Figure It Out was the quintessential '90s game show for the network. Hosted by former Olympian Summer Sanders, this game show brought on Nickelodeon stars, as well as non-Nickelodeon celebs, to try and guess what a contestant's ~unusual~ talent was.
Arguably the hardest game show to win in Nickelodeon history — out of 120 episodes, only 32 teams won the grand prize — Legends of the Hidden Temple combined athleticism with intelligence.
Double Dare is arguably Nickelodeon's most prolific (and iconic) game show of all time. It's also been around the longest and has the most iterations: Double Dare, Super Sloppy Double Dare, Family Double Dare, and Double Dare 2000.
In 2018, Nickelodeon revived the game show again, bringing on YouTuber Liza Koshy to host the series, with OG host Marc Summers returning to the classic game show with an on-camera role.
Double Dare (franchise)Double DareLogo for the 2018 revivalAlso known asSuper Sloppy Double Dare (1987, 1989) Family Double Dare (1988, 1990–93) Double Dare 2000 (2000)GenreGame showCreated byGeoffrey Darby Michael Klinghoffer Dee LaDuke Robert Mittenthal Debby Beece (Family Double Dare)19 more rows
Wild & Crazy Kids was a game show that originally aired on Nickelodeon in the early 1990s and featured large teams of kids competing against each other in modified versions of sports or playground games, such as Donkey Basketball, Three-Legged Soccer, and Tug of War.
Marc Summers has announced on Twitter that Nickelodeon has sadly decided to cancel and not renew it's Double Dare revival for a third season.
Slime Time LiveSlime Time Live is a television show that aired on Nickelodeon from 2000–2004, lasting 8 seasons. During its run it was hosted by Dave Aizer, Jonah Travick and Jessica Holmes and produced/directed by Jason Harper.
Pinwheel1977–1979: Pre-launch with Pinwheel She created the first Nickelodeon series, Pinwheel. The Pinwheel show premiered on December 1, 1977, as part of QUBE, an early local cable television system that was launched in Columbus, Ohio by Warner Cable Corp.
The slime is simply a mix of vanilla pudding, apple sauce, green food coloring and a little oatmeal.
MORE ABOUT NICKELODEON Slime City Popping up this holiday season in Miami's Aventura Mall until February 1, Slime City a gigantic pop-up installation where kids and their families will have the opportunity to play with slime, get slimed and even make their own sticky substance to take home.
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Double DareHis best known one was Nickelodeon's Double Dare from 1986 to 1993 plus additional versions. He was also the executive consultant for Double Dare 2000. From 2018-2019, Summers returned to Double Dare, but this time, as the announcer. He was dubbed as "The Mayor of Double Dare".
For such a sticky substance, Floam was a pretty solid concept. It was slime, filled with little styrofoam balls—allowing you to mold it into whatever shape you wanted, like mini-Michelangelo.
Top 10 '90s Nickelodeon Cartoons, Ranked10 CatDog (1998)9 Oh Yeah! Cartoons (1998)8 SpongeBob SquarePants (1999)7 KaBlam! (1996)6 Rugrats (1991)5 Rocket Power (1999)4 The Wild Thornberrys (1998)3 Doug (1991)More items...•
That green slime first appeared on the Canadian TV show You Can't Do That On Television in 1979 — a show that, two years later, aired on the kids' channel Nickelodeon.
In the early 2000s reality shows that pushed contestants to their physical limits were all the rage ( Fear Factor, Amazing Race, etc.), but Nickelodeon GUTS did it first with its “extreme arena” that pitted three teenagers (blue, red, and purple) against each other in extreme versions of popular sports. Taking the Olympics as its model and even ...
RELATED: Host Kirk Fogg on Legends of the Hidden Temple TV movie, possibly reviving show. Most famously, the show concluded with a temple run where teams entered the titular temple and had to solve puzzles and evade Mayan temple guards to retrieve the show’s lost artifact in under three minutes.
Figure It Out was the quintessential '90s game show for the network. Hosted by former Olympian Summer Sanders, this game show brought on Nickelodeon stars, as well as non-Nickelodeon celebs, to try and guess what a contestant's ~unusual~ talent was.
You know what's currently missing in your life? Nick GAS (which stands for Games and Sports), a former TV channel that only played reruns of Nickelodeon game shows. It was phenomenal and iconic and it needs to come back.
Arguably the hardest game show to win in Nickelodeon history — out of 120 episodes, only 32 teams won the grand prize — Legends of the Hidden Temple combined athleticism with intelligence.
Double Dare is arguably Nickelodeon's most prolific (and iconic) game show of all time. It's also been around the longest and has the most iterations: Double Dare, Super Sloppy Double Dare, Family Double Dare , and Double Dare 2000.
6 "Nick Arcade". Also called Nickelodeon Arcade, this game show, hosted by Phil Moore, had teams compete by playing video games in classic arcade style format (think: Wreck-It Ralph ), as well as immersing themselves into a video game with the help of green screens.
The messy game show — which included an epic obstacle course for the winning team to power through — began in the late '80s and was revived at the start of the millennium. (There was even something called Double Dare Live, which allowed guests staying at Nickelodeon Suites Resort in Orlando to participate in the fun.)
10 "You're On!". After hosting Nick Arcade, Phil Moore returned to the network to host You're On!, a game show where contestants try to get unsuspecting people to perform certain tasks. The people didn't know they were being filmed.
Hosted by Melissa van der Schyff, Keep It Spotless saw kid contestants challenged to maneuver through paint-filled obstacle courses without getting any of the paint on their all-white clothing. The contestants were then judged based on how much paint ends up on their clothing.
Originally airing in 1992, Nick Arcade was a game show that saw contestants face off in several different rounds of challenges involving trivia, video games, and live-action video games, in which the contestants were animated using bluescreen technology.
Airing for three seasons from 2009 to 2011, BrainSurge was a zany game show that tested contestant's memory and problem-solving skills in a series of wild challenges. The contestants competed to solve puzzles, recall details from a story, and memorize grid patterns, with eliminated contestants getting slimed.
Wild & Crazy Kids was a game show that originally aired on Nickelodeon in the early 1990s and featured large teams of kids competing against each other in modified versions of sports or playground games, such as Donkey Basketball, Three-Legged Soccer, and Tug of War.
Originally airing in 1997, Figure It Out uses a familiar game show format in which Nickelodeon celebrities would try to guess the unique talent or ability that kids contestants possessed. The celebrities would ask questions of the kids and attempt to unlock parts of the phrase that describes the kid's ability.
Make the Grade is one of the first game shows to air on Nickelodeon, debuting in 1989 and running for three seasons. The show is a fairly straightforward trivia show in which the kid contestants must answer questions from different school categories, such as history, science, and art, in difficulty levels that range from elementary to 12th-grade.
Finders Keepers is an inventive and unique game show that aired on Nickelodeon starting in 1987. The show's giant set features a replica of a house with one wall removed. In the first half of the game, the contestants must locate pictures hidden inside of a larger picture on a telestrator.