List of Brotherhood episodes and Nickelodeon Guts: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Television
[[Image:Brotherhooddvd.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Season 1 DVD box set, released on September 26, 2006 in Region 1 format]]
| show_name = Nickelodeon Guts
'''''Brotherhood''''', an American [[Television drama series|television drama series]] created by [[Blake Masters]], premiered on July 9, 2006 on the cable network [[Showtime]] in the United States and ended its first season on September 24, 2006. The show's second season debuted on September 30, 2007 and ended on December 2, 2007.<ref name="New York Times">
| image = <!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Guts.png|250px]] -->
{{cite web
| caption = GUTS logo from Nick.com
|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/07/arts/television/07brot.html?_r=3&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
| show_name_2 = Global Guts
|title=In Showtime's ''Brotherhood,'' Crime and Politics Meet in Providence
| genre = [[Game Show]]
|last=Stanley
| creator =
|first=Alessandra
| writer =
|publisher=''[[The New York Times]]''
| director = Jim Dussel<br>Bill Shebar
|date=2006-07-07
| creat_director =
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}</ref><ref name="sfreview">
| developer =
{{cite web
| presenter = [[Mike O'Malley]]
|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/09/28/DDRBSFG22.DTL&hw=Brotherhood&sn=002&sc=892
| starring =
|title=Tim Goodman: Review: 'Brotherhood'
| voices =
|last=Goodman
| narrated = [[Moira Quirk]]
|first=Tim
| theme_music_composer =
|publisher=''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]''
| opentheme =
|date=2007-09-28
| endtheme =
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}</ref>
| composer =
The show has been renewed for a third season.<ref name="sf">
| country = [[USA]]
{{cite web
| language =
|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=24&entry_id=23660
| num_seasons =
|title=Erica Hill ends strike; "Brotherhood" renewed; "Wire" strands; two white guys sit and talk.
| num_episodes =
|last=Goodman
| list_episodes =
|first=Tim
| executive_producer =
|publisher=''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]''
| co_exec =
|date=2008-01-22
| producer =
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}</ref>
| sup_producer =
As of [[{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}]], [[{{CURRENTYEAR}}]], '''21''' episodes of ''[[Brotherhood (2006 TV series)|Brotherhood ]]'' have aired. The first season consists of eleven episodes and the second season consists of ten episodes; the episodes are approximately 50 minutes long each.
| asst_producer =
| cons_producer =
| co-producer =
| editor =
| story_editor =
| location = [[Universal Studios Florida]]
| cinematography =
| camera =
| runtime = 30 Minutes
| channel = [[Nickelodeon (TV channel)|Nickelodeon]]
| picture_format =
| audio_format =
| first_run =
| first_aired = 1992
| last_aired = 1995
| preceded_by =
| followed_by = [[My Family's Got GUTS]]
| related = [[American Gladiators]]<br>[[Gladiators 2000]]
| website =
| production_website =
| imdb_id = 0210723
| tv_com_id =
}}

'''''GUTS''''' is a 30-minute "action-sports" [[game show]] that aired for four seasons on [[Nickelodeon (TV channel)|Nickelodeon]] from [[1992]] to [[1995]]. [[Mike O'Malley]], now famous on [[Yes, Dear]] presided as host; British American actress [[Moira Quirk]] (often called '''Mo''') was the [[referee]]/co-host. The show was taped in [[Universal Studios|Universal Studios Florida]] on Sound Stage 21, which was not part of the [[Nickelodeon Studios]] Complex but was rented by them. The show was revived on September 15, 2008 with a family edition on [[Nickelodeon (TV channel)|Nickelodeon]] entitled ''[[My Family's Got GUTS]]''. Episodes will be produced at Universal Studios Florida, where the original series originated.

==Gameplay==
Three children or teenagers competed in four athletic events at the "Extreme Arena" for points. First place in each event was worth 300 points. Second place received 200 points, and third place earned 100. Each contestant was dressed in one of three colors: '''<font color="#1E90FF">blue</font>''', '''<font color="red">red</font>''', and '''<font color="#5F009F">purple</font>'''.

Some events were based on skills in popular sports, such as [[basketball]], [[baseball]], [[football]] and [[soccer]]. Others made use of a [[wave pool]], and sometimes a racing track was used. During the show's run, more creative and ambitious events were invented, including a fabricated [[skiing|ski slope]] and the famous "Peak to Peak." Each event was said to allow the contestants to "live out some of their greatest sports fantasies" in a competitive arena. The show was very similar to the Olympics because they handed out Gold, Silver, and Bronze medals to the three athletes.

After the first event, one of the three players was asked to "Spill Your GUTS" between the remaining events. In season one, Mike talked about the player and his or her athletic and non-athletic interests. In season two, Moira discussed the player's interests, and also mentioned what GUTS equaled to that player. In season three, during a brief prerecorded segment, players introduced themselves and revealed their athletic and non-athletic interests, what "having guts" meant to them, why they were excited to be on the show, and/or usually also give a shout-out to their friends and family back home. On ''Global GUTS'', contestants introduced themselves; non-English speakers introduced themselves in their native language, and a translator did an English voice over for them.

==Events==
There were several different types of events, ranging from field sports to pool sports. Many events made use of elastic harnesses for aerial purposes. There were also track events and an [[obstacle course]] taking place in the gym.

===Elastic/Aerial===
{{Unreferencedsection|date=November 2007}}
'''Bull's Eye'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Modeled after [[archery]], players were equipped with [[crossbow]]s and [[velcro]] arrows. With the help of the elastics, they jumped off the Aerial Bridge and fired the arrows at the targets in front of them. Only arrows that actually hit the bullseye counted, and they only counted after the player hit the ground first before bouncing back up. The player with the most bullseyes scored in 60 seconds won the event (45 seconds in one season 3 episode). All three players competed at the same time.

'''Slam Dunk'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Players jumped off the Aerial Bridge and attempted to shoot a basketball through an elevated basketball hoop with each jump. Baskets only counted if they were made after the player touched the ground. All three players competed at the same time, and the player with the most baskets scored in 60 seconds won.

'''Spirals'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: With all three competing at the same time, players jumped off the Aerial Bridge and tried to throw footballs through a set of [[tire]]s and into a net. Earlier playings of this event had six small tires (for each player) stacked on top of one another in a pyramid fashion, and later playings replaced the small tires with one large tire, colored after the player's color. The player with the most footballs thrown into his or her goal in 45 seconds (60 seconds in season 2) won.

'''Off the Wall'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: 50 baseballs were attached to each of three walls. The players jumped off the Bridge and tried to knock as many baseballs as they could off the wall. The player with the most baseballs knocked off in 45 seconds won the event (this was usually determined by how many baseballs were left on the wall).

'''Spike It'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Players jumped off the Bridge and tried to hit a volleyball over a net and onto a target on the ground. Each player received five serves. If the player had a false serve, they were allowed to take that serve over again. The player with the most volleyballs hitting the targets was the winner. On some occasions, players played the game one at a time; and at other times, all three players participated simultaneously.

'''Over the Top'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: In this event, modeled after [[high jump]] competitions, each player, one at a time, jumped off the Aerial Bridge and tried to jump over a hurdle at a set height. Each player received three jumps (two in one episode). If a player successfully cleared the hurdle, it was raised for the next jump; if not, the player attempted the next jump at the same height. The player who jumped the highest was the winner. In the first two seasons, the heights they had to clear were 6'9", then 7'5", and 8'1". In season 3, the heights were raised to 8'8", 9'4", and 10'0". On ''Global GUTS'', the heights were 2.5 meters, 2.75 meters, and 3 meters.

'''The Longest Yard'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Modeled after [[long jump]] competitions, each player jumped from the Bridge and tried to make the longest distance they could away from it, making their mark by planting their feet in a sand pit in front of the bridge. Jumps that did not include two footprints in the sand did not count. The player making the longest jump won the event.

'''Jump! Jump!'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: This event was based on hurdling competitions. Players jumped off the bridge, over two high hurdles, and onto the bridge on the opposite side, before jumping over the hurdles again and back onto the original bridge. A five-second penalty was imposed on a player if he or she knocked a hurdle down, and in the first two seasons a two-second penalty was imposed if a player needed help from the spotters. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time won the event. In the third season this event was made more difficult in that the jumps were longer and the hurdles were higher, but the penalties for spotter assistance were eliminated.

