''Showmatch'' was an Argentine television program, broadcast by
eltrece
Canal 13 (known by its current brand name El Trece, stylized as eltrece) is an Argentine free-to-air television network and the flagship station of the network of the same name, located in the capital of Argentina, Buenos Aires. It is owned by ...
. It replaced the comedy show
Videomatch
''Videomatch'' was a late-night 120-minute Argentine comedy show hosted by Marcelo Tinelli and broadcast on Telefe that first aired in March 1, 1990 in the midnight time slot.
Currently the show still airs under the name of '' Showmatch'' (changi ...
in 2004, and from 2006 has produced the dancing contest ''
Bailando por un Sueño
Bailando may refer to:
* Bailando (Paradisio song), "Bailando" (Paradisio song), 1996
* Bailando (Enrique Iglesias song), "Bailando" (Enrique Iglesias song), 2014
* Bailando (Rouge song), "Bailando" (Rouge song), 2018
* ''Bailando!'', special prom ...
'' ("Dancing for a Dream"), along with similar contests such as ''
Cantando por un Sueño
''Cantando por un Sueño'' (Singing for a Dream) is a television contest produced by the Mexican television network Canal de las Estrellas which also aired on Univision in the United States. As with its twin show ''Bailando por un sueño'' (Da ...
'' ("Singing for a Dream"), ''
Patinando por un Sueño'' ("Skating for a Dream"), and ''
El Musical de tus Sueños'' ("The Musical of your Dreams"). In 2009, it presented "
Gran Cuñado
Gran Cuñado (in Spanish, "Big Brother-in-law") was a segment of the Argentine TV programs ''Videomatch'' and ''Showmatch'', hosted by Marcelo Tinelli. It consisted of a series of comedians characterized as Argentina's Politics of Argentina, most ...
" ("Big Brother-in-Law"), a parody of the reality show ''
Big Brother'', a segment carried over from ''Videomatch''.
''Showmatch'' is one of Argentina's most-watched programs, and scored as the country's highest-rated TV show in 2010 and 2011.
It has played host to a number of celebrity guests from around the world, including former boxer
Mike Tyson
Michael Gerard Tyson (born June 30, 1966) is an American former professional boxer who competed between 1985 and 2024. Nicknamed "Iron Mike" and "Kid Dynamite" in his early career, and later known as "the Baddest Man on the Planet", Tyson i ...
and footballer
Ronaldinho
Ronaldo de Assis Moreira (born 21 March 1980), commonly known as Ronaldinho Gaúcho () or simply Ronaldinho, is a Brazilian former professional Association football, footballer who played as an attacking midfielder or left winger. Widely reg ...
.
History
Showmatch is the new name of the program presented by Marcelo Tinelli, succeeding Videomatch, a sports and comedy show.
On September 2, 2005, Tinelli signed a major contract with Artear, operator of eltrece, thus opting to move to the channel of the ''solcito'' (little sun), where he eventually would set the program since 19 September 2005. The negotiations between the two companies had begun in April, at the initiative of Adrian Suar, director of programming of the station. As background, Suar and Tinelli already had preliminary negotiations in an attempt to moving during 1997.
"This is a bet that transcends economics, I feel it is a long-term path that tends to insert the program into a broader platform, which will open more possibilities to Argentine production and international expansion," Tinelli said when closing the contract. Meanwhile, Federico Hoppe and Pablo Prada became the main producers of the program. Since its inception, the program's eight seasons remained to be issued consecutively until the end of the cycle in 2012, where the program stopped being broadcast until 2014, the year in which the program retakes its emissions.
In its first season (2005) and half of Season 2 (2006) the program continued the format of its predecessor ''Videomatch'', with the famous hidden cameras, music, skits with guest artists, humorous sketches, among others, but due to the popularity of the segment ''Bailando por un Sueño'' (Dancing for a dream), since 2007, it became an annual competition and the program was entirely based upon this, as well as ''Cantando por un Sueño'' (Singing for a dream) and ''Patinando por un Sueño'' (Skating for a dream).
In 2009 upon celebrating 20 years, it returned to the original format during the first half of the year, also incorporating the segments ''Gran Cuñado'' (Big Brother-in-Law) and ''Bailando Kids''. As of August it began airing the contest ''El Musical de tus Sueños'' (The musical of your dreams).
In 2010, a new segment called ''Baila Argentina'' was incorporated, in which cities across the country competed through dances with massive people calling, but after some emissions, it stopped airing in Showmatch because of time, and it became part of ''Sábado Show'' (a show broadcast by the same channel and hosted by cast member José María Listorti).
In 2011, the show only aired ''Bailando por un sueño'', and in the last 7 seasons (2012, 2014-2019), in addition to this classic contest, there were parodies of celebrities, politicians and people from the show business appearing to interact with the host and the judges.
Production
Performances
An important feature of the show are televised performances made for the start of each season, which dubs of movies or series with a humorous tone are shown, parodies of several films, and large shows of presentation, in which different musical pieces are mixed accompanied by several choreography parts, carried out by the show's team of dancers and artists from different acrobatic disciplines. These stagings are prepared months in advance to be presented to the season premiere.
Within the format ''Bailando por un Sueño'', there were other outstanding artistic productions: the so-called "special rhythms" which usually consist of acrobatic discipline performances, full of visual effects. For example, the productions known as:
* "Bailando bajo la lluvia" (Dancing under the rain): where participants must dance under water in a scenery set to simulate a city street. Such show is that each couple occupies this space to develop different storylines with dancing. The climatic effect is achieved using more than 25 sprinklers that spew water steadily toward the track. For this, the studio is fitted with a drain system to support the flow of water. Producers were based on the film
Singin' in the Rain
''Singin' in the Rain'' is a 1952 American musical romantic comedy film directed and choreographed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, starring Kelly, Donald O'Connor and Debbie Reynolds, and featuring Jean Hagen, Millard Mitchell, Rita Moreno a ...
for the realization of the "rhythm".
* "Cuarto giratorio" (Rotating room): which was incorporated during the seventh season, based on a cubic element of about three meters and a half edge, similar to a room with bare front, where a camera is put only inside the cube. There is where couples must develop the choreography, while this is driven by a hydraulic mechanism which in turn is controlled with a command joystick, by the coach of the couple, who imbues speed to the unidirectional room (right-left). While transmitted by television, the effect of seeing the participants as if they walked through the roof and side is shown. The construction of the cube is done in a steel structure, in which a wooden room is decorated differently, according to the theme of the choreography.
* "Bioesfera" (Biosphere) is another example of these assemblies, which is an orbit built with the same material as the pole dance pole, whose pendulous movement depends on a
ball bearing
A ball bearing is a type of rolling-element bearing that uses balls to maintain the separation between the bearing races.
The purpose of a ball bearing is to reduce rotational friction and support radial and axial loads. It achieves this ...
that rotates over its own axis. It is hung in the middle of the studio, and there, the participants must perform their stunts while the music plays.
* "Aquadance", to this day, is the production with most technical requirement. It is a "rhythm" created in the third season, after the idea of finding and preparing new choreography to capture the attention of the audience. With this, the producers decided to make a big show of aquatic acrobatics, similar to those made in Las Vegas. This discipline was adapted and presented in the program as one of the dance rhythms. In the routine, the program's couples were immersed in acrylic fountains, making figures to the beat of a music track. It was so successful that since then, the show was held every year, having been modified three times. The second time it was done, there were three fountains used with a dancing water system that worked with the progression of the performance, fireworks combined with music and projection effects. Finally, since 2011, the three acrylic fountains mounted in one piece, with two slides and iron supports holding a fourth fountain, located more than 2 meters high, are used. From there the scenery is mounted in a fiberglass pool, covering the dance floor, with two waterfalls and 22 peaks of dancing waters. For all three occasions, the pools were filled with more than 10,000 liters of warm water, and counted with a new recycling system.
Controversy
The show has also been an ongoing source of controversy, and has been accused of sexual discrimination and
objectification
In social philosophy, objectification is the act of treating a person as an object or a thing. Sexual objectification, the act of treating a person as a mere object of sexual desire, is a subset of objectification, as is self-objectification, th ...
of women.
Awards
References
{{El Trece
Talent shows
El Trece original programming
2004 Argentine television series debuts
2000s Argentine television series
2010s Argentine television series