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Súper Sábado Sensacional

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Súper Sábado Sensacional
Created byAmador Bendayan
Directed bySamuel Colina
Presented byAmador Bendayan (1968–1988)
Gilberto Correa (1988–1996)
Daniel Sarcos (1997–2009)
Leonardo Villalobos (2010–present)
StarringMilka Chulina (co-host 1992–1996)
Daniel Sarcos (1996 Mega Match segment)
Viviana Gibelli (2001–2006 Guerra de Los Sexos segment)
Country of origin Venezuela
Original languageSpanish
Production
Running time5 hours
Original release
NetworkRadio Caracas Television (1968–1970)
Venevision (1971–present)
Release1968 –
present

Súper Sábado Sensacional (originally named Sábado Espectacular in 1968, renamed Sábado Sensacional in 1971) is a Spanish-language variety show created in Venezuela, and established on Radio Caracas Television in 1968. The show later moved to Venevisión network in 1971. Shown on a weekly basis, every Saturday from 4:00 pm to 9:00 pm (sometimes longer during special occasions) it is viewed internationally throughout Latin America, the Caribbean and the United States and it is considered as one of the highest rated television shows in the country. Throughout its run, there have been four major hosts: Amador Bendayán (1968–1988), Gilberto Correa (1988–1996), Milka Chulina (co-host 1992–1996), Daniel Sarcos (1997–2009) and Leonardo Villalobos (2010–present).

Overview

Broadcast history

Súper Sábado Sensacional ("Super Sensational Saturday") was originally established on RCTV as Sábado Espectacular ("Spectacular Saturday") in 1968. The show was later renamed Sábado Sensacional ("Sensational Saturday") by 1971, upon its arrival to Venevision. In 1990, "Súper" was added to the title, and is how the show is currently known today. In Venezuela, Súper Sábado Sensacional is broadcast for 5 hours, while in all other countries it is broadcast for either 4 or 2 hours. In some countries (particularly in the U.S.), the show was often broadcast under alternate titles like Sensacionalisimo and Súper Sensacional.

As of 2009, the show no longer broadcasts in the United States.

Segments

Current Segments

  • Yo Si Canto (2010, 2011)
  • Bailando Con Las Estrellas (2011)
  • Yo Si Bailo Con Los Niños (2011)
  • El Precipicio Reforzado/Disparatado (2006–2011)
  • Buscando Una Estrella (2008, 2012–present)
  • Mega Dance (2012–present)
  • Los Alquilinos (2012-present)

Previous Segments

  • El Show del Dinero (late 1990s)
  • El Momento de La Verdad (2001–2002)
  • Vale Todo Por Amor (2010)

Spin-offs

  • Mega Match Sensacional (1996–1999 as SSS segment, 1999–2007 as its own show)

This segment consisted of national high school teams competing for minutes, not points, like other game shows, to later use them up for a special House of Prizes event. During this event, two students are picked from both schools to participate. Both stand face-to-face at a podium and the host asks them questions which they must answer to earn the minutes. If one contestant answers wrong or the other contestant answers correctly, that contestant gets pie smashed in the face. Later on, the winning contestant is given a large keyring with around 20 keys, and with it, the student has to open the eight locked doors in the two story house and complete certain tasks in each room; for example, hanging a picture frame on a wall or searching for a lost pair of shoes in a room filled with shoe boxes to obtain additional prizes. The student is given the time that his team has won during the game. If the student completes all tasks before time runs out, he or she will win 30 million Venezuelan bolívars (30,000 bolívares fuertes, around $15,000) in prizes, including a new car. The money eventually goes to the school and not just the contestant who participated in the event. Mega Match spun-off as its own show in 1999 and went off the air in 2007. This segment also marked the beginning of Daniel Sarcos' involvement with Súper Sábado Sensacional in 1996 before becoming the show's main host in early 1997.

  • La Guerra de Los Sexos (2000–2006 as SSS segment, 2009–present as its own show)

Hosted by Daniel Sarcos (later replaced by Winston Vallenilla in 2010) and Viviana Gibelli, three male celebrities compete against three female celebrities in this segment through numerous games to earn points. This segment gained popularity that it started broadcasting separately throughout the 2000s and eventually spun-off as an independent show in early 2009. Executive producer Ricardo Peña was the show's announcer and head judge until his death in 2009.

Transitions

Bendayan to Correa (1988)

The original Sábado Sensacional logo.

The heavy schedule of a long running variety television show took its toll on Amador Bendayan's health at the end of the 1970s and throughout the 1980s. His abuse of cigarettes and his struggle with diabetes mellitus made it sometimes impossible to please his audience, forcing him to rest down, with his absence being covered by other hosts, including model and actress Miriam Ochoa, César González ("el amigo de todos" - "Everybody's friend"), journalist and broadcaster Napoleón Bravo and Gilberto Correa, who at the time was the host of another successful Venevision show "De Fiesta Con Venevisión" (and would eventually take over as permanent host of SSS until 1996). Meanwhile, people were patient enough to wait for Bendayan's constant returns, welcoming him with the now memorable slogan of "Ánimo Amador!" ("Cheer up, Amador!") which later became a stample of the show during the entire decade.

The Súper Sábado Sensacional logo from the early 1990s.

Bendayan's wish for a better respect to artists around the country was fulfilled in 1985, when he hosted an event celebrating his idea of La Casa del Artista (The Artist's House, which was inaugurated officially in late 1988). But despite his efforts, Amador's health was rapidly deteriorating by this time and was forced to retire completely from the show, while the audience still watched his show and the many musical performers would sign a flipchart pleading for his return.

