The TV format has been sold in other countries like: Czech Republic, Denmark, Indonesia, Norway, Turkey and in the Middle East on the Arabic channel
MBC1.
United Kingdom The British version, made by Talent Television for the BBC, was originally presented by
Anne Robinson and
Phillip Schofield. It ran for 17 editions between 2002 and 2007. The BBC tests were devised and standardised by the academic
Colin Cooper, of
Queen's University Belfast, who was sometimes referred to on the programme as 'Sooperman Cooperman'. Viewers could play along using
interactive television, log onto the BBC
website, or just use a pen and paper to keep score. The first show, in May 2002, was an IQ test and the six groups of 50 studio participants included blondes, builders, publicans, teachers and students. They were pitted against a group of 10 celebrities including
EastEnders star
Adam Woodyatt, pop music presenter
Jayne Middlemiss, Olympic athlete
Jonathan Edwards and former
Sunday Times editor and broadcaster
Andrew Neil. The teachers came out on top. The last IQ test in the UK was shown on 27 August 2007, when the studio groups were reality show contestants, clairvoyants, surgeons, removal men, Robinsons, Wallaces and celebrities. In this episode
Danny Wallace, a successful writer, made his first appearance as co-host. He replaced
Phillip Schofield, who had joined ITV at the time. Experts who joined Dr Colin Cooper on the IQ test panel have included Sylvia Herbert, a director of British
Mensa (2002 and 2003) and Baroness
Susan Greenfield, scientist and polymath (2004). Although there was usually an end-of-year test in the UK each year around Christmas, there wasn't one at the end of 2006. But at the start of 2007 there was a similar programme broadcast on BBC One called
Your Country Needs You, presented by
Patrick Kielty, with the same general format.
United States The American version aired as a two-hour special on
Fox TV on 9 June 2003 and on 5 March 2004 as
Test the Nation 2. Hosted by
Mark L. Walberg and
Leeza Gibbons.
Ireland Test the Nation: The National IQ Test is an
RTÉ Television programme, based on the successful BBC concept,
Test the Nation. First airing on
RTÉ One on 5 June 2006, the show follows the UK format almost identically. In studio, two presenters oversee proceedings, which feature 6 teams of 40 contestants from various sectors of society. Members of the public participate by
SMS or via the internet. The
Macromedia Flash applications used are identical to those used by the BBC. A trial version of the application appeared prior to the first quiz night, featuring 12 questions on a number of topics, including the
Birmingham Six, the former occupants of the
Grafton Street site now occupied by
Brown Thomas, and which Irish alcohol company
Salvatore Schillaci advertised for. This version of
Test the Nation covers the whole island of Ireland as opposed to just the
Republic; thus there is overlap between the content of the RTÉ and BBC versions of the show. As opposed to the BBC system of division by nearest city (which let people in Ireland enter if they chose Belfast), RTÉ divide results by historical
Irish county.
The first show The show first aired on RTÉ One on 5 June 2006, with
Miriam O'Callaghan and
Ray D'Arcy overseeing proceedings. As well as historical
Irish counties, other questions asked for demographic division included the participants preference for
tea or
cappuccino, and their support for
Roy Keane or
Mick McCarthy during
The Saipan Incident. Their in-studio teams were Hairdressers,
Football fans, an extended family from
County Clare, employees of
Revenue, Estate Agents, a collection of people who had done their
Leaving Certificate in 1986, and the "RTÉ Allstars", a collection of RTÉ presenters including
Eddie Hobbs and
Charlie Bird. The show was nominally part of, and the last show in, an RTÉ series
The Time of Our Lives, covering the 20 years from 1986 to 2006, during which the
Irish economy changed the country unrecognisably.
The second show This aired on 1 January 2007 and was presented by Miriam again but this time
Craig Doyle was her co-host. It was a test of the nation's IQ. It was revealed that the county with the highest IQ was
Monaghan. Panelists included
Neil Delamere,
Cathy Kelly and
Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin.
Canada Test the Nation debuted in Canada 18 March 2007 on the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation with the episode
Test the Nation: IQ. A second episode called
Test the Nation: Watch Your Language was broadcast on 9 September 2007, a third episode aired on 20 January 2008, called
Test the Nation: Trivia, and a fourth episode
Test the Nation: Sports aired on Sunday 25 May at 8 pm (8:30 NT) on CBC Television. A fifth episode
Test the Nation: Canada Eh? aired on Sunday 7 September at 8 pm (8:30 NT) on CBC Television. The sixth episode called "Test the Nation IQ" was broadcast on 24 January 2010 and was the second version of the IQ edition. People were tested on their IQ through a test that was designed by Professor James Parker from Trent University and Professor
Don Saklofske. Celebrities that had their IQ's tested included
Justin Trudeau, Dragon's Den's
W. Brett Wilson and Our Lady Peace's
Jeremy Taggart. In an interesting twist, Test the Nation had professional hypnotherapist Donald Currie hypnotize members of each team to see if hypnosis could help them achieve better IQ test scores. 1/3 of the hypnotized group did experience a jump in IQ score of up to 10 points. The Canadian show was hosted by
Wendy Mesley and
Brent Bambury for the first five editions, except
Test the Nation: Sports, which was hosted by
Ron MacLean and
Wendy Mesley. The sixth edition was hosted by
George Stroumboulopoulos and
Carole MacNeil. In the Canadian version, celebrity guests are selected to represent one of six in-studio teams. The celebrity guests also take the test and the top celebrity's score is revealed on air.
Test the Nation: Trivia featured celebrities:
Farley Flex,
Debbie Travis,
Lorne Cardinal,
Carlo Rota,
Samantha Bee and
Tricia Helfer.
Test the Nation: Sports celebrity guests are
Paul Coffey,
Debra DiGiovanni,
Alan Thicke,
Brian Bailey,
Victoria Pratt and
Chris Murphy. All of the episodes were written by Kristeen von Hagen & George Westerholm and Edward Kay.
Australia The Australian version, titled
Test Australia: The National IQ Test, was the most viewed television show in Australia in 2002. Versions of the program aired in 2003 and again in 2010.
Italy The Italian version, titled
Fratelli di Test, was aired in Italy in 2007. ==Broadcast dates==