'''Make Your Mark'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Each player jumped from the Bridge and, upon jumping back up, tried to make their highest mark on a yellow wall with paint resembling Nickelodeon's famous green slime. In earlier versions of this event, players put plastic gloves on their hands and dipped them in paint before trying to slap their hands on the wall. In later playings, players jumped into a giant ink pad (in season 1, players jumped into green ink, and in season 2, players jumped into inkpads corresponding to their jersey color) and then tried to make their mark on the wall with their feet. The highest jump won.

'''Rebound'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: A basketball was placed on a solitary cylinder in the middle of the arena floor. Here, players (who were in three different corners) jumped off their Aerial Bridges and to the center of the floor, and as they jumped up, they tried to grab the basketball and take it back to their bridge, which counted as a "rebound." There were seven attempts in this event (reduced to five in season 3, but changed back to seven in ''Global GUTS''), and the player with the most rebounds won.

'''Jump Ball'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: The layout was the same as Rebound, except the floor was painted in 3 different sections - blue, red and purple. Here, when the players jumped off their bridges and to the cylinder, they would tip the basketball (the jump ball) to the floor. Whatever color section the basketball landed on, scored a point for the player of that particular color. There were seven chances in this event, and the player with the most jump balls landing in their colored section was the winner.

'''Attack'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: In this event, players were equipped with [[lacrosse]] sticks and a ball to go with it. After jumping off the bridge, each player used his or her lacrosse stick to try to throw the ball into an elevated net. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds won. All three players competed at the same time in this event.

'''Fumble'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: The players were outfitted in football equipment and were hooked to one another with elastics around their waists, as they stood in three different corners. When a player traveled in one direction, he or she pulled another player with them due to the effect of the elastics. In the center of the field, a barrage of footballs fell out of a tube, and players had to recover the fumbles from the ground and put the footballs into their own baskets. The player with the most fumbles recovered in 45 seconds won. For ''Global GUTS'', this event was renamed '''Scrumble''', and each player now had to throw the footballs into his or her designated goal post instead of a basket and the event was timed at 60 seconds.

'''Rugby'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: This game was played the same as Fumble, but with [[Rugby football|rugby]] balls, and players wore rugby shirts instead of football jerseys.

'''Zero G'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: The contestants were suspended sideways and had to run across a sideways track with hurdles and [[trampoline]]s ("Black Holes"). They also had to make their way around the "Edge of Nothing," a sharp turn onto the other side of the track. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time was the winner.

'''Touchdown'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: With elastics, the players bounced up and down as they stood in three different corners, with an elevated goal directly across from each player. Contestants were required to grab footballs from elevated racks next to them, then try to throw them into their corresponding goals. The winner was determined by who scored the most "touchdowns" in 45 or 60 seconds.

'''Peak to Peak'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Eight miniature mountain peaks were laid out in the middle of the arena, alternating between left and right. With the help of the elastics, players jumped from the Aerial Bridge and went from one peak to another before reaching the opposite bridge and returning in the same manner. Players were assessed a two-second penalty if any peaks were missed. The player with the fastest time won.

'''Slam-A-Jama'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Each player had 30 seconds to score baskets in a hoop inside of a center cylinder while the other players tried to reject the shots. After one player has had their turn, he or she then went on defense against the next player. The player with the most hoops scored won. Players on defense could not grab onto the basket while they tried to defend against a player on offense; if they did grab onto the basket, they would lose a point that they scored on offense.

'''Dodge It'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: This event was modeled after the game of [[dodgeball]]. The players were in three corners as they bounced up and down constantly with the help of the elastics. As dodgeballs poured out of an elevated tube, players attempted to catch a ball and hit one of their opponents with it. Players were allowed to catch a dodgeball thrown at them (though it would still count as a hit against that player) and use it against the player that threw it, or against another player. The player who scored the most hits against their opponents in 60 seconds was the winner.

'''Triple Jump'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: One at a time, each player had two attempts (three in one episode) to jump onto an elevated platform, then over a set of barrels, and finally over a high hurdle before landing in a sand pit. The winner was the player with the furthest footprints from the aerial bridge, but attempts that did not result in both feet being planted in the sand (including not reaching the sand due to lack of momentum) were disqualified. Players were also disqualified if either they stepped over the foul line during their jump or if they failed to clear all of the obstacles.

'''Double Play'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: This event was played similarly to the Touchdown event, except instead of footballs on elevated racks next to the players, baseballs were shot at the players from four different cannons. Each player had a fielder's glove on one hand, and had to catch the baseballs with their gloved hand before using their free hand to throw them into the elevated net directly across from them (which was referred to as turning the "double play"). The player with the most baseballs thrown into their goal in 60 seconds won.

'''Shoot Out'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Competing simultaneously, players jumped off their aerial bridges and tried to kick soccer balls into their own nets. The player who scored the most goals in 60 seconds won.

'''Skyball'''
* Year of debut: 1995
* Objective: Played like Touchdown and Double Play, but used balls that are seen in Dodge It that are shot at the players from cannons. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds won.

===Gym===
'''Basic Training'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: One of the most frequently played events, players navigated a six-station obstacle course (seven in ''Global GUTS'') one at a time. To prevent making strategies based on his or her performance, opposing players were not allowed to watch contestants run the course before their turn. Players had to complete each obstacle before moving on to the next one (any missed obstacle resulted in a disqualification). The player who cleared the course in the fastest time won. In the event of a false start, players would be allowed to start the course over once, but then a second false start meant a disqualification. The obstacles, which varied every time the event was played, included one from each of the following stations:
** ''Obstacle 1'':
*** '''''Cargo Net''''': A rope ladder that players climbed up to an elevated platform.
*** '''''Wall Climb''''': A vertical wall with a rope with which the players could use to help themselves climb.
** ''Obstacle 2'' (falling off any of these made the player start the course over again, with the clock still running):
*** '''''Tightrope Walk''''': A chain-linked [[tightrope]] that players walked across to get to the next platform.
*** '''''Rings''''': A set of [[gymnastics]]-like rings that players used to swing across to the next platform.
*** '''''Tarzan Swing''''': A simple rope swing across the pit to the third obstacle on the next platform.
** ''Obstacle 3'':
*** '''''Free Fall''''': Players jumped off the platform into an air bag.
*** '''''Slide for Life''''': A 20-foot zipline ride halfway across the gym and onto a cushion in front of the fourth obstacle.
*** '''''Fire Pole''''': Players grabbed onto this obstacle and slid it down to the ground.
** ''Obstacle 4'':
*** '''''Elastic Jungle''''': A jungle gym filled with elastic bands through which players had to walk or crawl.
*** '''''Tire Crawl''''': A set of hanging tires that the players had to jump into and crawl through.
** ''Obstacle 5'':
*** '''''Wall Climb''''' or '''''Cargo Net''''', depending on which of those two obstacles was the first one
** ''Obstacle 6'':
*** '''''Free Fall''''' (usually if it was not the third obstacle)
*** '''''Tube Slide''''': Players slid down this obstacle and landed in the GUTS pool.
*In ''Global GUTS'', some new obstacles were added to this course, including:
**'''''Slingshot''''': An inflatable slide that the players had to slide or jump down from.
**'''''Pyramid''''': A set of barrels stacked in a pyramid fashion, which the players had to climb over.
* '''NOTES''': The 1-hour GUTS All-Star Special (1993) included an extended version of this event, combining most of the obstacles into the same course. It started with the '''''Tire Crawl''''' and ended with a '''''Slide for Life''''' ride into the pool. Also, in Global GUTS, the '''''Tightrope Walk''''' was renamed '''''Monkey Bridge'''''.

'''Extreme Baseball'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Virtually identical to Basic Training; however, this event took on a baseball theme as the obstacles were set up in a diamond formation, with each completed obstacle ending on a "base path", complete with a [[baseball diamond]] placed on the landing mats. Done one at a time, the player who completed the course in the fastest time won the event. This event replaced Basic Training for the 1994 season.

Obstacles in Extreme Baseball included:
** '''''Tarzan Swing''''' (renamed in this event as the '''''Ken Griffey, Jr. Swing''''')
** '''''Fire Pole'''''
** '''''Tire Crawl'''''
** '''''Elastic Jungle'''''
** '''''Pyramid''''' (known in this version as the '''''Decoy Second Baseman''''')
** '''''Column''''': A vertical column which players were required to climb to reach the elevated base.
** '''''Free Fall'''''
** '''''Cargo Net'''''
** '''''Wall Climb''''' to Third Base
** '''''Slide for Life'''''
** '''''Tube Slide'''''
(above two were sometimes referred to as the '''Neon Deion Slide''' when used to land on ''Home Plate'' and conclude the run.)

