Local television ''You Can't Do That on Television'' premiered on February 3, 1979, on CJOH-TV in
Ottawa. It was a locally produced, one-hour, low-budget variety program with some segments performed live. The show consisted of
comedy sketches,
music videos, and live phone-in contests in which the viewer could win prizes such as
transistor radios,
record albums,
model kits, etc. The format also included performances by local
disco dancers and special guests such as Ottawa-based cartoonist
Jim Unger. Each week, the show took its "roving camera" to hangouts around town, recording kids' jokes or complaints about life, which were played on the following week's broadcast. The show also benefited from links with popular
Top 40 Ottawa radio station
CFGO. For example, station personality Jim Johnson emceed the disco-dance segments and shared tidbits about the artists featured in music videos. Veteran comedy actor
Les Lye played numerous recurring characters and was initially the only adult to perform in the show's sketches. He was the only actor to appear for the entire series' run. Actress
Abby Hagyard, who played the maternal character "Valerie" opposite Lye's paternal role "Lance," joined the series in 1982. Occasionally, the older children in the cast (including
Christine McGlade, Sarah West or Cyndi Kennedy) played adult characters. The show offered programming for children on Saturday mornings that made no attempt to be an
educational program. The idea was successful, as (according to one episode) the show scored a 32 share of the ratings for CJOH in its 10:30 a.m. Saturday time slot. The studio masters for the first-season episodes no longer exist, and all but three of the episodes from the first season were believed lost until early 2013, when copies of the missing episodes from off-air recordings were contributed by Roger Price and posted on
YouTube. The format was similar to
You Must Be Joking! and ''You Can't Be Serious'', children's sketch variety shows that Price created and produced for
Thames Television in Britain from 1974 to 1978.
National television in Canada After a successful first season, a national
network version of ''You Can't Do That on Television
entitled Whatever Turns You On'' was produced for
CTV and debuted in September 1979 (its hour-long
pilot episode had aired in May). The show's creators shortened it to 30 minutes, removed local content, and added a
laugh track. They replaced music videos with live performances from popular Canadian artists including
Trooper,
Max Webster,
Ian Thomas, Ottawa's own
Cooper Brothers (one of whose members,
Dick Cooper, later became a writer for
YCDTOTV) and disco singer
Alma Faye Brooks.
Ruth Buzzi joined the cast playing many of the adult female characters, including a strict schoolteacher named Miss Fidt and the studio secretary Miss Take. In addition, the 22 children from the first season were trimmed down to seven:
Christine McGlade,
Lisa Ruddy, Jonothan Gebert, Kevin Somers, Kevin Schenk, Rodney Helal and Marc Baillon. Another first-season cast member, Elizabeth Mitchell, only appeared in the pilot episode. The show was placed in the 7:00 p.m. timeslot on Tuesday nights, and some CTV affiliates opted not to carry the show, possibly because of concerns about its content. As a result, CTV cancelled the show in December 1979 following poor ratings after only 13 episodes. In January 1981, production on
YCDTOTV resumed, and a new set of episodes aired locally on CJOH through May 1981. The format of the 1981 episodes was similar to that of the inaugural 1979 season, but each episode featured sketches that revolved around a certain topic (something that carried over from
Whatever Turns You On). As disco's popularity had waned, the dancers were replaced by
video-game competitions. At that time, Price and Darby tried to syndicate
YCDTOTV. They edited each 1981 episode into a half-hour format similar to that of
Whatever Turns You On. Some scenes were reshot to remove any specifically Canadian content, and the half-hour syndicated edits became entirely sketch comedy. The 1981 season was rerun on CJOH in early 1982 in the half-hour syndicated format. To compensate for the removal of local content, Price and Darby created a new local show for CJOH titled
Something Else, which featured many of the
YCDTOTV cast in a game show/variety format similar to that of
The Price Is Right. The
YCDTOTV team also made a pilot television film for
Disney in 1981 titled
Bear Rapids that was never picked up. Four of the hour-long CJOH episodes from the 1981 season ("Strike Now", "Sexual Equality", "Crime and Vandalism", and "Peer Pressure") are available for public viewing on
YouTube. The rest are only currently available in the half-hour edits.
Nickelodeon Peak years In 1981, the new American youth-oriented cable network
Nickelodeon took an interest in
YCDTOTV. Nickelodeon originally aired several episodes in the edited half-hour syndicated format as a test run. The response was positive, and in January 1982, Nickelodeon began airing the entire edited season. By 1983,
YCDTOTV was the network's highest-rated show. Production on new episodes of
YCDTOTV resumed full-time in 1982 in the half-hour all-comedy format, with Nickelodeon and CJOH as production partners. Over the next few years, the series was screened nationally in Canada.
