Showing posts with label Skating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skating. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 February 2014

Will The Jump be back next year?

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

When Channel 4 decided to proceed with The Jump, they were planning a nice warm-up in this miserable weather climate of celebrities learning how to compete at winter sports in the build-up to the Winter Olympics in Sochi. What they got ultimately was a programme that turned into one of the most dangerous in reality television history.

The celebrities who took part ranged from Olympic medallists and pop singers to glamour models and reality show regulars but it was the general hospital in Innsbruck, Austria that seemed more accustomed to seeing them rather than the competition the general public witnessed, both in Austria and on television.

The series was eventually won by former X-Factor winner Joe McElderry, who beat Donal MacIntyre in the final. To top it off, both were replacements which defeated the object of the entire series. So did Channel 4 get it wrong? Was it good television or too dangerous and more importantly, will it get another series next year?

The concept of the programme
Initially planned to be The Alpine Games two years ago, the programme producers offered the plan to ITV first but they turned it down as they deemed it to be too dangerous. It seems like their caution was the right move.

Needing a boost in ratings to compete with programmes on at this time of year such as Splash, Dancing on Ice and Celebrity Big Brother, Channel 4 put a lot of time and effort into the programme. Nine winter sports would be tested out, such as the giant slalom, speed skating and the terrifying skeleton. Experts including skeleton gold medallist Amy Williams and UK Sport performance director Graham Bell were brought in to help the rookies tame their fears and bring out their competitive streak.

They would compete in these events on a day-by-day basis and the bottom two on each evening would have to do a live ski jump, with the individual recording the lowest distance being eliminated from the competition. The idea was there, the concept sounded good but the execution of The Jump probably backfired.
12 celebrities started but none of these competitors would win The Jump
What The Jump did manage was to get a solid crop of celebrities. Taking part were British Olympic legend Sir Steve Redgrave, former cricketer Darren Gough, 80s pop singer Sinitta, TV presenter Anthea Turner, ex-Five member Ritchie Neville, model Melinda Messenger, Pussycat Doll Kimberly Wyatt, comedian Marcus Brigstocke, hairdresser Nicky Clarke, presenter Laura Hamilton, TOWIE favourite Amy Childs and socialite Henry Conway.

Little did they know the injuries they would collect and that none of them would be crowned winner of The Jump.

Injuries galore
Gough was the first to go down with injury with various accidents in training and two awkward crashes on the ski slopes in rehearsals before the main show. When he exited on day three of the competition, the relief was clear to see. His body had taken a battering and it was pretty silly that medical advice didn’t intervene to pull him out before serious damage was done.

Henry Conway was next on the casualty list. An injury picked up during training for the skeleton event left him with a broken hand and devastated to be leaving the competition. It opened the door for McElderry to come in as a replacement, defeating MacIntyre in a live ski jump.

One injury is unfortunate and it can happen on any show, while another taking a pasting can be seen as careless but once Melinda Messenger was forced to withdraw after suffering concussion in bobsleigh training, The Jump was quickly turning into a medical drama rather than a winter sports competition.

The final was farcical itself. After a nasty accident on the slopes that had worrying echoes of the crash off-piste that has left racing superstar Michael Schumacher fighting for his life in hospital, Sir Steve Redgrave was in grave trouble. A fractured rib left him in deep pain. He battled on in his true Olympic competitive spirit but he had to call it quits on the morning of the final event, realising it was a risk too far, even for an Olympian who has achieved it all in his superb career. 

Then, comedian Marcus Brigstocke – a popular member of the celebrities had a monumental shunt off the final jump of the risky ski cross event. Screeching in pain from the moment he landed, it looked distressing to watch. An ankle injury meant he became the fourth contender eliminated through injury. 

The other two finalists also weren’t unscathed. McElderry lost control in the final event and took a nasty bang to the head but made it to the final jump-off. MacIntyre, who was growing in confidence with every event, had a big crash in rehearsals for the jump-off to be crowned champion, cutting his lip and leaving him with a black eye. McElderry won almost by default – he was last man standing and it destroyed what promised to be a competitive final night of action.