===Track===
'''Moon Race'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: This event made use of Nickelodeon Moon Shoes, which were strapped to the players' feet. Players raced around the track by jumping with the moon shoes on. Players must stay in their designated lanes or they'll be disqualified, and the player who crossed the finish line first was the winner.

'''Wild Wheels'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Players were buckled into a special recumbent [[tricycle]], which they then pedaled around the track while going through some obstacles such as cones and ramps (and in later playings, the "Car Wash"). Players competed one at a time, and if the player went off the track or missed an obstacle during their run, he or she received a two-second penalty. The player who finished this course in the fastest time was the winner.

'''Eat My Dust'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: In this event, players, going one at a time, rode a [[BMX]] bicycle around the track, while having to deal with obstacles such as the "Bump n' Dump" ramp, a sand trap, the "Tippin' Tubular Tunnel", the "Sack Attack" (a series of swinging punching bags) and a final ramp before crossing the finish line. A two-second penalty was imposed on a player if they went off the track during their run. The fastest time was the winner.

'''Blade Runners'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: The contestants wore in-line skates, which they used to race around the track, going through some obstacles as they went along, including a pair of low hurdles (the Limbo Bars), a series of flags or cones (the Frantic Flags, or the Slalom), some swinging punching bags (the Sack Attack), a low tunnel (the Car Wash), and a final ramp. Players received a two-second penalty if they stepped off of the track during their run. Fastest time won.

'''Tornado Run'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: In this event, the track had many different obstacles that the players had to navigate around, including running on top of a "river" (a simulated pond with stepping stones), then over a "rocking earthquake" (pieces of faux pavement that tilted up and down), after that scampering through and then climbing jungle vines (one set in early playings, and later two sets), and racing through a "swamp fog" on the final ramp. A wind also blew leaves onto the players during the race to make it more challenging. The more common version of this game had all three players run around the track, with the one crossing the finish line first being the winner. Alternate playings of this event had the players run through the course one at a time, with the winner being determined by the fastest time.
* '''Note''': This is the only event where an injury occurred to a player that actually kept them out of the remainder of the competition. This happened in a ''Global GUTS'' episode (1995), where all three players fell after crossing the river, but one of them, [[Commonwealth of Independent States|CIS]] contestant Katya "The Asteroid" Afansjeva (in blue) sprained her ankle and was unable to continue on in the GUTS competition (she was then replaced by fellow Ukrainian, Stepan "The Serpent" Serdyuk). From that point on, players competed individually in Tornado Run.

'''Mad Max'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: Played like Wild Wheels (with a reclining tricycle), this event (likely inspired by the movie of the [[Mad Max|same name]]) had many obstacles to overcome. As they pedaled around the track, contestants passed "The Junkyard" (a part of the track with scrap lying on it), then navigated over a series of speed bumps, then raced through "Pothole Pass", and finally crashed through a "Dead End" wall on their way to the finish line. The two-second off-the-track penalty applied to this event as well. Fastest time was the winner.

===Pool===
In the first two seasons, the pool was located in the field, but in season 3, the pool was moved to the scoreboard area. Also in season 2, [[plexiglass]] was added in to avoid water splashing outside the pool.

'''Invisible Boat'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Players were hooked to an elastic cord and given a paddle. The players used the paddle to walk themselves across the pool before touching the end of the pool with their paddle; this was made more difficult by means of several water cannons creating rapids in the pool. Fastest time won. In the 1994 season, this event was made a bit more difficult, in that players were now required to paddle to the end of the pool and then back. As such, in this version of the event, not touching both ends of the pool with one's paddle resulted in an automatic third place finish.

'''Boogie Down'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: With rapids active, players, who were hooked to a harness, use a rope to pull themselves from one end of the pool to the other and back while kneeling on a kneeboard (boogie board), high-fiving a spotter at each end to assure a complete run. Fastest time won the event.

'''White Water'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: With rapids active, players had to paddle an inflated raft around two buoys and to the end of the pool, where they gave a high five to a spotter to end the race. If a player did not go around a buoy, he or she got a five-second penalty added to their time. The player with the fastest time won the event. In the first two seasons, if the player exceeded a 60-second time limit, he or she would get an automatic third place. In season 3, the '''Wave Runner''' event (see below) was renamed to White Water. In Global GUTS, the Wave Ball would still be used, but the pylons were replaced by buoys again.

'''Totally Tubular'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: The swimming pool was divided into three lanes for this event, and each lane had an equal number of inner tubes. Players simultaneously swam to the other end of the pool, having to put the inner tubes over themselves as they swam along. After touching the end of the pool, they had to swim back to the starting point with the tubes still on them. The player who made it back to the starting point first was the winner. However, if a player did not touch the end of the pool before coming back to the starting point, or missed any inner tubes, he or she was disqualified.

'''Splash Down'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Three inflated tubes were attached to each other (with bungee cords) in a triangular fashion, with one player on each tube. With the rapids active, players shook the tubes with their bodies in an attempt to knock their opponents into the pool. The last player remaining above the water was the winner. This event was timed at 45 seconds, and if all three players stayed on top of their tubes, they all received first place points.

'''Hang Ten'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: While on a bodyboard (surfboard), players had 30 seconds to collect as many of ten buoys scattered around the pool as possible, while at the same time trying to battle against large waves created by a Wave Ball. In order for the buoys to count, they had to remain on the players' arms. Whoever collected the most buoys won.

'''Wave Runner'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: This followed basically the same format as the White Water event, except that now, players had to make their way around two pylons, and instead of rapids, they would be hindered by waves caused by the Wave Ball. Again, fastest time won.

'''Power Ski'''
* Year of debut: 1993
* Objective: Hanging from a harness, the player's feet were strapped to a special (trick) water ski. With the Wave Ball active, the object was for the players to pull themselves from one end of the pool to the other and back while on the ski, high-fiving the spotters at each end. The fastest time won the event.

'''Skurfin' Safari'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Strapped to a water ski (skurfboard), players had to pull themselves to one end of the pool and back in the rapids. However, five buoys were lined up in the player's path, and the contestant had to maneuver their way around the buoys in a slalom fashion in both directions, also having to high-five the spotter to end their attempt. Any time a player did not navigate around a buoy resulted in a two-second penalty. The penalty would also be imposed on any player who lifted their skurfboard out of the water for more than two seconds during their run. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time won.

===Field===
'''Free Kick'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Two automated cannons shot several soccer balls at each of the players, who stood in front of each of three goal nets. Players had to block as many of the soccer balls as they possibly could in the allotted time (30 seconds in seasons 1 and 3, and 45 seconds in season 2 and Global GUTS), and the one who blocked the most shots won. If the player stepped outside of his or her own box, he or she was given an automatic third place finish.

'''Wild Pitch'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Cannons shot several baseballs at high speeds directly at the three players. In earlier playings, the object of this game was to dodge as many balls as possible in 30 seconds, with the player getting hit the fewest times being the winner. The second and more familiar version of this event gave the players a baseball bat to use. Here, they tried to hit as many balls as they could with their bats in 30 seconds (45 seconds in season 2), with the winner being the person who hit the most balls. Players had to stay in their own boxes or else they would be disqualified. In season 1, the players were outfitted in [[catcher]]s' gear, and in season 2, they wore [[batter (baseball)|batter]]'s helmets, safety goggles, and protective chest pads.

'''Aces'''
* Year of debut: 1992
* Objective: Several cannons shot a series of [[tennis]] balls over a net at each player. Using a tennis racquet, the player had to return as many serves as possible back over the net in 30 seconds. The player with the most serves returned won.

'''Slap Shot'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: The field was divided into three separate lanes for this event. Each lane had barricades on alternating sides of the lane, and a revolving goal at the end of it. The players used a hockey stick, a pair of roller skates, and a ball for the puck; the object was to navigate around the barricades, keeping the ball in front of their stick, and try to score a goal by hitting the ball into the revolving goal. They would then skate back and repeat the process. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds (45 seconds in one episode) was the winner.

'''Blast It'''
* Year of debut: 1995
* Objective: Players stood in a center circle as soccer balls poured out of an elevated tube. There were three separate goals set in a triangular fashion outside the circle (each one representing the player's color), and the object was to score as many soccer goals as they could in 60 seconds. Players could not leave the center circle or touch the ball with their hands. The player with the most goals scored was the winner.

