翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Switch to right-hand traffic in Czechoslovakia
・ Switch Up
・ Switch Up (R. Kelly song)
・ Switch V
・ Switch virtual interface
・ Switch-reference
・ Switch.co
・ Switch/I Only Want to Be with You
・ Switch56
・ Switcha
・ Switchback
・ Switchback (band)
・ Switchback (Celldweller song)
・ Switchback (film)
・ Switchback (Music for Pleasure song)
Switchback (TV series)
・ Switchback Railroad Trail
・ Switchback Railway
・ Switchback School
・ Switchback Trail
・ Switchback, West Virginia
・ Switchball
・ SwitchBlade
・ Switchblade
・ Switchblade (album)
・ Switchblade (band)
・ Switchblade (disambiguation)
・ Switchblade (video game)
・ Switchblade Honey
・ Switchblade II


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Switchback (TV series) : ウィキペディア英語版
Switchback (TV series)

''Switchback'' was a Canadian television show for children, teens and young adults broadcast on CBC Television in the 1980s. It was produced regionally from Vancouver, Winnipeg, Regina, Halifax, Calgary and Toronto.
==The first ''Switchback'': Vancouver==
Produced by Nijole Kuzmickas and originally hosted by Canadian folk musician Rick Scott, CBC Vancouver's ''Switchback'' was a weekly Sunday morning live broadcast that began in January 1981. The name "Switchback" referred to the program's original format, which invited young viewers to trade used toys, comic books, and other bric-a-brac. Viewers could either call in or write in with offers, which were written on a board on the studio set or later featured in a free classified-ad-style publication put together by the show and mailed out to viewers who requested it. This feature was dropped after the first season. The show regularly featured phone-in contests and write-in raffles for prizes such as T-shirts, LPs and toys. An old cowboy cliff-hanger adventure serial was also featured weekly during the first season. The second season began with host Gordon White, soon replaced by Richard Newman (now a voice actor), who remained with the show for two and a half years.
A memorable show during Newman's tenure was the "dippy-dome" episode, which ran mock news flashes and backward footage of the inflation of the original B.C. Place Stadium roof. The episode unwittingly predicted, nearly a quarter-century before the fact, the dome's accidental deflation in 2007. Numerous hosting changes followed Newman's exit while the show struggled to recapture the rapport created by Scott and Newman. CBC Vancouver's desperation in this regard was evident: Producer and writer Phil Savath took over the program and hired a teenager, Andrew Cochrane, at that time attending Churchill Secondary School and performing with the Vancouver Theatresports League. Cochrane went on to host Switchback in Halifax while he was attending law school at Dalhousie University. Cochrane also hosted the children's game show ''5-4-3-2-Run''. An interesting sidebar: Cochrane is at present a Crown Prosecutor in Vancouver.
Regular sketch performers included improvisors Colin Mochrie, Richard Side, Ian Boothby, Jay Ono, Randy Schooley and Riel Hahn.
''Switchback'' was notable also for being the first regular broadcaster of rock videos in British Columbia. In the days before MuchMusic and CBC's ''Good Rockin' Tonite'', ''Switchback'' served as a Canadian MTV. (Early on, Bill Henderson, lead singer of Chilliwack, was guest host for one week. Later on, Terry David Mulligan's ''Good Rockin' Tonite'' successor, Stu Jeffries, became the host of the late-period Switchback.) In the early years of the show, guest hosts included Bob Geldof of the Boomtown Rats in his pre-Band Aid/Live Aid incarnation. Through interviews and by broadcasting videos, ''Switchback'' also did much to promote local Vancouver rock musicians, notably the Payola$, Loverboy, Doug and the Slugs and Henderson's Chilliwack.

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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