It's Alive!
GenreVariety
Created byKevin Lund
Written byKevin Lund
Ben Joseph
Josh Morris
Franklin Young
Julie Donoahue
Jessica Wright
Directed byKevin Lund
Rick Watts
StarringTaulene Ayoub
Jennifer Baxter
Mike Beaver
Shayleen Butler
Haydn Chase
Jeff Colt
Stacey DePass
Eva Preger
Adrian Pryce
Patricia Ribeiro
Jamie Shannon
Tikka Sherman
Ian Sirota
Danny Smith
Robert Tinkler
Scott Yaphe
Jason Walker
Mark Adam Zeifman
ComposersRichard Rodwell
Country of originCanada
Production
Executive producersKevin Lund
Josh Morris
Ian Murray
ProducersJosh Morris
Kevin Lund
Rick Watts
Production locationsYTV Studios
Toronto, Ontario
EditorIan Gardner
Running time90 minutes (Season 1)
60 minutes (Seasons 2-3)
30 minutes (Season 4)
Production companyGRC Productions
Original release
NetworkYTV
ReleaseMay 14, 1994 (1994-05-14) 
August 10, 1996 (1996-08-10)
Related
Uh Oh!

It's Alive! is a Canadian children's variety show that aired on YTV between 1994[1] and 1996. Coined "the least educational show on television", the show mainly consisted of comedy sketches, celebrity interviews, musical performances, game shows, and obstacle challenges. In its original six-episode first season, episodes were 1½ hours long, which also contained an episode of programs including Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. Starting in the second season, the show was cut back to one hour with the television programs dropped from the show. In the fourth and final season, the show was cut to a half-hour. Most of the sketches and the obstacle courses were shot at various locations in Toronto, while the musical performances, game show segments, and celebrity interviews were done in front of a live studio audience full of children at YTV's studios in Toronto. A unique aspect of the show was the use of product placements including 3DO, Crispers, and Canada Games. The game show, Uh Oh!, which was inspired on a game show parody sketch during its second season, later became a spin-off show after It's Alive! ended in 1996.

References

  1. "Ontario Scene". March 14, 1994. Retrieved 2021-09-01.


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