===Ski slope===
'''Vertiboggan'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Modeled after [[toboggan]]ing, each player (who was hooked to a harness) would navigate on a toboggan down a fabricated ski slope (which used soap bubbles to keep it slick), making some sharp turns (such as the "Nerve Curve" and the "Face Plant Slant") as they went along and passing through some moguls (known as "Mogul Mania"), until they reached the finish line. The player with the fastest time was the winner.

'''Spin Out'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Players used a [[luge]] sled to make it down the ski slope and to the finish line, with the fastest time winning.

'''The Edge'''
* Year of debut: 1994
* Objective: Played like the other two Ski Slope events, this event had the players strapped to skis and using two ski poles for navigation down the slope. As always, fastest time would win.

==The Aggro Crag==
The fifth and final event, the Aggro Crag (later renamed the Mega Crag, and finally the Super Aggro Crag) ultimately decided the winner. All three contestants raced to climb a fabricated [[mountain]], activating a series of lighted targets commonly referred to as "actuators" (six and later seven in the first season; eight from the second season on) on their way to the peak. If a contestant missed an actuator along the way, that player could not complete the climb until he or she returned and activated the target they missed. The climb was made more difficult with special effects that simulated [[lightning]] storms, rock [[avalanche]]s, flying "[[snow]]" in the form of glitter and confetti, "nuclear flying crystals", and steep walls. Each contestant had a separate but identical side of the mountain to climb, and was not permitted to cross into another's path. The first contestant to successfully activate each target, including the final one at the peak of the mountain, earned first-place worth 725 points. The second- and third-place contestants earned 550 and 375 points, respectively.

A number of violations on the Crag could result in a player automatically receiving third place points. These included:
* Inadvertently crossing into another player's section of the mountain, even by grabbing another player's hand rail
* Accidentally hitting someone else's actuator (excluding the final actuator)
* Making a false start at the beginning of the climb, i.e., beginning before the whistle
* Finishing the climb without lighting all of one's own actuators
* Not stepping on all of the boulders in the Crag's "Boulder Canyon" section at the base of the mountain, a rule introduced in the second season.

The increased point structure in the event allowed contestants to come from behind to win, despite earlier mistakes. It also nearly ensured that no two contestants could achieve a tie score. The only way two contestants could tie on the Crag was if they both violated the rules as outlined above. Although theoretically possible, a tie in the contestants' total scores never happened, even when two contestants were disqualified on the Aggro Crag.

The highest possible score for a contestant was 1925 points, and was attained several times throughout the show's run. Three contestants who achieved this score in 1992 were invited back to compete in a one-hour "[[GUTS All-Star Special]]" in 1993.

The Aggro Crag went through several revisions in the show's run, each longer and more difficult than the previous version. In the first two taped seasons (1992 and 1993), the mountain was called the Aggro Crag. For the show's third season in 1994, the mountain was renamed the Mega Crag. For the show's final season, ''Global GUTS'' (1995), it changed yet again to the Super Aggro Crag. In the third season in 1994, its color was changed to be molten.

The total height of the Aggro Crag is 28 feet.

It should be noted that the Aggro Crag was not actually made of rock, but out of foam and particle board. Thus, being awarded an actual piece of the rock was intrinsically impossible -- the winning contestant received the glowing trophy shown on camera.

==Winning==
The player with the most points after all five events won the game and received a gold ''GUTS'' medal, as well as a faux glowing piece of the Aggro Crag. When the show changed to ''Global GUTS'', the medals were redesigned to reflect the show's new logo. With all seasons of the show, second place received a silver medal and third received a bronze medal.


== Global GUTS ==
''Brotherhood'' is set in [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]], [[Rhode Island]] and centers on the [[Irish-American]] Caffee brothers, who hail from a fictitious working-class neighborhood known as The Hill. Tommy Caffee ([[Jason Clarke (actor)|Jason Clarke]]) is a respected local politician, a member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives; Michael Caffee ([[Jason Isaacs]]) is a professional criminal who is involved with the [[Irish Mob]] of [[New England]].<ref name="LA Weekly">
A year after its cancellation in 1994, a spinoff was launched called '''''Global GUTS'''''. The format remained the same with four athletic events and the Super Aggro Crag; however, the contestants now included children from the [[United Kingdom]], [[Mexico]], [[Israel]], [[Germany]], [[Spain]], [[Portugal]], the Commonwealth of Independent States (simply referred to as "CIS" on air, this included only [[Russia]], [[Ukraine]], [[Kazakhstan]] and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], though a press release claims to include [[Belarus]] as well, and the flag of Belarus was occasionally seen in the rafters), and the [[United States]]. Each country had its own team of broadcasters; O'Malley retained this role for the US and UK broadcasts.
{{cite web
|url=http://www.laweekly.com/film+tv/tv/family-circle/13873/
|title=Family Circle
|last=Abele
|first=Robert
|publisher=''[[LA Weekly]]''
|date=2006-07-05
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}</ref>
Throughout the series, the brothers' professional and private lives are intertwined.<ref name="sfreview"/>


At the end of each ''Global GUTS'' episode, in a manner similar to the Olympics, the flags of the contestants' countries were raised while the [[national anthem]] of the gold medal winner played in the background (for example, if a player from the U.S.A. won a gold medal, the [[Star-Spangled Banner]] would play in the background). Each player then took a lap around the Extreme Arena with his or her country's flag draped over their shoulders.
The first season has been released on DVD in [[DVD region code|Region 1]] by [[CBS Home Entertainment]]. The second season will be released on DVD in Region 1 on October 7, 2008.<ref name="DVD2"/>


In each ''Global GUTS'' episode there was a medal count to record how many gold, silver, and bronze medals each country won:
The episode titles are references to religious texts for the first season and [[Bob Dylan]] lyrics for the second season. The referenced text is written in italics below the title (for the bible references, the [[King James Version]] is used).<ref name="UGO">
{{cite web
|url=http://www.ugo.com/channels/dvd/features/brotherhood/interview.asp
|title=Blake Masters Interview - Brotherhood
|last=Braun
|first=Kyle
|publisher=[[UGO Networks|UGO]]
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}</ref>


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
==Series overview==
{| class="wikitable" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
|-
|-
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" width="75"|Season
!colspan=5|Global Guts medal count
!! rowspan="2" width="50"|Episodes
!! colspan="2" width="300"|Originally&nbsp;aired
!! colspan="2" width="200"|DVD&nbsp;Release
|-
|-
|'''Rank'''
! width="150"|[[Season premiere|Season&nbsp;premiere]]
|'''Country'''
!! width="150"|[[Season finale|Season&nbsp;finale]]
|bgcolor="gold"|[[Image:Med 1.png|Gold]]
!! width="150"|[[DVD region code|Region&nbsp;1]]
|bgcolor="silver"|[[Image:Med 2.png|Silver]]
!! width="50"|Discs
|bgcolor="bronze"|[[Image:Med 3.png|Bronze]]
|-
|-
|1||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|GBR}} United Kingdom||8||2||2
|bgcolor="72a487"|
|align="center"|'''[[#Season 1: 2006|1]]'''
|align="center"|11
|align="center"|July 9, 2006
|align="center"|September 24, 2006
|align="center"|September 26, 2006
|align="center" rowspan="2"|3
|-
|-
|2||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|MEX}} Mexico||7||3||2
|bgcolor="547763"|
|align="center"|'''[[#Season 2: 2007|2]]'''
|align="center"|10
|align="center"|September 30, 2007
|align="center"|December 2, 2007
|align="center"|October 7, 2008<ref name="DVD2">
{{cite web
|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Brotherhood-Season-2-Delayed/9910
|title=Brotherhood DVD news: New Release Date for Brotherhood - The Complete 2nd Season
|publisher=[[TVShowsOnDVD.com]]
|last=Lambert
|first=David
|date=2008-06-23
|accessdate=2008-08-05}}</ref>
|-
|-
|3||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|USA}} United States||6||4||2
|bgcolor="1a8749"|
|-
|align="center"|'''[[#Season 3: 2008|3]]'''<ref name="sf"/>
|4||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|GER}} Germany||4||6||2
|align="center"|8<ref name="sf"/>
|-
|align="center"|TBA
|5||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|ISR}} Israel||4||3||5
|align="center"|TBA
|-
|align="center"|TBA
|6||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|ESP}} Spain||2||2||8
|align="center"|TBA
|-
|7||style="text-align:left"|{{flagicon|POR}} Portugal||1||5||6
|-
|8||style="text-align:left"|CIS<br />{{flagicon|RUS}} Russia<br /> {{flagicon|UKR}} Ukraine<br />{{flagicon|Georgia|1990}} Georgia<br />{{flagicon|KAZ}} Kazakhstan ||0||7||5
|-
|-
|}
|}


