Large food items are thrown in, including mystery superfoods with plus or minus points written on. On one occasion, instead of a celebrity, Penfold from Danger Mouse was used.Ĭelebrities go head to head in a giant spinning wheel and try to get food down a throat hole. The celebrity loser is then asked to pie themself.Ī celebrity is 'locked up in jail' and answers as many questions they can in 100 seconds.Ī/two celebrity/s is put in detention and has to answer questions about themselves until the school bell rings.
This was changed for later series and replaced with "How Much?" and "Whose Shop?", both led by Joe Tasker. While the crew count the rolls, Johnny Nelson played a game with the contestant called "Jonny's random supermarket item pricing game while we count the toilet rolls". They can choose between 3 trollies, which change each week. Each toilet roll is worth a point, with the golden toilet roll being worth 10 points and the brown toilet roll causing them to lose 5 points. Two celebrities must push a shopping trolley into a pyramid of 800 toilet rolls to see how many they can collect. These include choosing what episode of a programme to show and choosing who does a task like tidying up the studio or eating a gross item. Joe and Harpz then rate them out of five.Įach week, a viewer watching at home is chosen to make various decisions. Viewers are asked to pull silly faces and send in pictures. Viewers are asked to send in a picture of themselves doing something different each week (for example, throwing away their homework). Viewers at home on the phone must guess what number of an object is in the other object. Segments How Many Things in the Thing? Ī number of an object (for example, footballs) are placed into another object (for example, a phonebox). When the show resumed production after quarantine, to follow the health guidelines, the episodes were filmed without the kid audience, and all celebrity guests practiced social distancing.Īs of 2022, the show brought back its kid audience in future episodes, with the current COVID-19 vaccine available to all under the age of 5. Up until the COVID-19 pandemic, the show was filmed in front of a studio audience who are children. It is also the first time a Saturday morning Kids Show has ran into the afternoon since 1993 Guests picked what they were going to watch and the 2nd part began at 10:15 and ended at 12:15. In the Christmas 2020 episode Part 1 aired from 9am-9:30am with a 45 minute break at 09:30 due to 2 Christmas specials on CBBC and Cbeebies. The show originally aired until 11am but was expanded to 11:30am in Series 3.
The show includes celebrity guests, games, sketches and CBBC shows, and focuses on live chat with children across the United Kingdom, either on the phone or via the web. Every week, the series broadcasts live from BBC Pacific Quay Studios, in Glasgow.
In 20, special programmes were also produced as part of the CBBC Summer Social TV coverage. Spin-off series Summer Mash-Up aired during the 2020 summer holidays in a 30-minute Thursday afternoon slot (temporarily replacing Blue Peter). The 3rd series resumed on 7 November to broadcast the remaining episodes in the series.Ī new series began on 23 January 2021 although it is still listed as series 3. However, due to the 2019–2020 Coronavirus pandemic, the show was presented from Tasker, Kaur, and Chapman's houses via video-link under the name Saturday Mash-Up! House Party, from 4 April until the end of the series on 30 May. A third series started on 1 February 2020. Ī second series aired from 29 September 2018 on CBBC (with repeats on BBC Two from the previous Saturday morning). It is said to "continue the tradition of iconic Saturday morning programmes such as Live & Kicking, Going Live!, Saturday Superstore and Multi-Coloured Swap Shop". It is CBBC's first series in this genre since TMi moved to Fridays in 2010.