LipSync
LipSync | |
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Genre: | Game Shows |
First Broadcast: | 2004 |
Producer(s): | Rowan de Pomerai Rick Selby Sarah Leese Neil Brehon |
YSTV's comedy panel show which blends original rounds with some borrowed from the greatest TV and radio comedy. Since the demise of Bona Dicta it now holds the dubious honour of being YSTV's longest-running show.
Pilot
Lipsync began over drinks in Wentworth Bar on a Monday night after a station meeting in February 2004, based around the YSTV Clock and the idea of "Just a Minute" on TV. The pilot episode (later the same night, after pizza!) featured Richard Ash, James Thorniley, Steve Walker, Rowan de Pomerai, and Ed Jellard, chaired by Drew Perry. Crew was non-existant - the chair vision mixed whilst the winner of each roundUnverified or incomplete information swapped onto camera! A short clip from this made it into Best Broadcaster 2004.
Series
A more organised regular show was started in 2004 by Rowan de Pomerai, it was taken over in the summer of 2006 by Rick Selby. In the spring of 2007, Sarah Leese joined him as co-producer.
In the beginning
Steve Walker created the title sequence, Rowan and Vanky did the rest. It was ace. The original title music was Chopin's 'Minute Waltz', before eventually being replaced by a jaunty tune Rowan knocked up in Apple's GarageBand application.
Stuart Murphy
When reviewing YSTV's Best Broadcaster compilation for 2005's NaSTA, Stuart Murphy - then controller of BBC3 - included a comment in his (brief) notes that "the panel game looks crap". This was referred to a number of times on the show in summer 2005. Despie this objection, Stuart thought that YSTV was the 2nd best student TV station.
In-Jokes
A number of in-jokes are to be found throughout the series, including frequent piss-taking of pint sized popster Aaron Carter, though nobody seems quite sure how that one came about. His single Saturday Night even made a guest appearance on a special version of the title sequence, but the team members didn't seem impressed.
2005-06
Through the Autumn and Spring terms, Rowan was still producing.
During the summer term, Rick and Rowan put out 4 shows between them in a sort of gradual handover. These were the first to use the "Coffee Bar" set, making the show look very different.
2006-07
Over the summer Rick spent countless hours creating a new title sequence (music created especially for the show by James Hyde, a non-YSTV bod doing Music Tech), and a few rushed minutes at the start of the autumn term updating the graphics.
16 mini-shows were hashed together from previous episodes for the Freshers Workshops, which Rowan and Rick presented, but these still used the original titles and graphics.
In week 4 of the Autumn term, the new-look LipSync was unveiled, with a few new rounds:
- Lost In Translation, where a phrase or title is translated to a foreign language and back; the contestants are given the result and must work out what the phrase or title was
- Threesomes - in the past, many shows had an "odd one out" round or similar, generally consisting of three options. This round allowed all of these to come under one header.
Rick did most of the presenting, with Claire Butler presenting the last show of the Autumn term, and Sarah Leese the Jay Foreman special in week 6 of the Spring term.
2007-08
Under increasing pressure from outside commitments, Rick cut the show's output down from its regular slot to a handful of special editions; a move shamelessly copied by the BBC in 2009 for its obscure sci-fi show, "Doctor Who".
2008-09
Having co-produced the final show of the previous year, Neil Brehon took the reins as producer, attempting to revitalise the show with the introduction of new rounds, nonsensical pre-titles sketches and regular "team captain" seats for Matthew Tole and Mark Friend.
Unfortunately, he too succumbed to time constraints and took the Spring term off to focus on his degree, though he intends to produce extra shows in the Summer term to make up for it.
YSTV Productions |
Series • Events Coverage • One-offs |