Supernanny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Supernanny | |
Series logo |
|
Format | Reality TV |
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Starring | Jo Frost |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 5 |
No. of episodes | 71 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Channel 4 |
Picture format | 16:9 |
Original run | 1 September 2004 – present |
Supernanny is a British reality television programme about helping parents with misbehaving children.
The show features professional nanny Jo Frost, who devotes each episode to helping a family whose children are out of control. Using a variety of methods, she shows parents different ways of disciplining their children and maintaining order in their households. She is noted for her kind but firm no-nonsense approach.
Contents |
[edit] History
Supernanny was originally broadcast in the UK at the beginning of the Autumn/Winter season on Channel 4 in 2004, starring Jo Frost. Supernanny is one of Channel 4's most popular shows, reaching nearly 5 million viewers in the first series, with consistently high ratings throughout the series. Supernanny US is also shown on Channel 4 (and its sister channel E4) with respectable viewing figures. The premiere episode for the third series attracted 3.1 million viewers with a 14% audience share. These values are half of those from the previous two series.[1] It is narrated by Nick Frost. The theme song is "Be Good Johnny" by Men at Work (though the show's version is a cover). The fourth series of Supernanny began on 29 August 2007 at 8pm with Beyond The Naughty Step following straight afterwards on E4. The fifth run, broadcast over a year later on Channel 4, began on 24 September 2008.
[edit] International versions
Supernanny has been broadcast or slightly adapted in other countries.
[edit] United States
ABC created its own version of Supernanny, which has the same title and premise as the original version, and continues starring Jo Frost, however it is narrated by Jeff Bartsch. The series is currently airing its fifth season.[2] A possible spinoff called "Super-Manny," starring male nanny Mike Ruggles, was the subject of the November 14, 2008, episode.[3]
The American version was rebroadcast in Australia, but was not as successful there and was eventually put on hiatus.[citation needed]
[edit] Other countries
- Katharina Saalfrank is the Supernanny in the German version, aired on RTL.
- Dorota Zawadzka is the Supernanny in the Polish version, aired on TVN, and a co-host of the talk-show I Ty możesz mieć superdziecko (You too can have a superchild), in which Supernanny analyses episodes from her series, talks to celebrity parents and gives her advice. It is broadcast by TVN Style.
- Cathy Kalthoum Sarrai is the Supernanny in the French version, aired by M6.
- Rocio Ramos is the Supernanny in the Spanish version, broadcast on Cuatro. Another version with teenagers called S.O.S. Adolescentes is also aired on Cuatro. In the Spanish regions of Catalonia and Basque Country, the original version is broadcast by TV3 with Catalan dubbing and by ETB 1 with Basque dubbing respectively.
- The Dutch version is called Eerste Hulp Bij Opvoeden. The name is a play on Eerste Hulp Bij Ongevallen, the Dutch term for first aid. Other similar programmes exist, such as Schatjes, which use a slightly different concept.
- The Italian version is called S.O.S. Tata. Aired on La 7.
- The first Romanian nanny was Irina Petrea. The second and the actual is Raluca Iuga. The show is aired on Prima TV.
- Greek version is aired by Skai TV, with the name Νταντά Πρώτων Βοηθειών (First-aid nanny).
- The Chinese version of Supernanny features supernanny Wo Yao Yige, and is soon to be broadcast on CCTV.
[edit] In other media
Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (October 2008) |
- The US animated series Drawn Together spoofed the show in a 2005 episode. In the parody, Supernanny tries to use her powers of discipline to take over the world. She first takes care of Captain Hero (the superhero) by sending him to the Naughty Stool so he will not intervene, and then uses an army of mind-controlled children to invade the White House until Captain Hero re-appears. He stops her by stomping on her foot, which makes her curse out loud. For using profanity, he sends her to the Naughty Stool, at which moment the mind-controlled children break free and tear Supernanny to shreds.[4]
- The US animated series South Park spoofed the show in a 2006 episode "Tsst", though unlike the Drawn Together episode, the Supernanny parody was not the focus of the show. In the episode, which also features parodies of Nanny 911 and The Dog Whisperer, Supernanny is one of the nannies called upon to discipline Eric Cartman but his behavior ends up driving her to a mental institution and eating her own excrement yelling "From hell, it's from hell!".[5]
- The character "Miss Foster" portrayed by Sarah Lancashire in the episode Partners in Crime from the television sci-fi show Doctor Who was based on Jo Frost's signature outfit, hairstyle, glasses, voice and body language.
[edit] References
- ^ TV ratings: August 29 | Media | MediaGuardian
- ^ "ABC Announces Early Pick-ups of Alternative Series for 2008-2009 Season". The Futon Critic. 2008-02-28. http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news.aspx?date=02/28/08&id=20080228abc02.
- ^ Kinon, Cristina (2008-11-14). "'Super Manny' Puts a Guy in the Nanny Seat". New York Daily News. http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2008/11/14/2008-11-14_super_manny_puts_a_guy_in_the_nanny_seat.html. Retrieved on 2009-02-20.
- ^ Drawn Together: Super Nanny Recap - TV.com
- ^ Home News Tribune Online[dead link]