In addition to airing the program on Nickelodeon in the United States, it aired on the Ukrainian Television Network in the CIS, [[Ravensburger TV]] in Germany, the Israeli Children's Channel in Israel, [[MVS Multivisión]] in Mexico, [[Sociedade Independente de Comunicação]] in Portugal, [[TVE]] in Spain, and [[Nickelodeon UK]] in the United Kingdom.
===Season 1: 2006===
{| class="wikitable" width="100%" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
|-
|-style="color:white"
! style="background: #72a487;" width="20"|Season<br>#
!! style="background: #72a487;" width="20"|Series<br>#
!! style="background: #72a487;"|Title
!! style="background: #72a487;"|Director
!! style="background: #72a487;"|Writer(s)
!! style="background: #72a487;" width="150"|Original&nbsp;airdate
!! style="background: #72a487;" width="40"|[[Production code number|<font color=white>PC</font>]]


As a precursor to ''Global GUTS'', season 3 of Nickelodeon GUTS featured six contestants from the United Kingdom, competing in six separate shows. Of the six, four contestants ended up winning the gold medal.
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1
|EpisodeNumber2=1
|Title=Mark 8:36
|WrittenBy=[[Blake Masters]]
|DirectedBy=[[Phillip Noyce]]
|OriginalAirDate=July 9, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?''
State Representative Tommy Caffee is a rising star in Rhode Island politics and the political boss of his home ward. The murder of local gangster Patty Mullin opens the door to the return of Tommy's brother, Michael Caffee, whom Patty had sworn to kill. Michael locates his old partner, Pete McGonagle, and starts to reassert himself in Providence. Irish mob boss Freddie Cork threatens to have Michael killed unless Tommy throws some lucrative State contracts his way. Detective Declan Giggs, a childhood friend of the Caffees, begins investigating Michael's return. Tommy's wife, Eileen Caffee, deals with her own demons via drugs, alcohol and a string of extramarital affairs.
|ProdCode=1-01
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=2
|EpisodeNumber2=2
|Title=Genesis 27:29
|WrittenBy=[[Henry Bromell]]
|DirectedBy=[[Ed Bianchi]]
|OriginalAirDate=July 16, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''Let people serve thee, and nations bow down to thee: be lord over thy brethren, and let thy mother's sons bow down to thee: cursed be every one that curseth thee, and blessed be he that blesseth thee.''
Michael and Pete force a local merchant into selling them her store. When the merchant goes to Tommy to complain, Tommy palms her off to Declan, who compromises himself by making the complaint go away. Michael learns that his old girlfriend, Kath Perry, is now married with two children. Tommy's efforts to stop a new highway from bisecting The Hill includes a deal with the mysterious power-broker Judd and lead him to bribe and blackmail two of his fellow representatives. The conflict between Eileen's public demeanor and private pain is temporarily halted when she learns that her sister-in-law is having medical problems.
|ProdCode=1-02
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=3
|EpisodeNumber2=3
|Title=Matthew 13:57
|WrittenBy=[[Dawn Prestwich]] & [[Nicole Yorkin]]
|DirectedBy=[[Jean de Segonzac]]
|OriginalAirDate=July 23, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''And they were offended in him. But Jesus said unto them, A prophet is not without honour, save in his own country, and in his own house.''
A garbage strike forces Tommy to mediate between the unions, which are controlled by Freddie, and the mayor. He has to turn to Judd to end the strike. Carl ends his relationship with Eileen. Michael struggles to come to terms with the changes in the neighborhood.
|ProdCode=1-03
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=4
|EpisodeNumber2=4
|Title=Matthew 5:6
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=Ed Bianchi
|OriginalAirDate=July 30, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.''
On information from Moe Riley, Treasury agents raid Rose Caffee's residence looking for counterfeit money. They are unsuccessful, but the scandal costs Tommy both politically and financially, so he pledges his loyalty to the speaker of the house. Michael frames Moe for murder in revenge.
|ProdCode=1-04
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=5
|EpisodeNumber2=5
|Title=Matthew 12:25
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=[[Steve Shill]]
|OriginalAirDate=August 6, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand.''
Michael and Pete want to play on Freddie Cork's softball team, but he refuses. Michael then seeks help from Terry Mulligan, a bar owner. Rose fights against layoffs and outsourcing in her sewing factory, but loses her job as well as a result of speaking up. The Speaker seeks to build a new waste management station in Tommy's district, prompting him to seek fair compensation for those affected.
|ProdCode=1-05
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=6
|EpisodeNumber2=6
|Title=[[Samyutta Nikaya|Samyutta]] 11.10
|WrittenBy=Dawn Prestwich & Nicole Yorkin
|DirectedBy=[[Leslie Libman]]
|OriginalAirDate=August 13, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''All-conquering, all-knowing, intelligent; with regard to all things, unadhering; all-abandoning, released in the ending of craving: him I call a man who lives alone.''
Michael helps Declan dispose of a body after Declan's partner, Ralph Mango, unwittingly shoots an undercover FBI agent. Eileen's drug use intensifies and she is arrested for erratic behaviour. Tommy's eldest daughter, Mary Rose, is caught trying some of her mothers drugs by Michael, who gives her a job in his store to keep an eye on her. Tommy uses his political influence to turn a profit.
|ProdCode=1-06
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=7
|EpisodeNumber2=7
|Title=Genesis 27:39
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=Steve Shill
|OriginalAirDate=August 20, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''And Isaac his father answered and said unto him, Behold, thy dwelling shall be the fatness of the earth, and of the dew of heaven from above.''
Tommy persuades Michael to be lenient with a debtor who owns their childhood movie theater and organizes a fundraiser to help the theater. The whole neighborhood comes together for the grand opening but Freddie steals the proceeds and the cinema is forced to close. Rose starts a new job in a store. Declan tries to recruit union leader Marty Trio as a witness.
|ProdCode=1-07
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=8
|EpisodeNumber2=8
|Title=Job 31:5-6
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=[[Nick Gomez]]
|OriginalAirDate=August 27, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''If I have walked with vanity, or if my foot hath hasted to deceit; Let me be weighed in an even balance that God may know mine integrity.''
As Rose prepares a surprise birthday party for him, Michael and Kath drive down to New Jersey on a mission from Freddie. When the deal goes bad, Michael turns to violence. Despite this, Kath remains by his side, causing him to realize how much he still cares for her. The House's new Speaker attempts to siphon funds out of The Hill, making Tommy willing to do anything to foil his scheme. Meanwhile, Pete figures out the truth behind Eileen's problems and reaches out to help.
|ProdCode=1-08
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=9
|EpisodeNumber2=9
|Title=Ecclesiastes 7:2
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=Henry Bromell
|OriginalAirDate=September 10, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to go to the house of feasting: for that is the end of all men; and the living will lay it to his heart.''
A bus crash on the way back from a football game leaves several residents of The Hill dead. The accident was caused by the suicide of Freddie Cork's son, who was a homosexual. Michael uses this information to manipulate Freddie. Freddie pressures Tommy into ensuring that his son receives a catholic burial. Carl is also killed in the crash and Eileen resolves to atone for her sins. Marty Trio's wife is also killed and he finally decides to work with the police.
|ProdCode=1-09
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=10
|EpisodeNumber2=10
|Title=[[Viveka Chudamani|Vivekchaudamani]]: 51
|WrittenBy=Dawn Prestwich & Nicole Yorkin
|DirectedBy=[[Brian Kirk]]
|OriginalAirDate=September 17, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''A father has got his sons and others to free him from his debts, but he has got none but himself to remove his bondage.''
Neil Caffee arrives in town and Michael and Tommy form an uneasy alliance to get rid of their father. Rose confronts Michael about how he makes his living. Pete again struggles with his addiction after Michael orders him to kill a fourteen year old drug dealer and this time Eileen comes to his aid. Tommy discovers that his daughter has been working for Michael, ending their period of co-operation.
|ProdCode=1-10
|LineColor=72a487
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=11
|EpisodeNumber2=11
|Title=Matthew 22:10
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters (teleplay);<br>Blake Masters and Henry Bromell (story)
|DirectedBy=Ed Bianchi
|OriginalAirDate=September 24, 2006
|ShortSummary=:''So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both bad and good: and the wedding was furnished with guests.''
Everyone in The Hill attends a big Irish wedding, as Tommy tries to avoid a legal trap set up by ambitious U.S. Attorney Ellis Franklin, who has promised him immunity if he will testify about Michael's dealings with Freddie. He must also protect his brother from being killed by Moe Riley, who has been released from prison and is out for revenge. Declan finds his partner may be corrupt and must decide where his loyalty lies. At the wedding, Eileen consoles the bride-to-be and reconnects with some old friends.
|ProdCode=1-11
|LineColor=72a487
}}
|}