Presenting problems
Davina McCall and Alex Brooker were the co-hosts of The Jump. I’m not Davina’s biggest fan considering my pure hatred of Big Brother but she has done a superb job hosting the tense quiz The Million Pound Drop in recent years. Having started her TV career presenting Don’t Try This At Home for ITV back in 1998, she is no stranger to shows that ramp up the risk element. On the final night, Davina proved her daredevil ability by jumping off the K-40 – the biggest jump in the competition and landed it successfully and with style. Sadly her presenting control on the programme wasn’t quite up to the same standard. She hasn’t lost a huge amount by hosting The Jump but it did lack the command that sometimes a show that struggles needs from its anchor.

Brooker is most familiar appearing regularly on the panel show The Last Leg. However his presenting ability for this show was disappointing and pretty lame. There was no chemistry between him and McCall and therefore without any leadership from the front, The Jump began to fall down from the word go.

Reception and plus points
Despite the injuries galore, there were some pluses with The Jump. With it on a nightly basis, it was easy to follow or simply drop out of. I decided to watch it as it was something different and it is so much better than Splash. If I wanted to see diving on TV, I’d just watch a game from the Barclays Premier League on Sky Sports rather than Tom Daley’s pitiful programme.
The Jump held no fears for some, but left many needing medical attention
Some of the celebrities showed no fear. Kimberley Wyatt stepped out of the background and into the limelight. Often overshadowed by former Pussycat Dolls in recent years, Nicole Scherzinger and Ashley Roberts, Wyatt won many fans with her attitude to both competition and the way she never gave up. Her dramatic exit in the quarter-final was a real shame, as she had the potential out of all the celebrities who started to win it. Anthea Turner was another who should be praised for taking on anything thrown at her without any fear – something you couldn’t say about Amy Childs who was a nightmare and eventually wimped out like a baby on the second evening of competition.

Barry Davies reminded us all of his golden age in the commentary box. His humour and wit in guiding the viewer through the events was class. Of course, this is the man who famously said in the 1988 Seoul Olympics; ‘Where were the German defence, but frankly, who cares!’
The reception from TV critics it got though was largely negative. Digital Spy’s Alex Fletcher wrote: “It was more painful than a snowball in the mouth” whilst The Independent’s Sally Newall commented: “A bonkers, scary mash-up of Big Brother and Ski Sunday.”  

The ratings also agreed with the experts. Starting at 2.6m viewers on opening night, fans of The Jump melted away in the days that followed. By the end, a million viewers had been lost – with a measly 1.7m tuning in for the final. Even Australian daytime soaps, Neighbours and Home & Away attracted better rating figures despite their scheduling last week.

So how would I sum up The Jump? It was something different and clever that turned into a television danger zone. While I watched it all the way through for the interest of something new, I don’t think I’d tune in if it returned in 2015. In fact, I don’t think many will be shedding tears when this winter sports laughing stock is put to sleep and into the television graves of reality show failures. 

Sunday, 19 January 2014

Dancing on Ice - Thank you and farewell

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

Some programmes on television go far too soon before they become the hits they should be, whilst others stay on the air despite being completely out of date. One show that has reached its natural conclusion is the ITV skating show Dancing on Ice.


Presented by the silver fox Phillip Schofield and Christine Bleakley, the programme is currently in its ninth and final series which is a celebration of the previous eight years where a hosts of previous champions, runners-up and entertainers come back to make friends with the ice again in a bid to become the champion of champions. The show – not expected to be a hit when it first appeared in our winter schedules in January 2006 has become anything but a failure. However, the executives at the leading terrestrial commercial channel have made the right call in not deciding to continue with another series after 2014.
It is farewell to Dancing on Ice after nine series in March
This piece will look at some of the best moments of Dancing on Ice (logo pictured above), the top partnerships and routines, the blubbering moment where Todd Carty became an internet sensation and some of those acid tongue insults from Mr Nasty, Jason Gardiner.

Skating with Celebrities
To start with, the programme was titled as 'Skating with Celebrities' and ITV approached former Olympic champions Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean to help perform new routines and coach/mentor celebrities to perform on the ice. At first, the skating duo who had captured our hearts with the epic ‘Bolero’ routine that won gold in the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo said no but after a change of title to Dancing on Ice and more thought, agreed to give this a go.

10 celebrities competed in series one, ranging from soap actors and actresses, to musicians, sports stars, journalists, models and Olympians. As the years have progressed, more competitors start on the journey with as many as 14 per series in recent years. All the celebrities are paired with professional skaters who have become almost as recognisable as the actual celebrities we watch with anticipation. However, only Matt Evers and Daniel Whiston have competed with an amateur to start with in every single series of the programme.

