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Celebrity Double Dare
aka
why kid shows should remain kid shows

Unsold Pilot: (1987)
Double Dare: A game show made
for kids that rocked the television world. It was the perfect mix
of quiz, comedy, and overall presentation that enthralled kids and
grownups alike. Everybody wanted to get a piece of the pie after
Double Dare succeeded where many others failed. One of the most
pathetic attempts at building off of Double Dare's success was done by
Double Dare's parent company, Viacom. Their brilliant idea was to
have two adult contestants team up with two adult celebrities and play a
modified, adult version of Double Dare. So, you're taking
everything that made Double Dare unique and turning it into a sideshow
not seen since the old days of Almost Anything Goes. Brace
yourself, people it's time for our first voyage into the realm of Unsold
Pilots and what better way to kick it off with the attempted
bastardization of Double Dare affectionately known as Celebrity Double
Dare.

Before anything, I want to talk
about the main set. This is probably one of the most boring sets
I've seen, especially for a pilot. There's nothing there. No
chase lighting used in the original Double Dare set, no bright
background, no nothing. It's like they didn't even care.
It's just painfully generic. Another thing that irks me is the
horrific mix of the old Double Dare theme. It sounds like it was
done by a bunch of garage band guys who got paid in peanuts. So,
they've already failed on that aspect.

Now the host of this show is
Bruce Jenner. He was, in a word, average. He wasn't the best
host out there, but he is far from the worst candidate out there to host
something like this. I guess he needed something to do between
winning the decathalon in the 1976 Olympiad and banging Kim Kardashian's
Mom. He doesn't rock the boat in any way, he does come up with a
nice little joke every now and then and clearly explains what the people
need to do. So, he gets a pass. But let's meet the
celebrities who will be helping out the contestants.

It's TV Cooking Expert Heidi
Bohay and Scott Baio. So, a couple of B-listers helping out some
B-grade contestants on a C-Grade Pilot. It's kind of interesting
here at Heidi pointing at Chachi's arms, thinking that he got that
normally. I mean, not everybody who's main diet came from Arnold's
got arms like that. I'm getting off track here, let's just start
the game.

Like Double Dare, Celebrity
Double Dare starts with a tossup, and unlike Double Dare, where the
opening stunt is interesting, this one has the teams eating a strand of
licorice until someone reaches the marshmallow in the middle. It's
just boring to sit through, unless you enjoy Scott Baio sucking on your
TV screen. I mean, he's an expert at sucking. Just look at
Joanie Loves Chachi episodes on Youtube, he had great practice there.

The questions on the show are
unique in a way. Instead of multiple choice questions & other
straightforward questions, the questions used on Celebrity Double Dare
are 2-parters which must be answered by both teammates one at a time,
sorta like what they did on the 2002 incarnation of Beat The Clock.
What also gets me is the fact that instead of just saying dare, they "I
dare you" or "I Double Dare You". Another thing that irked me is
the fact that they don't let the teams confer unless they've been "I
Double Dare You"ed. I guess that's because the producers made the
brilliant move of putting the contestant podiums right beside each
other. It's like they're trying too hard to stray away from what
made the kids version what it is and try a sterilized adult version.
What's also disheartening that it just seems so bland and boring
compared to the kids version. The questions don't have any flavor
to them, like the kids version did, and the teams don't seem to be
enjoying themselves. Another boneheaded move was that instead of
keeping control, they passed it off after each right answer, probably to
ensure that a competitive game was being played. To be frank, most
games of Double Dare were competitive, mainly because they were allowed
to confer about an answer, and the questions weren't stupid 2-parters.
It just seems so sterile.
I mean, the physical challenges
that they do are really really sterilized. What was Double Dare
back in the day you ask. That's right, messy!

But do we get any mess in the physical challenge? Not really.
I mean, in the Physical Challenge above, which was used in the original
program, the contestants threw eggs and not tennis balls. It just
seems more lame than anything else. Another thing that's lame is
that there was an overhead clock on the actual show that ticked down.
Instead, we get the cheaped out chyron clock instead. It makes the
show more lame than it is. The second round is the same, except
with double the dollar amounts, like the actual Double Dare show, except
just as boring and mind-numing as round 1 was on this pilot.

As proof, they were asked the
question "There are two letters missing on most telephones, name them."
And they had to take the physical challenge. Because they couldn't
identify the letters Q and Z. How dumb do you have to be to not
get those two letters? When I saw that, this went through my head.

Thank you High.
Ok, I had enough, let's just get
to the course. I mean, the setup can't be as bad as the main game
set.

God, I hate being wrong.
Let's just go over what's wrong with the setup here. There are no
flags, the obstacles look so pathetic looking, the nameplates used for
the obstacles look like something you see outside of a deli, there's
buzzers out there to signify that you completed the obstacle, and there
are only 7 obstacles instead of 8 in the actual series. It doesn't
also help that the obstacles are also placed without any care or any
way, shape or form of continuity.
Well, let's get this over with.
I'll just give pictures of all of the obstacles and give you a small, 5
word or less review.

The Tire Blowout: Sterilized
Recipe Tire Run.

Hurdler's Nightmare: Water
doesn't make it good.

Karate Chophouse: Worse than
Karate Kid III.

Commando Climb: Basic
Training but dumber.

Mini Indy: Icy Trike minus the
fun.

Slide For Life: Not
interesting at all.

Winner's Lemonade Splashdown:
The sad, wet climax.
Needless to say, the contestant
won. Well, since this is a pilot and all, so they needed to make
sure there was a winner. They all say goodbye, and so does my
sanity.
I'm just thankful that this
didn't make are, otherwise I bet anything that the regular version of
Double Dare would have been dead because of this. It's kinda sad
when Bob Hilton was the best thing about the show. The celebrities
looked like they didn't want to be there, the set was the most boring
thing I've seen in the mid-late 80s game show world, and let's not
forget they sterilized the hell out of this show to make it look, feel
and sound like a different show. Thankfully, it didn't work out
and this was buried with the rest of the failed pilots of that era.
What was weird was that this wasn't the only Celebrity Double Dare Pilot
out there. I recognized Stuart Pankin in the open, so at least
another pilot exists. Hopefully, that won't see the light of day
again.
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