===Season 2: 2007===
==Famous contestants==
In 1992, [[Backstreet Boys|Backstreet Boy]] [[AJ McLean|A.J. McLean]] appeared on GUTS, competing against Amanda "The Accelerator" Bulger and Jamie "The Jackal" Mendelsohn, and finishing with the silver medal. He was in blue and referred to on the show as AJ "Mean" McLean. He had one event win during his appearance, that being a win in the Slam Dunk event.
{| class="wikitable" width="100%" style="background: #FFFFFF;"
|-
|-style="color:white"
! style="background: #547763;" width="20"|Season<br>#
!! style="background: #547763;" width="20"|Series<br>#
!! style="background: #547763;"|Title
!! style="background: #547763;"|Director
!! style="background: #547763;"|Writer(s)
!! style="background: #547763;" width="150"|Original&nbsp;airdate
!! style="background: #547763;" width="40"|[[Production code number|<font color=white>PC</font>]]


In 1993, Hollywood stuntwoman [[Anna Mercedes Morris]] competed on the show under the name Anna "Roadrunner" Morris. She was dressed in red, competing against "Lawless" Lauren Shealy and Paul "Running Man" Battson, and she finished with the gold medal, despite injuring her knee in the Basic Training event.
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=1
|EpisodeNumber2=12
|Title=One Too Many Mornings 3:4-8
|WrittenBy=[[Blake Masters]]
|DirectedBy=[[Phillip Noyce]]
|OriginalAirDate=September 30, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''You can say it just as good / You're right from your side / I'm right from mine / We're both just one too many mornings / An' a thousand miles behind''
Tommy and Eileen finds it difficult to keep up the appearance of a happy marriage for the sake of Tommy's political career as Tommy tries to outsmart Franklin. The now-incapacitated Michael, who has no memory of the night of his attack, tries to reclaim his territory but his condition makes it troublesome. Michael asks Declan to find his assailant, not knowing it actually is Declan. Freddie puts Michael to use. Declan gets ostracized at home and at work, launching him into a dangerous downwards spiral.
|ProdCode=2-01
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=2
|EpisodeNumber2=13
|Title=Down in the Flood 3:5-6
|WrittenBy=[[Henry Bromell]]
|DirectedBy=[[Brian Kirk]]
|OriginalAirDate=October 7, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''Now, it's king for king / Queen for queen''
Tommy turns to his sister, Mary-Kate, rather than his wife, Eileen, as the planning for his re-election campaign commences. To the dismay of Rose, Michael and Tommy's Irish cousin Colin Carr returns to Providence. He finds employment through Tommy but is displeased with his work. Declan and Cassie have dinner with Cassie's parents. Michael teams up with Moe for a truck heist.
|ProdCode=2-02
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=3
|EpisodeNumber2=14
|Title=The Lonesome Death of...4:7-8
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=[[Nick Gomez]]
|OriginalAirDate=October 14, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''Stared at the person who killed for no reason / Who just happened to be feelin' that way without warnin'''
Michael and Eileen cope with the death of a mutual friend with the help of Colin. Freddie tries to avoid all-out war with the Italians. The now-out of control Declan is enlisted by Franklin as a spy in the Irish mob. Eileen and Tommy's tense relationship grows even more volatile. Tommy handles a situation involving the Speaker of the House's mistress and makes a decision about his own private life.
|ProdCode=2-03
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=4
|EpisodeNumber2=15
|Title=Not Dark Yet 3:5-6
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=Henry Bromell
|OriginalAirDate=October 21, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''Sometimes my burden seems more than I can bear / It's not dark yet, but it's getting there''
Rose is the catalyst of a disagreement between her sons, which leads Michael to hinder Tommy's real estate real. Freddie tries to use Declan's status as a police officer to settle some unrest and the two grow closer. Eileen tries to cover up her daughter's delinquent behavior and find some common ground with Kath in the process. Tommy continues to see his mistress, Dana.
|ProdCode=2-04
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=5
|EpisodeNumber2=16
|Title=Dear Landlord 1:3-4
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=[[Ed Bianchi]]
|OriginalAirDate=October 28, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''My burden is heavy / My dreams are beyond control''
Tommy loses parts of his usual support network and tries to keep his life on track. Michael considers a change in his lifestyle. Colin finds his father, but gets a less than warm welcome. Freddie asks Declan to locate a business associate.
|ProdCode=2-05
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=6
|EpisodeNumber2=17
|Title=True Love Tends to Forget 1:1-4
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=[[Thomas Carter (film director)|Thomas Carter]]
|OriginalAirDate=November 4, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''I'm getting weary looking in my baby's eyes / When she's near me she's so hard to recognize / I finally realize there's no room for regret / True love, true love, true love tends to forget''
Tommy makes an effort to clean up a crime-ridden neighborhood in The Hill. Michael tries to assert power at home as he and Kath look at the possibility of having a child. Eileen has dinner with wives of other politicians and gains some useful insight. Rose struggles with the realities of getting older.
|ProdCode=2-06
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=7
|EpisodeNumber2=18
|Title=Only a Pawn...1:7-8
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=Blake Masters
|OriginalAirDate=November 11, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''But he can't be blamed / He's only a pawn in their game''
Complications arise on election day, causing Tommy to seek the support of his friends and family to secure his re-election. Mary-Kate helps her brother out but is exasperated by what she has to do. Nozzoli asks Michael to drive an out-of-town hit man to a job and Michael and the hit man find that they have very differing views.
|ProdCode=2-07
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=8
|EpisodeNumber2=19
|Title=Shelter from the Storm 1:1-2
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=[[Michael Corrente]]
|OriginalAirDate=November 18, 2007
|ShortSummary=:'''Twas in another lifetime, one of toil and blood / When blackness was a virtue and the road was full of mud''
Judd's declining health affects Colin and Tommy. Michael feeds Franklin information to keep Freddie in jail. Declan is surprised by his new assignment and tries to clear his conscience of the dirty dealings around him. Eileen volunteers at social services but the work environment is not what she expected.
|ProdCode=2-08
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=9
|EpisodeNumber2=20
|Title=Call Letter Blues 1:2-6
|WrittenBy=Henry Bromell
|DirectedBy=Alik Sakharov
|OriginalAirDate=November 25, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''Listenin' to them church bells tone / Yes, I walked all night long / Listenin' to them church bells tone / Either someone needing mercy / Or maybe something I've done wrong''
Rose walks out on her family Thanksgiving morning, leaving the remaining Caffees to fend for themselves. In exchange for information, Freddie and Marty Trio are allowed holiday furlough at a safe location, with a bloody outcome. Colin gets an important mission by Michael, who promises him a Thanksgiving dinner with the family as reward.
|ProdCode=2-09
|LineColor=547763
}}
{{Episode list
|EpisodeNumber=10
|EpisodeNumber2=21
|Title=Things Have Changed 1:7-8
|WrittenBy=Blake Masters
|DirectedBy=Ed Bianchi
|OriginalAirDate=December 2, 2007
|ShortSummary=:''Standing on the gallows with my head in a noose / Any minute now I'm expecting all hell to break loose''
In the aftermath of the holiday furlough, Franklin launches an investigation. As his life is threatened by Freddie and Nozzoli, Michael ties up some loose ends. Declan is displeased with his new job and makes an important decision. Freddie turns to Declan for protection. Michael indirectly interferes with Tommy's career as Tommy makes a bid for the Speaker's chair. Eileen makes a stand against Tommy's extramarital affairs. As old family ties are severed, new ones are born.
|ProdCode=2-10
|LineColor=547763
}}
|}


