Europe The format of ''It's a Knockout!
was used in many European countries, with each version forwarding teams for the international version, Jeux sans frontières''. In the United Kingdom, participants came from the heats of ''It's a Knockout''. The original presenter was
McDonald Hobley, but he stayed for just one series before handing over to
Katie Boyle, who in turn was replaced by
David Vine and
Eddie Waring. It was not until 1972 that the presenter most associated with the role,
Stuart Hall, took over presenting the UK heats and also provided the British commentary for the international version along with Waring, who was better known as the BBC's Rugby League commentator.
Wales had its own team between 1991 and 1994 and the programme was broadcast on
S4C in Welsh by Iestyn Garlick and
Nia Chiswell.
Australia Almost Anything Goes! aired in Australia from 1976 to 1978. It was hosted by Tim Evans and Brendan Edwards and featured Sean Kramer and Australian Rules player
Ron Barassi. It was filmed in Melbourne. The 1976 season featured two complete competitions with initial heats and finals, while the 1977 and 1978 seasons featured only one each. Following the 1977 grand final, the season finale featured a competition between the top two teams from the grand final and a team representing New Zealand. An Australian version of ''It's a Knockout!
ran on Network Ten from 1985 to 1987. The teams were divided into the Australian states: New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia. The show was hosted by Billy J. Smith, along with Fiona MacDonald for the duration that it aired in Australia. They would arrive to the show in a golf buggy. The show was filmed in a field in Dural, New South Wales, but due to numerous complaints from local residents, the show was dropped in 1987. This version aired in Mexico on the TV Cable Network Multivisión and was a success in 1992, and also in the U.S. on KCAL-TV in Los Angeles & WWOR-TV in New York in 1990–91. It was also adapted and shown in Argentina as Supermatch''. This version was heavily edited, and the
anchors were replaced by off-screen commentators. In October 2011, it was announced that Channel 10 Australia would re-launch a new version of ''It's a Knockout!'' for its 2011–12 summer programming line-up hosted by
HG Nelson,
Charli Robinson and
Brad McEwan. Due to insurance costs, the show was filmed in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and ran for eight 1-hour episodes between December 2011 and January 2012 and featured teams of 15 from each state of Australia.
New Zealand In New Zealand, a series based on ''It's a Knockout!
called Top Town'' ran from 1976 to 1990, and was revived in 2009.
United States: Almost Anything Goes! The American version of ''It's a Knockout!
, re-titled Almost Anything Goes!
, by Bob Banner, aired on ABC in the United States from 31 July to 28 August 1975. It won the time slot on Thursday nights against reruns of The Waltons on CBS and a short-lived Ben Vereen variety show (Comin' at Ya!'') on
NBC. In the first season, there were four regional events (North, East, South, and West); each had teams representing cities with populations of 20,000 or smaller from three different states, and each city had to be within 200 miles of the other two. The four winners then met in a national final. The second season consisted of 14 episodes, broken up into nine episodes where all three cities were from a particular state, three regional finals (East, South, and West – there was no North regional in the second season) consisting of three state winners, a national final consisting of the three regional winners, and a "Supergames" where the second season winner competed against the first season winner and a team of celebrities representing Hollywood. For its second season (24 January to 2 May 1976),
AAG! moved to Saturday nights after the cancellation of the short-lived
Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell variety show. Sports announcers
Charlie Jones and
Lynn Shackelford were the
play-by-play and
color men on this version which featured small towns across America playing the games.
Sam Riddle, who was one of the producers, served as field reporter in 1975 along with
Dick Whittington, the latter being replaced by
Regis Philbin in 1976.
Boulder City, Nevada, won the 1975 series and
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, won the 1976 series. In a showdown, Boulder City beat Chambersburg and a celebrity all-star team (the "Hollywood Tinsel Towners"). However, it was up against
The Jeffersons and
Doc on CBS and
Emergency! on NBC, and was shortly cancelled thereafter due to low ratings. A children's version, called
Junior Almost Anything Goes! and hosted by
Soupy Sales, ran on Saturday mornings from 11 September 1976 to 4 September 1977. A syndicated celebrity version (
All Star Anything Goes!) hosted by
Bill Boggs ran from 16 September 1977 to September 1978. Tony DeFranco of
The DeFranco Family performed the theme song for the
All Star Anything Goes syndicated show. ==Charity specials==