Showmatch


Showmatch is a popular Argentine television program, currently broadcast by Channel 13. It replaced the comedy show Videomatch in 2004, and from 2006 has produced the dancing contest Bailando por un Sueño, along with similar contests such as , Patinando por un Sueño, and El Musical de tus Sueños. In 2009, it presented "Gran Cuñado", a parody of the reality show Big Brother.
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 and footballer Ronaldinho. However, the show has also been an ongoing source of controversy, and has been accused of sexual discrimination and the objectification of women.

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 signs a major contract with Artear, operator of eltrece, thus opting to move to the channel of the solcito, 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 passing during 1997.
"This is a bet that transcends economics, I feel it is a path of long - term 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 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 and half of Season 2 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, since 2007, it became an annual competition and the program was entirely based upon this, as well as Cantando por un Sueño and Patinando por un Sueño.
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 and Bailando Kids. As of August it began airing the contest El Musical de tus Sueños.
In 2010, a new segment called Baila Argentina is 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 Sabado Show.
In 2011, the show only aired Bailando por un sueño, and in the last 3 seasons, 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.
Another of the most outstanding artistic productions are, within the format Dancing for a dream some so- called "special rates" which usually consist of acrobatic performances, full of visual effects disciplines. For example, the productions known as: