The Getaway Car | |
---|---|
Genre | Game show |
Presented by | Dermot O'Leary |
Starring | The Stig |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Production | |
Production locations | Cape Town, South Africa |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC One |
Release | 16 January – 3 September 2016 |
The Getaway Car is a British game show that has aired on BBC One from 16 January to 3 September 2016. It is hosted by Dermot O'Leary and is themed around motoring; it also features the character The Stig from the BBC car show Top Gear , as well as supporting characters the Red Stig and Blue Stig, described as The Stig's adolescent nephews.
The show's initial commission was for twelve hour-long episodes and made by Charlotte Moore, the controller for BBC One and Mark Linsey, the controller of entertainment commissioning. It was executive produced by Andy Rowe, series produced by Emma Taylor and its head of format, Clare Pizey, oversaw proceedings. This initial series is hosted by Dermot O'Leary, with assistance from the anonymous racing driver character The Stig, who had previously featured on BBC Two's motoring show Top Gear.
In each episode, five teams of two contestants each compete in three rounds of car based competition, which reduces the field down to a final couple, who in the final round try to win as much money as possible by racing the Getaway Car against The Stig. The contest is pitched as much as a test of the relationship of the couple as it is of their driving ability.
Speaking on 8 January 2016 episode of the BBC's The One Show, O'Leary described the show as " Total Wipeout behind the wheel of a car meets Gogglebox - in the same way that when you watch Gogglebox, you see what people are like in their front room", "you get couples who supposedly love each other but you put them behind the wheel of a car and they speak to each other in the most intolerable way". One Show presenter Rory Bremner described it as " Mr & Mrs meets Top Gear meets The Chase "
The teams take turns to complete a timed obstacle course, laid out inside a small race track, part of which also serves as the course finish straight.
The obstacles are negotiated as follows:
The fastest three automatically qualify for Round Two, the remaining two must compete in a playoff to decide which team is eliminated from the show.
The co-driver of each team must sit in a car driven by either the Red Stig or Blue Stig, as they race each other around the mini-track for two laps. Just before they set off, they are given a question which will have multiple possible answers (e.g. from Episode 1: "Countries whose name ends with the letter A") – the winner is the team who gives the most right answers.
The four remaining teams must take turns to race a timed lap of an off-road course, featuring the named corners Cape of No Hope and Cheetah's Corner, and a hump obstacle Sillymanjaro. Their final time is their raw time plus any time penalties incurred, issued as follows:
The fastest two teams automatically qualify for Round Three, the remaining two must compete in a playoff to decide who become the second team eliminated from the show.
As with Round One, the Round Two payoff involves the team co-drivers having to answer a multi-choice question as they sit in a car driven at speed by Red Stig and Blue Stig, although in this case on the off-road course and for only one lap. If both teams give the same number of answers, it reverts to the speed.
In Round Three, on a stretch of tarmac next to the mini-track, the last three teams must repeatedly race each other down three parallel and segregated winding race lanes. At the end of their lanes they must choose to smash through one of two foam walls each painted with a picture on it (each lane having their own pair of walls with the same pictures). The pictures represent one right and one wrong answer to a question asked just before the cars set off on each race (e.g. in Episode 1 they are country flags and the question is "The Eurostar links Great Britain, France and which other country – Belgium or Holland?").
At the start of the round, each team has two lives, and at the end of each race one team loses a life, decided based on which team(s) answered wrongly, and if multiple teams got it wrong (or if all got it right) the tie is resolved based on who finished slowest. The races are repeated until two teams have been eliminated by losing both their lives.
In Round Four, the final team must race the Getaway Car around the mini-track at night, for a maximum of two laps, pursued by The Stig in a supercar described as "significantly faster" than the Getaway Car. To make it a fair contest, the team are given a head start of a number of seconds, worked out on a case by case basis by the "pit crew" (e.g. 8 seconds in Episode 1). The race ends when either The Stig passes the team, leaving them with whatever money they have won, or they reach the finish line, winning the £10,000 prize. Along the course are three money gates with set values (£1,000, £2,000, £3,000 on the first lap, £6,000, £8,000 and £10,000 on the second), which, if reached by the team before they are passed, denote the prize money they will win. The £3,000/£10,000 money gate is the finish line.