In 1993, actor [[Mike Vogel]] competed on GUTS with Christy "Blast" Gast and Cam "The Ice Man" Burke, and finishing with the silver medal. He tied with the other players for first place on Over the Top and also won the Aggro Crag event, coming from third place to take second overall. He was known as Mike "Flea" Vogel and was dressed in blue.
===Season 3: 2008===
''Brotherhood'' has been renewed for a third season of eight episodes. A premiere date has not been announced.<ref name="sf"/>


In 1994, actress [[Ashley Drane]] competed on GUTS with Nicole "The Bomber" Bozard and UK resident Leanne "Panther" Kelley, and finishing with the silver medal. She was known as Ashley "The Face" Drane and was dressed in blue.
==References==

{{refbegin}}
In 1994, [[Houston Dynamo]] defender [[Bobby Boswell]] appeared on GUTS, competing against Robin "The Lizard" Rexroat and Jennifer "The Jaguar" Barnes, and finishing with the silver medal. He was known on the show as Bobby "Lightning" Boswell and won the soccer event "Shoot Out", just a hint of what was to come for the career of Bobby Boswell. (Boswell, who was dressed in purple, also won the Mega Crag event in that very same show.)
;General

*{{cite web
==Special guests==
|url=http://www.sho.com/site/brotherhood/episodes.do
The following were guests during the 1992 season:
|title=Official ''Brotherhood'' episode guide
* Wendy Bruce
|publisher=[[Showtime]]

|accessdate=2008-07-30}}
The following were guests during the 1994 season:
*{{cite web
* [[Picabo Street]]
|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/reviews/Brotherhood-Complete-1st-Season/5984
* [[Adam Oates]]
|title=Brotherhood - The Complete 1st Season Review
* [[Charlie Ward]]
|last=Gord
* [[Dominique Wilkins]]
|first=Lacey
* [[Evander Holyfield]]
|publisher=[[TVShowsOnDVD.com]]

|date=2006-10-23
The guests in the 1994 season would, before each event, give a list of three "Smart Moves" (suggestions) that they felt that the players should follow.
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}

*{{cite web
==My Family's Got GUTS==
|url=http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/24492/brotherhood-the-complete-first-season/
{{main|My Family's Got GUTS}}
|title=Brotherhood: The Complete First Season

|last=Jones
A revival of the show, ''My Family's Got GUTS'', debuted on September 15, 2008 at 8 pm eastern/pacific on Nickelodeon. The series again calls the studios at Universal Studios Florida home. This version is hosted by [[Ben Lyons]], along with [[Australia]]n celebirty Asha Kuerten as the referee.
|first=Preston

|publisher=[[DVD Talk]]
==Reruns==
|date=2006-10-18
''Nickelodeon GUTS'' reruns were shown on [[Nickelodeon GAS]] from March 1, 1999 until the network's closure on December 31, 2007. Five episodes are available for viewing online via [[TurboNick]].
|accessdate=2008-07-30}}
;Specific
{{refend}}
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.sho.com/site/brotherhood/ Official Showtime website]
* [http://www.familyguts.tv Family GUTS blog]
*[http://www.sho.com/site/brotherhood/episodes.do Showtime episode guide]
* [http://www.freewebs.com/bigdog53105/gutsfanpage.htm Bigdog's Dog House Nickelodeon Guts]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXk4C48sACM Video of the Nickelodeon GUTS Videogame for the Super Nintendo]
*{{imdb title|0457229|Brotherhood}}
* [http://www.nick.com/turbonick/index.jhtml]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brotherhood}}

{{featured list}}
{{Nickelodeon Network Game Shows}}
[[Category:Lists of drama television series episodes]]

[[Category:Lists of crime television series episodes]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:GUTS}}
[[Category:1990s American television series]]
[[Category:1990s Nickelodeon shows]]
[[Category:1992 television series debuts]]
[[Category:1995 television series endings]]
[[Category:American game shows]]
[[Category:Cable game shows]]
[[Category:Game shows]]
[[Category:Nickelodeon game shows]]
[[Category:Nickelodeon Games and Sports shows]]
[[Category:Nickelodeon shows]]

Revision as of 15:57, 12 October 2008

Nickelodeon Guts
GenreGame Show
Directed byJim Dussel
Bill Shebar
Presented byMike O'Malley
Narrated byMoira Quirk
Country of originUSA
Production
Production locationUniversal Studios Florida
Running time30 Minutes
Original release
NetworkNickelodeon
Release1992 –
1995
Related
American Gladiators
Gladiators 2000

GUTS is a 30-minute "action-sports" game show that aired for four seasons on Nickelodeon from 1992 to 1995. Mike O'Malley, now famous on Yes, Dear presided as host; British American actress Moira Quirk (often called Mo) was the referee/co-host. The show was taped in Universal Studios Florida on Sound Stage 21, which was not part of the Nickelodeon Studios Complex but was rented by them. The show was revived on September 15, 2008 with a family edition on Nickelodeon entitled My Family's Got GUTS. Episodes will be produced at Universal Studios Florida, where the original series originated.

Gameplay

Three children or teenagers competed in four athletic events at the "Extreme Arena" for points. First place in each event was worth 300 points. Second place received 200 points, and third place earned 100. Each contestant was dressed in one of three colors: blue, red, and purple.

Some events were based on skills in popular sports, such as basketball, baseball, football and soccer. Others made use of a wave pool, and sometimes a racing track was used. During the show's run, more creative and ambitious events were invented, including a fabricated ski slope and the famous "Peak to Peak." Each event was said to allow the contestants to "live out some of their greatest sports fantasies" in a competitive arena. The show was very similar to the Olympics because they handed out Gold, Silver, and Bronze medals to the three athletes.

After the first event, one of the three players was asked to "Spill Your GUTS" between the remaining events. In season one, Mike talked about the player and his or her athletic and non-athletic interests. In season two, Moira discussed the player's interests, and also mentioned what GUTS equaled to that player. In season three, during a brief prerecorded segment, players introduced themselves and revealed their athletic and non-athletic interests, what "having guts" meant to them, why they were excited to be on the show, and/or usually also give a shout-out to their friends and family back home. On Global GUTS, contestants introduced themselves; non-English speakers introduced themselves in their native language, and a translator did an English voice over for them.

Events

There were several different types of events, ranging from field sports to pool sports. Many events made use of elastic harnesses for aerial purposes. There were also track events and an obstacle course taking place in the gym.

Elastic/Aerial

Bull's Eye

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Modeled after archery, players were equipped with crossbows and velcro arrows. With the help of the elastics, they jumped off the Aerial Bridge and fired the arrows at the targets in front of them. Only arrows that actually hit the bullseye counted, and they only counted after the player hit the ground first before bouncing back up. The player with the most bullseyes scored in 60 seconds won the event (45 seconds in one season 3 episode). All three players competed at the same time.

Slam Dunk

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Players jumped off the Aerial Bridge and attempted to shoot a basketball through an elevated basketball hoop with each jump. Baskets only counted if they were made after the player touched the ground. All three players competed at the same time, and the player with the most baskets scored in 60 seconds won.

Spirals

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: With all three competing at the same time, players jumped off the Aerial Bridge and tried to throw footballs through a set of tires and into a net. Earlier playings of this event had six small tires (for each player) stacked on top of one another in a pyramid fashion, and later playings replaced the small tires with one large tire, colored after the player's color. The player with the most footballs thrown into his or her goal in 45 seconds (60 seconds in season 2) won.

Off the Wall

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: 50 baseballs were attached to each of three walls. The players jumped off the Bridge and tried to knock as many baseballs as they could off the wall. The player with the most baseballs knocked off in 45 seconds won the event (this was usually determined by how many baseballs were left on the wall).

Spike It

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Players jumped off the Bridge and tried to hit a volleyball over a net and onto a target on the ground. Each player received five serves. If the player had a false serve, they were allowed to take that serve over again. The player with the most volleyballs hitting the targets was the winner. On some occasions, players played the game one at a time; and at other times, all three players participated simultaneously.

Over the Top

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: In this event, modeled after high jump competitions, each player, one at a time, jumped off the Aerial Bridge and tried to jump over a hurdle at a set height. Each player received three jumps (two in one episode). If a player successfully cleared the hurdle, it was raised for the next jump; if not, the player attempted the next jump at the same height. The player who jumped the highest was the winner. In the first two seasons, the heights they had to clear were 6'9", then 7'5", and 8'1". In season 3, the heights were raised to 8'8", 9'4", and 10'0". On Global GUTS, the heights were 2.5 meters, 2.75 meters, and 3 meters.