CTV, the network CJOH-TV was affiliated with, broadcast the show on Saturday mornings between 1982 and 1990, with little publicity. However,
YCDTOTV continued to expand its audience in the United States on Nickelodeon, where it initially aired five times a week and eventually every day. The series gained broader exposure in its native Canada in 1988 when it was added by the newly established youth-oriented
YTV cable channel. It was heavily promoted and aired daily during peak viewing hours. Viewers in the United States were given the opportunity to enter the Slime-In, a contest hosted by Nickelodeon that flew the winner to the set of ''You Can't Do That on Television'' to be slimed. The contest was later replicated by Canada's YTV as the Slime Light Sweepstakes. In 1983 at
WGBH-TV in
Boston, Massachusetts, Roger Price created a version of
YCDTOTV for American public television network
PBS titled
''Don't Look Now (originally to be titled Don't Tell Your Mother!
). The show was similar to episodes from the 1979 season of YCDTOTV
, including music videos and several earlier YCDTOTV'' sketches and motifs (including a variation on the show's trademark green slime gag called "Yellow Yuck"). Despite high ratings, the series ended after its five-episode trial run in October 1983, possibly because of complaints from parents about its content. Nickelodeon was also concerned that if ''Don't Look Now
was successful, it could mean the end of YCDTOTV''. The series was believed lost until all five episodes surfaced in early 2013. They have been posted on
YouTube, excluding the copyrighted music videos. Price created another show for Nickelodeon in 1985, the less successful
Turkey Television. It featured several main cast members of
YCDTOTV including Les Lye, Christine McGlade, Kevin Kubusheskie and Adam Reid. By this time, McGlade, now in her twenties and eager to move on with her life, had moved to Toronto and was flying back to Ottawa for
YCDTOTV taping sessions.
Turkey Television also marked McGlade's debut as a producer, a career that she continued after leaving
YCDTOTV in 1986. Another Price production using
YCDTOTV cast members,
UFO Kidnapped, was made in 1983. Although the pilot aired on Nickelodeon, the series was not picked up.
Changing of the guard and controversies By 1987, many of the veteran cast members such as Matthew Godfrey, Douglas Ptolemy, Vanessa Lindores and
Adam Reid had grown too old for the show. Longtime host Christine McGlade ("Moose") had departed the previous year, as had
Alasdair Gillis (who had been promoted to co-host with McGlade in 1985 before leaving toward the end of the 1986 season). Lisa Ruddy ("Motor Mouth"), McGlade's longtime sidekick on the show, left at the end of the 1985 season. Only five episodes were filmed for the 1987 season, tying with the 1990 season as the shortest during the show's 11-year run. The episode "Adoption," was so controversial that it was banned after being shown twice. A "DO NOT AIR" sticker was placed on the master tape at CJOH. "Adoption" is the only episode that was banned in the United States. Co-creator Geoffrey Darby has stated that he felt the episode went too far, and that the writers were unaware of the sensitive nature of the material. In Canada, the "Divorce" episode was banned. However, the "Adoption" episode was shown with edits. In the sketch in which Senator Prevert calls the adoption agency to send his son back after using him to do chores all day, the line in which he calls the adoption agency officer a "damn bureaucrat" was excised. In addition, Nickelodeon had removed the half-hour edits of the 1981 episodes of ''You Can't Do That on Television'' from its daily rotation, along with the 1982 "Cosmetics" episode. The 1981 episodes were set to air for the last time during a 1985-week-long promotion called "Oldies but Moldies," with contests in which viewers could win prizes such as "tasty, fresh chocolate syrup". Instead, the episodes continued to air until the end of 1987, but not often. Reportedly, this was because Nickelodeon's six-year contract to air the 1981 season expired in 1987. As Nickelodeon was beginning to aim for a younger demographic, and many of the 1981 episodes dealt with topics more relevant to teenagers (such as smoking, drugs,
sexual equality and
peer pressure), the network opted not to renew the contract. Nickelodeon allegedly removed the "Cosmetics" episode from rotation for the latter reason (although the "Addictions" episode from that same season was not dropped). By contrast, when Canada's YTV began airing the series in 1989, they continued airing the 1981 season as part of the package, as well as
Whatever Turns You On, which was never shown in the United States.
Final years Roger Price moved to
France following production of the 1987 season after being informed that Nickelodeon was not planning to order more episodes. Production was suspended for 1988. When Price eventually returned to Canada, he wanted to resume production of ''You Can't Do That on Television
from Toronto, but was convinced by the cast and crew to return to Ottawa and CJOH. Nickelodeon ordered more YCDTOTV'' episodes for the 1989 season. Auditions were held at CJOH in the spring of 1988, and taping began that fall.