For the Round One obstacle course, the teams are driving old, modified Volkswagen Golfs, fitted with roll bars and painted in their team colours in a theme, aided with a large symbol mounted on their roof.
For the Round One race-off, Red Stig and Blue Stig are driving identical Jaguar F-Type S coupes, painted metallic red or blue.
For the Round Two off-road course, the teams are driving new off-road buggies, painted in their team colours.
For the Round Two race-off, Red Stig and Blue Stig are driving identical Polaris 4 by 4s, painted red or blue.
In Round Three, the teams each race identical new Fiat 500 Abarths or Mini Coopers, identified with their respective coloured team markings.
In the Final Round, the Getaway Car is a Toyota 86 painted white with two black stripes, described as the fastest car they will have driven in the competition. The Stig pursues the team in supercar described as "significantly faster" than the Getaway Car, with the model chosen on an episode by episode basis. In Episode 1, it is a Mercedes AMG GT S, painted white.
The show received mixed reviews from critics. Radio Times described it as "fun family entertainment to drive away the January blues", adding the show, "which sees couples team up, row and give The Stig a run for his money, is a winner", however Matt Baylis in the Daily Express said that "the only viewers who could have stayed the course, I suspect, would have been TV critics or people forced to watch it while being interrogated in secret CIA prisons". Michael Hogan of The Daily Telegraph noted that "the longer the show went on, the more its faults became apparent" and described the show as "slow, repetitive and unevenly paced" and feeling "like an over-stretched segment on Top Gear , TFI Friday or a bushtucker trial". [1]
Nigel Ernest James Mansell is a British former racing driver, who competed in Formula One from 1980 to 1995. Mansell won the Formula One World Drivers' Championship in 1992 with Williams, and won 31 Grands Prix across 15 seasons. In American open-wheel racing, Mansell won the IndyCar World Series in 1993 with Newman/Haas Racing, and remains the only driver to have simultaneously held both the World Drivers' Championship and the American open-wheel National Championship.
The Stig is a character from the British motoring television show Top Gear. Created by former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson and producer Andy Wilman, the character is a play on the anonymity of racing drivers' full-face helmets, with the running joke that nobody knows who or what is inside the Stig's racing suit. The Stig's primary role is setting lap times for cars tested on the show. Previously, he would also instruct celebrity guests, off-camera, for the show's "Star in a Reasonably Priced Car" segment.
Think Fast is an American children's game show which aired on Nickelodeon from May 1, 1989, to March 30, 1990, with reruns airing weekly until June 29, 1991.
Fun House is an American children's television game show that aired from September 5, 1988 to April 13, 1991. The first two seasons aired in daily syndication, with the Fox network picking it up and renaming it Fox's Fun House for its third and final season.
F1 Race is a racing video game developed by HAL Laboratory and published by Nintendo for the Famicom in 1984. A version was released in 1990 for the Game Boy in Japan and in 1991 in Europe and North America, including the Four Player Adapter for four-player gameplay.
Robotica is a robot combat show produced for the American television cable channel TLC, a subsidiary of the Discovery Channel, from April 4, 2001, to November 16, 2002. Ahmet Zappa and Tanya Memme hosted all three seasons while Tanika Ray only hosted the first season with Dan Danknick replacing her for the second and third seasons.
Benjamin Lievesley Immi Collins is a British racing driver from Bristol. He has competed in motor racing since 1994 in many categories, from Formula Three and Indy Lights to sportscars, GT racing and stock cars.
The 2008 Chinese Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 19 October 2008 at the Shanghai International Circuit. It was the 17th and penultimate race of the 2008 Formula One World Championship. Lewis Hamilton for the McLaren team won the 56-lap race from pole position. Ferrari driver Felipe Massa finished second, and Kimi Räikkönen was third in the other Ferrari.
The Top Gear test track located at Dunsfold Aerodrome in Surrey, United Kingdom was used by the BBC automotive television programme Top Gear. The track was designed by Lotus Cars as a testing facility, with many of its Formula One cars tested there. It was used to test both cars and drivers seen on the programme, mainly in Power Laps and Star in a ... Car.
Real World/Road Rules Challenge: The Gauntlet III is the 15th season of the MTV reality game show, The Challenge.
Top Gear challenges is a segment of the Top Gear television programme where the presenters are tasked by the producers, or each other, to prove or accomplish various tasks related to vehicles.