In late July 1989, agonizing in his deathbed, Bendayan made producer Ricardo Peña write a letter as a farewell message to Venezuela and his wish to continue producing the show with Gilberto Correa, who was in charge of reading Bendayan's last will on a special aired the day after he died, on August 9, 1989.

Amador Bendayan's death was a hard blow on everyone who worked or participated on the show, particularly on Ricardo Peña. Despite the grief, the show kept on with new host Gilberto Correa and co-host Milka Chulina, generating higher ratings and focusing even more on multitudinary events, like state fairs (i.e. Feria de San Sebastian), the Super Bingo de la Bondad, and the Festival de la Orquidea (an event founded by Bendayan in 1982, to celebrate the Maracaibo Chiquinquira Fair).

Correa to Sarcos (1996-97)

The logo used when Daniel Sarcos took over as host in 1997. A 2-dimensional version was used during Correa's final season, and for a brief period during Sarcos's tenure.

Daniel Sarcos's youthful energy caught the eye of Gilberto Correa, who at the time saw his own inevitable retire that same year. Sarcos started in 1996 by covering the "Mega Match Sensacional" segment for his first year on the show, while Correa was hosting in the main studio.[1] Sarcos later took over as permanent host during a Feria de San Sebastian edition of the show, which took place on January 18, 1997. Shortly after, the stage received a huge makeover. One of the best known segments on the show was La Guerra De Los Sexos, introduced in 2001, later becoming its own show in early 2009. The talent show segment, "El Precipicio Reforzado" was added in 2006, featuring a jury of three people dressed like Juan Gabriel (played by El Moreno Michael), El Chacal (from Sabado Gigante), Alejandro Corona (later dropped in 2007), Doña Gurmesinda, Don Francisco, etc. This segment was renamed "El Precipicio Disparatado" in 2011. They have many other new segments covering many slots of the show's duration, generating criticism amongst its viewers. Despite this, Súper Sábado Sensacional still goes strong over 40 years on air, maintaining its place as one of the longest running variety shows in Latin America.

A tribute was made to Amador Bendayan for the 20th anniversary of his death. Former host Gilberto Correa, as well as many other previous guests of Súper Sábado Sensacional all returned to participate in the tribute. The original Sábado Sensacional theme song was used for the intro of this episode.

Nearly two months after the airing of Bendayan's tribute, executive producer Ricardo Peña died in his home of natural causes. On Saturday of that week, Daniel Sarcos, along with nearly all of Venevision's employees paid tribute to Peña during that airing of Súper Sábado Sensacional. Peña served as executive producer on the show since 1977.

Sarcos to Villalobos (2010)

Sarcos later signed a contract with a network in Ecuador. Venevision got deeper into details with the situation, and by January 2010, Sarcos finally admitted that he has signed a contract with Ecuavisa, and was willing to still continue with Venevision, but production executives did not allow it. His contract with Venevision expired, and Sarcos left Súper Sábado Sensacional.[2]

On February 13, 2010, entertainer Leonardo Villalobos debuted as host of Súper Sábado Sensacional, following his departure from his previous show, Portada's. Villalobos first appeared in the "El Precipicio Reforzado" segment during a Festival de La Orquidea edition of SSS in 2009 before he took over as host.

Notable guests

Many guests on the show include: Don Francisco, Cristina Saralegui, Jackson 5, John Travolta, Shakira, Mana, Jerry Rivera, Mirla Castellanos, Los Adolescentes, Salserin, Servando and Florentino, Thalía, Juanes, Chayanne, Emmanuel, Rocío Dúrcal, Soledad Pastorutti, Ricardo Montaner, Luis Fonsi, Lila Morillo, David Bisbal, Simon Diaz, Alejandro Fernández, El Moreno Michael, Kudai, Paulina Rubio, Pablo Montero, Oscar D'León, Celia Cruz, Juan Gabriel, Olga Tañon, Wisin & Yandel, Rakim y Ken Y, Tony Dize, Fey, Nelson de la Rosa, Jorge Celedon, Chino & Nacho, Tito El Bambino, Don Omar, Calle Ciega, Los Cadillac, Pandora Peaks, Elvis Crespo, as well as many more.

Theme music

While the original theme for the show's broadcast on RCTV is unknown, the first theme used on Venevision's broadcast was called "Sábado Sensacional" and was composed by the late Arnoldo Nali. In 1990, a new theme with new lyrics was used for the show's opening, though the previous theme was still used for when the host was introduced. This theme was re-arranged again in 1996 for Gilberto Correa's final season and would be used for the majority of Daniel Sarcos's run until 2008. In 2009 (the final year with Sarcos as host), the show debuted a new theme composed by Miguel Mardeni and Eli Cordero and is still used to this day.

All previous theme songs are still used often during special editions of Súper Sábado Sensacional, though the intact versions have not been released due to Venevision's current copyright regulations.

Venevision's 50th anniversary celebration

Súper Sábado Sensacional was one of the shows that celebrated Venevision's 50th anniversary. Throughout various recent episodes, Súper Sábado Sensacional showed numerous retrospective clips of previous episodes, as well as a tribute to the late Ricardo Peña. Gilberto Correa returned to the show once again to co-host a special episode alongside current host Leonardo Villalobos.[3] Daniel Sarcos was slated to return as well, but declined.

References

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