Amyas Godfrey and Andrea Byrne were the only child cast members to transition from 1987 to 1989. However, a few minor 1986 cast members returned for episodes, including Rekha Shah and James Tung. Opinions regarding the 1989 and 1990 episodes of
YCDTOTV are mixed among longtime fans of the show, particularly regarding the new episodes' increasing reliance on
bathroom humor and more slime and water gags (which was supposedly at the request of Nickelodeon executives). The show did not completely sever ties to its past, as many former cast members reappeared during the 1989 season in cameo roles, most notably in the "Age" episode, which was hosted by Vanessa Lindores (who was slimed twice during it) and also featured cameos by Doug Ptolemy, Alasdair Gillis, Christine McGlade and Kevin Kubusheskie (who by that time had become a stage producer on the show). Gillis also appeared briefly in the "locker jokes" segment during the "Fantasies" episode, and Adam Reid, who by this time had become an official writer for
YCDTOTV, also appeared (and was slimed) at the very end of the episode "Punishment." The show's ratings declined throughout 1989 and 1990. The network's desire to produce more of its own shows at
its new studios at
Universal Studios in
Orlando, Florida, coupled with low ratings, caused production of ''You Can't Do That on Television'' to officially end in 1990 after only five episodes (tying 1990 with 1987 as the shortest season of the series). Though ratings declined, Nickelodeon continued to air
reruns until January 1994, at which point it was only aired on weekends. On October 5, 2015, Nickelodeon's sister network
TeenNick brought the show back in reruns as the first program on
The Splat, its expanded classic-themed block. The airings began with the first two 1981 episodes, "Work" and "Transportation," marking the first time that those episodes had aired on American television in 30 years. However, only two additional episodes ("Christmas" and "Holidays" from the 1984 season) have been aired since. As of March 23, 2021, the 1981 season has been made available to stream on
Paramount+.
International airings YCDTOTV was aired in Australia with great success on
ABC Television in the late 1980s, beginning with 1981's "Work, Work, Work." It first aired at 5:30 PM on weekdays starting in April 1987. After its first two runs, it was moved to a 7:00 AM weekday morning timeslot in 1989. In February 1991, it was back to afternoons at 5 pm on The Afternoon Show with Stephanie Osfield., where it continued until June 1991. It then moved into a 11 am weekday time slot in December 1991 , where it remained for the entirety of 1992 , but many children would catch it during School Holidays. It finished up on the ABC in Australia, in the weekday 11 am timeslot in February 1993. The series was also seen in European countries and reportedly in countries in the Middle East (with
Arabic dubbing), although no French-dubbed version for distribution in either France or countries in the
Francophone world is known to exist. Nor were any local adaptations based on the
YCDTOTV format known to have been made.
YCDTOTV was also broadcast in several other countries, such as the United Kingdom (on the former satellite and cable children's network
The Children's Channel), New Zealand (on
TV3), Germany (on
Armed Forces Network with the original English audio), Saudi Arabia (on the country's former English-language channel
Saudi 2) and the Philippines (on
RPN-9).
DVD Releases As of today, You Can't Do That On Television has not appeared in partial sets or the complete series. Announcements had been made that the series would be released in 2006, but the series has not materialized in Home Video on DVD or Blu-ray. No official information regarding the absence of this program has been provided.
Parody YCDTOTV has been occasionally referenced during episodes of
Robot Chicken, including some of the show's trademark gags, such as locker jokes, Barth's Burgery and green slime. In the
Family Guy episode "
Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Jr. High",
Peter Griffin is slimed after saying "I don't know'". It was followed immediately by a still shot that is a direct reference to
YCDTOTV's opening sequence, with the words "You Can't Do That on Television" written in red over a man's face. A later episode of the series was titled "
You Can't Do That on Television, Peter", but contained no overt references to
YCDTOTV. In the
NewsRadio episode "The Song Remains the Same", Mr. James celebrates
April Fools' Day (in February) by having Joe install the "trigger machines" from
YCDTOTV, and then tricks the cast into getting slimed and doused with water. The "1981" episode of
VH1's ''
I Love the '80s 3-D features a segment on YCDTOTV'' that features
Hal Sparks,
Alyson Hannigan and
"Weird Al" Yankovic all getting slimed after being tricked into saying "I don't know."
Wil Wheaton is also slimed during the opening credits.
YCDTOTV is also loosely parodied in the 2010
How I Met Your Mother episode "Glitter", with
Cobie Smulders' character on the Canadian television show "Space Teens" making several references to the show. In reality, Smulders grew up a fan of the show. The
Saturday Night Live season 47 episode hosted by
John Mulaney features a humorous account of how green slime came to be introduced to
YCDTOTV and ultimately Nickelodeon.
Proposed reboot In August 2017, it was announced that ''You Can't Do That on Television'' would be getting a reboot. Original creator Roger Price would serve as executive producer, while Jimmy Fox of Main Event Media would develop the project. However, Fox stated on their
Twitter account on September 14, 2019, that the reboot had been called off. == Trademarks ==