Bargain Mad
Bargain Mad | |
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Watch Online | |
Genre: | Comedy drama |
First Broadcast: | 26th September 2013 |
Producer(s): | Chris Parker |
Bargain Mad is YSTV's 2013 live shopping channel show, following previous attempts in 1994 and 2001. The show features Chris Parker and Josh Hunter attempting to sell various "bargains", with viewers encouraged to purchase them via the use of hashtags (#) on Twitter.
Episode One
Episode one aired live at 11PM on 26th September 2013. Amazingly, Chris and Josh managed to provide 52 minutes of largely unscripted hilarity, and even managed a sale, leading to applause from the crew at the end of the show.
Format
The first episode placed Chris and Josh on stools on either side of the plasma, which was used to display the Bargain Mad logo and VT's of the products being rotated on a table. New products were brought on to set by the Floor Manager for live demonstrations. Numerous puns were made along the theme of bargains ("bargain mad", "bargain up the wrong tree", etc.).
Products
- 11 old VHS cases ("Luxury plastic versatile storage solution")
- Hashtag: #BLOCKBUSTER
- Initial price: £5.99 each
- Final price: £0.39 each
- Result: 1 damaged (attempting to prove its sturdiness), 1 donated to Floor Manager Liz Pascoe, 9 unsold
- Memorable quote: "It's like books that you don't have to read."
- 1985 Sun newspaper ("Antique paperised updates from 20th September 1985")
- 10 copies of the script to Checkmate ("Limited edition word recording for chess-based drama")
- Hashtag: #CHEMISTRY
- Initial price: £8.00 each
- Final price: £0.10 each
- Result: 3 copies sold to the chair of ComedySoc, 7 unsold (fortunately they hadn't actually been printed)
- Memorable quote: "I'm not sure whether these shivers of ecstasy that I'm feeling right now are due to this script or the fact that it's a bargain."
- 2 signed, framed photos of YUSU president Kallum Taylor ("Autographed portrait of YUSU president and Denim enthusiast Kallum Taylor")
- Hashtag: #DENIM
- Initial price: £30.00 each
- Final price: £0.50
- Result: 1 picture "bought" by Chris (later smashed), 1 unsold
- Memorable quote: "I reckon I'd probably put it next to Kallum Taylor, after I kidnap him"
In-jokes
Crew
Chris made a number of references to members of the show's crew:
- Peter Eskdale (Director)
- Liz Pascoe (Floor Manager)
- Lucy Walters (Graphics Op)
- Kieron Moore (Camera Op, "the gentleman in the purple jumper")
- Sam Nicholson (Vision Mixer)
- Alex Williams (Camera Op)
"Local feminist writer"
In the 2012-2013 academic year, a female first year student (who shall remain unnamed) led a campaign to stop YUSU's shop Your Shop selling The Sun newspaper, due to the misogynistic message that some students (notably the unratified FemSoc) believed was sent by the paper's page three feature. The motion was ultimately defeated 3:1 in YUSU's referendum, perhaps in part due to the student's campaigning techniques, which included several articles in Vision and The Yorker that some deemed to constitute personal attacks on opponents, and her involvement in the unsuccessful campaign to ratify FemSoc, which featured several less than balanced articles in the Huffington Post and a petition signed my thousands of non-YUSU members.
In the end, FemSoc didn't get ratified and had to change its name to "University of York Feminists" as it was deemed by YUSU to offer largely the same services as the union's Women's Committee. The Sun was quietly removed from Your Shop anyway, due to no-one actually buying it.
"Lucy Walters stalking in the background"
A running joke around the period in which the show was broadcast was Lucy's supposed crush on Kallum Taylor. A week later, she would perform a musical tribute to the "Special K" to the tune of Wrecking Ball (Miley Cyrus) during the final live Freshers week show.
Reception
Despite having a relatively small live audience (broadcast in week 0, Summer Camp, before most of the new freshers arrived) the episode was well received. The chair of ComedySoc commented on Facebook: "This is incorporating my favourite thing about TV shopping channels, the desperation to keep talking no matter what." On the episode's on-demand page of the website, one anonymous viewer called the presenters "the next Mochrie and Stiles", branding the show "a triumph".