Top Gear: Winter Olympics is a full-length, special edition episode for BBC motoring programme Top Gear, and is the first in a series of full-length specials for the show. The episode was aired on 12 February 2006, with a repeat of the episode being aired a week later on 19 February. The special saw hosts Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May travelling to Lillehammer, Norway and creating their own version of the Winter Olympics with cars. The episode was later released on DVD on 5 June later that year. Unlike most of the subsequent specials this special was not based around long distance cheap car road trip challenge but rather an episode that featured cars mostly new cars that were on the market taking part in modified versions of Winter Olympic sport save for the Ski Jump challenge involving an old Leyland Mini. The only other Top Gear special not to be centred around a cheap vehicle challenge was the Top Gear: Polar Special which involved a modern Toyota Hilux up against a dog sled.
The 2010 Spanish Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2010 Formula One season. It was held on 9 May 2010 at the Circuit de Catalunya. It was the first European race of the 2010 season, and was ultimately won by Red Bull's Mark Webber after the Australian qualified on pole and led every lap of the race.
Global Rallycross was a rallycross series operated by businessmen Colin Dyne in conjunction with Sponsor RedBull. The series ran for seven seasons, primarily in North America, from 2011 to 2017.
Time Masters is an Australian children's game show hosted by Tony Johnston from 1996 to 1998 on the Seven Network. Running for three seasons, Tony would meet the two school teams consisting of two players each. The teams then participated in three rounds of games, competing for points. After five days of play, the winning school would take home the major prize, whilst the losing school would take home a runners up prize. In each of the five daily episodes, players won player's prizes, and for Scramble, the fastest player also won a watch. In 1998, the show ended and was replaced with Wipeout a year later, also hosted by Johnston.
Top Gear is a British automotive magazine and currently inactive motoring-themed entertainment television programme. It is a revival devised by Jeremy Clarkson and Andy Wilman of the 1977–2001 show of the same name for the BBC, and premiered on 20 October 2002. The programme focuses on the examination and reviewing of motor vehicles, primarily cars, though this was expanded upon after the broadcast of its earlier series to incorporate films featuring motoring-based challenges, special races, timed laps of notable cars, and celebrity timed laps on a course specially-designed for the relaunched programme. The programme drew acclaim for its visual and presentation style since its launch, which focused on being generally entertaining to viewers, as well as criticism over the controversial nature of its content. The show was also praised for its occasionally controversial humour and lore existing in not just the automotive community but in the form of internet memes and jokes. The programme was aired on BBC Two until it was moved to BBC One for its twenty-ninth series in 2020.
Don't is an American comedic physical game show that aired on ABC from June 11 to August 13, 2020. The show was hosted by Adam Scott. Ryan Reynolds served as an executive producer and commentator. The show features teams of four trying to accomplish various tasks to win up to $100,000. In April 2021, the series was canceled after one season.
The 2022 DoorDash 250 was the twelfth stock car race of the 2022 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, and the fifth iteration of the event. The race was held on Saturday, June 11, 2022, in Sonoma, California at Sonoma Raceway, a 2.385 miles (3.838 km) permanent road course. The race took the scheduled 75 laps to complete. At race's end, Kyle Busch, driving for his own team, Kyle Busch Motorsports, put on a dominant performance, leading 45 laps for his 62nd career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win, and his first of the season. To fill out the podium, Zane Smith of Front Row Motorsports, and Ty Majeski of ThorSport Racing, would finish 2nd and 3rd, respectively.
The 2022 Drive for the Cure 250 presented by BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina was the 29th stock car race of the 2022 NASCAR Xfinity Series, the final race of the Round of 12, and the 50th iteration of the event. The race was held on Saturday, October 8, 2022, in Concord, North Carolina at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, a 2.280 miles (3.669 km) permanent road course. The race was increased from 67 laps to 72 laps, due to several NASCAR overtime finishes. A. J. Allmendinger, driving for Kaulig Racing, held off Ty Gibbs in the final few laps to earn his 15th career NASCAR Xfinity Series win, and his fifth of the season. To fill out the podium, Noah Gragson, driving for JR Motorsports, would finish 3rd, respectively. Allmendinger and Gibbs would mostly dominate, leading 25 and 24 laps.