Dancing on Ice became an instant early hit, which was a surprise to the producers as Britain’s love of ice dancing was rekindled. 11.6m watched the grand finale to the first series, won by actress Gaynor Faye. The peak of the show came in the third series (2008) when the programme was moved to a Sunday night from its original Saturday evening slot. Ratings reached a peak of 14m during final evening when the former Hearsay singer Suzanne Shaw pulled off two amazing performances to land the first coveted maximum scores of 30.0 (five 6.0s) in the history of Dancing of Ice.

Panel Wars
The basics of the show haven’t changed but one thing that has often been reformed is the Ice Panel (pictured below) and they are a competitive lot of people who want their say and give natural and constructive criticism to the skating couples. Only former Olympic champion and head judge Robin Cousins has remained as a judge throughout every single series as different quotas have joined him on the panel. It started with five judges, which shrunk to three for series six before rising back to four in 2013. Other regulars have included Nicky Slater, Karen Barber (who also coaches the celebrities) and ex-Spice Girl Emma Bunton. Karen Kresge, Ashley Roberts, Ruthie Henshall and Natalia Bestemianova have also had at least one series on the panel.
The current Ice Panel: Robin Cousins, Karen Barber, Ashleigh Roberts and Jason Gardiner
The majority of the panel’s comments are justified. They will praise the good parts of a performance and give feedback on the weaker elements of a routine. Sometimes this can lead to serious disagreements between the Ice Panel themselves. Then you have Jason Gardiner in the mix. His comments have often been insulting, vile and distasteful towards the elements of competition but also fun with the programme. While some of his jibes have been fair enough, such as calling Gary Lucy ‘boring’ in series five because he was others were well wide of the mark.

He called Dame Kelly Homes a “man in drag!” in series one, said Kay Burley’s “smile makes you look demented!” in series two, told Tana Ramsey in series five that she had “the sensuality of a frigid schoolmistress” and accused former Olympic swimmer Sharron Davies of “not looking human” in the same series. There isn’t any place for Gardiner to start character assassinating the celebrities for something they are trying to learn but I guess it is part of the entertainment value of the programme’s identity.

One of the funniest dialogues was in series three with tennis pro Greg Rusedski. After another lame performance from the 1997 US Open finalist, Gardiner said: “You know Greg; you have the charisma of cardboard! You are as dull as dishwater mate!” In typical Rusedski fashion, he responded back by saying “I’ll make the final and we’ll see.” Gardiner then said “if he would make the final, he wouldn’t be there!” It was a dialogue classic but Greg crashed out in the series three quarter-finals so ultimately it was all for nothing.

Injuries and snazzy costumes
Dancing on Ice has had its thrills but also its spills. Andi Peters fell over during the introduction to a show in series one, then got up in typical fashion and said “that’s Andi!” He was quickly sent packing by the public. David Seaman dropped his professional partner Pam O’Connor twice in 2006 and there have been other numerous injuries which have led for many celebrities and even pros needing medical treatment. The most serious was a broken ankle for entertainment reporter Michael Underwood which ruled him out of the 2008 series in the third week of the competition. Although the fear remained, Michael returned a year later to do the competition properly and was voted out in week four in a skate-off when he and his pro partner Melanie Lambert were beaten by Melinda Messenger and Fred Palascak, who is married in real life to Lambert.

Unlike Strictly Come Dancing, Dancing on Ice hasn’t seen many real-life romances formed although close bonds have been formed between celebrity and professional. However two of the celebs returning in 2013 are skating with their real-life partners. Series six winner Sam Attwater is skating with fiancĂ©e Vicky Ogden and Seaman got together with Frankie Poultney during the 2009 UK tour. They are also getting married later this year.

One other thing that has made DOI standout is some of the snazzy costumes that have been worn. Men in tight costumes, women in revealing outfits, it all adds to the appeal of the show. Main costumes designer Stephen Adnitt has managed to create over 1000 costumes during the nine series and millions of sequins have been used per year. His job is imperative to the success of the show.

The sublime to the ridiculous
There have been some incredible partnerships in the history of the show. Kyran Bracken and Melanie Lambert in series two, Ray Quinn and Maria Filippov in series four but top of the pile in my view was the pairing of Hayley Tamaddon and Daniel Whiston for the 2010 series.

