翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Call Cobbs, Jr.
・ Call collision
・ Call completion
・ Call Connection
・ Call control
・ Call Control eXtensible Markup Language
・ Call detail record
・ Call Down the Moon
・ Call duck
・ Call duration
・ Call Equiname
・ Call Federal Credit Union
・ Call Field
・ Call For Action
・ Call for bids
Call for Help
・ Call for Love
・ Call For Music
・ Call for service
・ Call for the Dead
・ Call for the orders of the day
・ Call for the Saint
・ Call forwarding
・ Call gapping
・ Call gate
・ Call girl
・ Call Girl (1974 film)
・ Call Girl (2007 film)
・ Call Girl (2012 film)
・ Call girl (disambiguation)


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Call for Help : ウィキペディア英語版
Call for Help

''Call for Help'', also known as ''CFH'', is a computer-themed television program that first aired exclusively on TechTV (formerly ''ZDTV''), a cable and satellite television network focused on technology, and then aired on G4techTV Canada and the HOW TO Channel in Australia. The final taped episode aired on February 26, 2007, but because the episodes were taped out of order, a number of other episodes taped during the same shooting week aired through April 6, 2007. A spin-off called The Lab with Leo Laporte aired much of the same content as ''Call for Help'' and ran on the same networks. The Lab was canceled about one year later due to low viewer ratings and the final episode aired in August 2008.
==United States==
Broadcast live from San Francisco, California, the show premiered on May 11, 1998 with Leo Laporte as host. The show's very first caller (by accident) was Laporte's mother. He functioned as a technical advisor to viewers experiencing difficulties with their personal computers (or "personal confusers", as Laporte jocularly referred to them). Such individuals were encouraged to contact the show via e-mail, telephone or webcam, with telephone/webcam users serving as on-air participants. Laporte also welcomed in-studio guests (including Martin Sargent, Roger Chang, Brett Larson, Hahn Choi and others), who expertly highlighted and reviewed various technology products with a novice perspective in mind.
In 2001, Laporte decided to focus solely on another TechTV program, ''The Screen Savers,'' and Becky Worley became the lead ''Call for Help'' host (briefly joined by Scott Herriott as co-host). Later that year, Chris Pirillo took over the lead hosting duties, with Alison Strahan Cat Schwartz, Morgan Webb, and TechLive correspondent Laura Burstein serving as rotating co-hosts. In 2003, Pirillo left TechTV for publicly unspecified reasons, and Laporte returned as lead host alongside Cat Schwartz. Morgan Webb left her ''CFH'' co-hosting duties (and her other show, ''The Screen Savers'') to co-host TechTV's ''X-Play''.
''Call for Help'' performed an annual "Call-for-Help-a-Thon" on December 26, 2002. The live telecast lasted eighteen hours in 2002, and twelve in 2003, during which viewers with questions pertaining to new technology gifts called in.
In December 2003, the original animated cartoon opening and theme music were replaced with a new live-action sequence, featuring Laporte and Schwartz, and a different song. A new version of the show's logo was introduced.
In May 2004, TechTV and G4 merged to form G4techTV. ''Call for Help'', despite being the network's second-highest rated show (ranked just below ''X-Play'' in viewership), did not appeal to the combined channel's target demographic in the opinion of G4 executives, and was cancelled immediately. The final United States edition of ''Call for Help'', taped two days prior, aired on May 21, 2004.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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