production team mingling with hosts and guests to create a more flowing storyline. The cast of this element was completely different from that of Spin-off and included Carla Mendonça, who played Juliet Nichols. A wedding between two members of this "team" formed the backbone storyline in the final edition of the series.
The programme also included imported cartoons as inserted content; cartoons which were featured during the programme's run included She-Ra: Princess of Power,[1] Samurai Pizza Cats, The Real Ghostbusters and Scooby Doo.
Cancellaton and replacement
Motormouth came to an end in April 1992. During the final series' run, Television South had been told that they would lose their ITV franchise (to Meridian Broadcasting) at the end of 1992, though TVS planned an appeal against the decision. Thus, at the time of the final Motormouth, the future of TVS was unclear. It was decided to close the programme altogether, and the final show closed with a sign-off from the presenters, including Neil Buchanan who had fronted all four series.
Scottish Television took over arrangements for the winter Saturday morning, when Nigel Pickard transferred to the company from TVS. Scottish Television entered into an agreement with Warner Bros. to create a new show, What's Up Doc?, which, like Motormouth, broadcast from the Maidstone Studios,[4] Andy Crane transferred from Motormouth to the new show, joined by Yvette Fielding and Pat Sharp.
Post-Motormouth
Steve Johnson went on to host a CITV gameshow, Terror Towers, in the mid-1990s.
Gaby Roslin's next role after Motormouth came in September 1992 when she and Chris Evans launched The Big Breakfast on Channel 4. She's since presented City Hospital, Children In Need and The Terry & Gaby Show amongst others.
Andy Crane remained with What's Up Doc? for its three-year run. He presented news programming for Manchester-based Channel M until the axe on 19 March 2010.
Andrea Arnold moved into film-making, winning an Oscar in 2004 and a BAFTA in 2007.
Tony Gregory is a TV director whose credits include Big Brother[5] .
Neil Buchanan remained with CITV until 2007, producing shows through his company The Media Merchants and hosting Finders Keepers and Art Attack.
The Maidstone Studios have since been used as a production base for other Saturday morning programmes including Ministry of Mayhem and Basil's Swap Shop.
Series guide
- Series 1: 58 editions (Saturdays/Sundays) - 3 September 1988 - 26 March 1989
- Series 2: 29 editions - 9 September 1989 - 31 March 1990
- Series 3: 31 editions - 1 September 1990 - 30 March 1991
- Series 4: 32 editions - 31 August 1991 - 4 April 1992
References
- ^ a b "Sat Kids". Paulmorris.co.uk. http://www.paulmorris.co.uk/satkids/index2.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
- ^ "Saturday Morning TV". screenonline. 1996-08-26. http://www.screenonline.org.uk/tv/id/446013/. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
- ^ http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Motormouth
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udodXb_kEDE&feature=related
- ^ "Error: no
|title=
specified when using {{Cite web}}". http://www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/news/?newsid=3228411.
External links
Preceded by
Get FreshMotormouth
1988–1992Succeeded by
What's Up Doc?ITV Tiswas · Saturday Banana · The Saturday Show (ITV)/The Saturday Starship · The Mersey Pirate · No. 73/7T3 · Get Fresh · Ghost Train · Motormouth · Gimme 5 · What's Up Doc? · Scratchy & Co./Massive · Telegantic Megavision/It's Not Just Saturday · WOW!/The Noise · Tricky · SMTV Live · Ministry Of Mayhem/Holly & Stephen's Saturday Showdown · wknd@stvChannel 4 T4 (Sat/Sun)Five Milkshake! (Daily) · Milkshake! FM / Shake! / The Core / NGA (Sat/Sun)Sky Sports Categories:- British children's television programmes
- Children's ITV television programmes
- 1980s British television series
- 1990s British television series
- 1988 in British television
- 1988 British television programme debuts
- 1992 British television programme endings
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.