Best friends for the best part of two decades, Tamaddon, who recently joined the cast of Coronation Street was the runaway favourite of series five. Together with Whiston, they put in my favourite ever routine, which can be seen below. They danced to ‘Jai-Ho’ from the Bollywood movie sensation ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ and produced a flawless performance that wouldn’t be out of place in a professional competition.


That was sublime but the most ridiculous contestant and perhaps the funniest is Todd Carty. Best known for his roles as ‘Tucker’ in Grange Hill and Mark Fowler in EastEnders, Carty turned up for series four and he simply couldn’t skate or even perform. On week three, he made a spectacular exit from the ice arena when his toe pick got caught in the ice, taking out the cameraman and two other professional skaters. While partner Susie Lipanova continued with the routine, Carty was pushed onto his feet, came back onto the ice in time with the end of the music and then gave a rather pathetic plea to the public to keep in safe from the dreaded skate-off. It led to him becoming an internet phenomenon and DOI commentator, the late Tony Gubba struggling to keep his laughter in check.


Carty has returned for the final series and lord only knows what will happen five years on.

The final curtain
From the surprise rise of Donal McIntyre in series four, to Heather Mills becoming the first amputee to compete on the show a year later, Dancing on Ice has been on an incredible journey with the public. However it has reached its final curtain.

Series nine started a fortnight ago with 14 previous heroes from the show’s past coming back to perform in the all-stars edition. Four celebrities have already skated for the last time as Joe Pasquale, the recently departed Hollyoaks actress Jorgie Porter, Lucy and Seaman have exited the competition.

10 stars remain with the prize of being the all-star champion up for grabs. For Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean, it will close the chapter on a sensational career which has seen them still gracing the ice 30 years after the first sight of ‘Bolero’ in Sarajevo. Unless it is a serial drama or you are Simon Cowell who can make something last forever, all programmes reach their natural conclusion and with format changes, lower ratings and lack of starring celebrities, the time has come for Dancing on Ice to be retired.

Hopefully the final series will go out with a bang and not a whimper. It is thank you for all the memories it has created since 2006 and in around eight weeks’ time, farewell.

CELEBRITIES WHO HAVE COMPETED IN DANCING ON ICE:
Series 1: Dame Kelly Holmes, John Barrowman, Bonnie Langford, Stefan Booth, Gaynor Faye, David Seaman, Andrea McLean, Sean Wilson, Andi Peters, Tamara Beckwith
Series 2: Kyran Bracken, Clare Buckfield, Lee Sharpe, Lisa Scott-Lee, Duncan James, Ulrika Jonsson, Stephen Gately, Emily Symons, Phil Gayle, Kay Burley, Neil Fox
Series 3: Chris Fountain, Suzanne Shaw, Gareth Gates, Zaarah Abrahams, Steve Backley, Natalie Pinkham, Michael Underwood, Linda Lusardi, Greg Rusedski, Samantha Mumba, Tim Vincent, Aggie MacKenzie, Sarah Greene
Series 4: Ray Quinn, Jessica Taylor, Donal MacIntyre, Zoe Salmon, Michael Underwood, Coleen Nolan, Todd Carty, Melinda Messenger, Ellery Hanley, Roxanne Pallett, Graeme Le Saux, Gemma Bissix, Jeremy Edwards  
Series 5: Hayley Tamaddon, Mikey Graham, Danniella Westbrook, Kieron Richardson, Heather Mills, Gary Lucy, Emily Atack, Danny Young, Sinitta, Dr. Hilary Jones, Sharron Davies, Jeremy Sheffield, Tana Ramsay, Bobby Davro
Series 6: Sam Attwater, Laura Hamilton, Jeff Brazier, Chloe Madeley, Johnson Beharry, Jennifer Metcalfe, Vanilla Ice, Denise Welch, Comedy Dave, Kerry Katona, Dominic Cork, Elen Rivas, Steven Arnold, Angela Rippon, Craig McLachlan, Nadia Sawalha
Series 7: Matthew Wolfenden, Jorgie Porter, Sebastien Foucan, Jennifer Ellison, Chico, Heidi Range, Chemmy Alcott, Andy Whyment, Sam Nixon, Charlene Tilton, Mark Rhodes, Rosemary Conley, Corey Feldman, Laila Morse, Andy Akinwolere
Series 8: Beth Tweddle, Luke Campbell, Samia Ghadie, Matt Lapinskas, Anthea Turner, Gareth Thomas, Oona King, Joe Pasquale, Lauren Goodger, Keith Chegwin, Shayne Ward, Pamela Anderson