[quote name=\'uncamark\' date=\'Oct 17 2003, 03:00 PM\'] Fox was ehhh as a host (to you New Yorkers, how did "Wonderama" become such a New York TV institution with him hosting?) and veteran game show producer/creator Mark Maxwell-Smith came on camera as Fox's wacky sidekick. Originally shot with either no audience or a very small and quiet audience, CBS had it sweetened up the wazoo after the first few eps. If I recall, a catchy theme written by Merv's bandleader Mort Lindsey accompanied by a crude-but-effective animation of the show's mascot (Fox: "He's a funny fellow, isn't he?"). Only ran one season, like most of the eat-your-fruit live-action Saturday-morning series of the era (yeah, there was some sort of educational content in the show, damn if I remember what it was).
No way in hell it'll make the Top Twelve. [/quote]
Point by point.
A little history on why "Wonderama" was such a magical show. Kind of the same reason Chicago was so fond of "Bozo the Clown". "Wonderama" was really inherited by Sonny Fox, which debuted in September 1955 on WABD-TV (precursor to WNEW-TV, Channel 5) and was hosted by Sandy Becker ("Geeba Geeba"). Herb Sheldon followed, and then Bill Britten, which was the first "Wonderama" done in front of a kid audience. Fox showed up for duty on 1/4/59, and the show changed from being a live show to being taped on a Thursday morning/afternoon. Word quickly spread that tix to "Wonderama" equaled a day off from school, tons of games for toys and other prizes, very cool and unique guest stars, and a goodie bag for every kid globbed with stuff like chewing gum, Turkish Taffy, other candy, and topped off by -- what else? a toothbrush. Bob McAllister, the best-remembered and best host, took over 8/13/67 and hosted the show for ten more years after that. After that, the title was used for a non-audience, pretaped show with kid hosts visiting zoos, factories and such, which lasted six more years, four additional in repeats. One of those kid hosts was a redheaded kid named JD Roth.
"Wonderama" was an incredible format to kid merchandise, and with the potential for kids to win up to ten toys in "Snake Cans" or a bicycle in "Musical Chairs", it's no wonder there was a five year waiting list for tickets. Yep, five years. You had to be an infant to want to be on "Wonderama" because by the time the show sent you the tix, you were too old to be on it!
The other thing, and there's no way I know why I remember this, is Fox's "WOG" opening: "He's a funny fellow, he is." Nitpicky, but when you hear it for two years straight, you kind of committed it to memory. But I do agree that Fox was rather wooden on everything I've ever seen him host, from "WOG" to "$64,000 Challenge". I also think by the time "WOG" premiered, Fox was a kidvid executive at CBS. So by that time he was a suit, so despite the sportswear he came off as maybe a little too earnest. I saw him host a B/W "TTTT" a few years ago on GSN and he had that same vibe. "Wonderama" was the show where he could transcend it.
As for throwing projectiles from roller coasters, I really don't see the educational value there. I guess they were stressing teamwork and good sportsmanship above all.