The Longest Yard

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Modeled after long jump competitions, each player jumped from the Bridge and tried to make the longest distance they could away from it, making their mark by planting their feet in a sand pit in front of the bridge. Jumps that did not include two footprints in the sand did not count. The player making the longest jump won the event.

Jump! Jump!

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: This event was based on hurdling competitions. Players jumped off the bridge, over two high hurdles, and onto the bridge on the opposite side, before jumping over the hurdles again and back onto the original bridge. A five-second penalty was imposed on a player if he or she knocked a hurdle down, and in the first two seasons a two-second penalty was imposed if a player needed help from the spotters. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time won the event. In the third season this event was made more difficult in that the jumps were longer and the hurdles were higher, but the penalties for spotter assistance were eliminated.

Make Your Mark

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Each player jumped from the Bridge and, upon jumping back up, tried to make their highest mark on a yellow wall with paint resembling Nickelodeon's famous green slime. In earlier versions of this event, players put plastic gloves on their hands and dipped them in paint before trying to slap their hands on the wall. In later playings, players jumped into a giant ink pad (in season 1, players jumped into green ink, and in season 2, players jumped into inkpads corresponding to their jersey color) and then tried to make their mark on the wall with their feet. The highest jump won.

Rebound

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: A basketball was placed on a solitary cylinder in the middle of the arena floor. Here, players (who were in three different corners) jumped off their Aerial Bridges and to the center of the floor, and as they jumped up, they tried to grab the basketball and take it back to their bridge, which counted as a "rebound." There were seven attempts in this event (reduced to five in season 3, but changed back to seven in Global GUTS), and the player with the most rebounds won.

Jump Ball

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: The layout was the same as Rebound, except the floor was painted in 3 different sections - blue, red and purple. Here, when the players jumped off their bridges and to the cylinder, they would tip the basketball (the jump ball) to the floor. Whatever color section the basketball landed on, scored a point for the player of that particular color. There were seven chances in this event, and the player with the most jump balls landing in their colored section was the winner.

Attack

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: In this event, players were equipped with lacrosse sticks and a ball to go with it. After jumping off the bridge, each player used his or her lacrosse stick to try to throw the ball into an elevated net. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds won. All three players competed at the same time in this event.

Fumble

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: The players were outfitted in football equipment and were hooked to one another with elastics around their waists, as they stood in three different corners. When a player traveled in one direction, he or she pulled another player with them due to the effect of the elastics. In the center of the field, a barrage of footballs fell out of a tube, and players had to recover the fumbles from the ground and put the footballs into their own baskets. The player with the most fumbles recovered in 45 seconds won. For Global GUTS, this event was renamed Scrumble, and each player now had to throw the footballs into his or her designated goal post instead of a basket and the event was timed at 60 seconds.

Rugby

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: This game was played the same as Fumble, but with rugby balls, and players wore rugby shirts instead of football jerseys.

Zero G

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: The contestants were suspended sideways and had to run across a sideways track with hurdles and trampolines ("Black Holes"). They also had to make their way around the "Edge of Nothing," a sharp turn onto the other side of the track. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time was the winner.

Touchdown

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: With elastics, the players bounced up and down as they stood in three different corners, with an elevated goal directly across from each player. Contestants were required to grab footballs from elevated racks next to them, then try to throw them into their corresponding goals. The winner was determined by who scored the most "touchdowns" in 45 or 60 seconds.

Peak to Peak

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Eight miniature mountain peaks were laid out in the middle of the arena, alternating between left and right. With the help of the elastics, players jumped from the Aerial Bridge and went from one peak to another before reaching the opposite bridge and returning in the same manner. Players were assessed a two-second penalty if any peaks were missed. The player with the fastest time won.

Slam-A-Jama

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Each player had 30 seconds to score baskets in a hoop inside of a center cylinder while the other players tried to reject the shots. After one player has had their turn, he or she then went on defense against the next player. The player with the most hoops scored won. Players on defense could not grab onto the basket while they tried to defend against a player on offense; if they did grab onto the basket, they would lose a point that they scored on offense.

Dodge It

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: This event was modeled after the game of dodgeball. The players were in three corners as they bounced up and down constantly with the help of the elastics. As dodgeballs poured out of an elevated tube, players attempted to catch a ball and hit one of their opponents with it. Players were allowed to catch a dodgeball thrown at them (though it would still count as a hit against that player) and use it against the player that threw it, or against another player. The player who scored the most hits against their opponents in 60 seconds was the winner.

Triple Jump

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: One at a time, each player had two attempts (three in one episode) to jump onto an elevated platform, then over a set of barrels, and finally over a high hurdle before landing in a sand pit. The winner was the player with the furthest footprints from the aerial bridge, but attempts that did not result in both feet being planted in the sand (including not reaching the sand due to lack of momentum) were disqualified. Players were also disqualified if either they stepped over the foul line during their jump or if they failed to clear all of the obstacles.

Double Play

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: This event was played similarly to the Touchdown event, except instead of footballs on elevated racks next to the players, baseballs were shot at the players from four different cannons. Each player had a fielder's glove on one hand, and had to catch the baseballs with their gloved hand before using their free hand to throw them into the elevated net directly across from them (which was referred to as turning the "double play"). The player with the most baseballs thrown into their goal in 60 seconds won.

Shoot Out

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Competing simultaneously, players jumped off their aerial bridges and tried to kick soccer balls into their own nets. The player who scored the most goals in 60 seconds won.

Skyball

  • Year of debut: 1995
  • Objective: Played like Touchdown and Double Play, but used balls that are seen in Dodge It that are shot at the players from cannons. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds won.

Gym

Basic Training

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: One of the most frequently played events, players navigated a six-station obstacle course (seven in Global GUTS) one at a time. To prevent making strategies based on his or her performance, opposing players were not allowed to watch contestants run the course before their turn. Players had to complete each obstacle before moving on to the next one (any missed obstacle resulted in a disqualification). The player who cleared the course in the fastest time won. In the event of a false start, players would be allowed to start the course over once, but then a second false start meant a disqualification. The obstacles, which varied every time the event was played, included one from each of the following stations:
    • Obstacle 1:
      • Cargo Net: A rope ladder that players climbed up to an elevated platform.
      • Wall Climb: A vertical wall with a rope with which the players could use to help themselves climb.
    • Obstacle 2 (falling off any of these made the player start the course over again, with the clock still running):
      • Tightrope Walk: A chain-linked tightrope that players walked across to get to the next platform.
      • Rings: A set of gymnastics-like rings that players used to swing across to the next platform.
      • Tarzan Swing: A simple rope swing across the pit to the third obstacle on the next platform.
    • Obstacle 3:
      • Free Fall: Players jumped off the platform into an air bag.
      • Slide for Life: A 20-foot zipline ride halfway across the gym and onto a cushion in front of the fourth obstacle.
      • Fire Pole: Players grabbed onto this obstacle and slid it down to the ground.
    • Obstacle 4:
      • Elastic Jungle: A jungle gym filled with elastic bands through which players had to walk or crawl.
      • Tire Crawl: A set of hanging tires that the players had to jump into and crawl through.
    • Obstacle 5:
      • Wall Climb or Cargo Net, depending on which of those two obstacles was the first one
    • Obstacle 6:
      • Free Fall (usually if it was not the third obstacle)
      • Tube Slide: Players slid down this obstacle and landed in the GUTS pool.
  • In Global GUTS, some new obstacles were added to this course, including:
    • Slingshot: An inflatable slide that the players had to slide or jump down from.
    • Pyramid: A set of barrels stacked in a pyramid fashion, which the players had to climb over.
  • NOTES: The 1-hour GUTS All-Star Special (1993) included an extended version of this event, combining most of the obstacles into the same course. It started with the Tire Crawl and ended with a Slide for Life ride into the pool. Also, in Global GUTS, the Tightrope Walk was renamed Monkey Bridge.

Extreme Baseball

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Virtually identical to Basic Training; however, this event took on a baseball theme as the obstacles were set up in a diamond formation, with each completed obstacle ending on a "base path", complete with a baseball diamond placed on the landing mats. Done one at a time, the player who completed the course in the fastest time won the event. This event replaced Basic Training for the 1994 season.

Obstacles in Extreme Baseball included:

    • Tarzan Swing (renamed in this event as the Ken Griffey, Jr. Swing)
    • Fire Pole
    • Tire Crawl
    • Elastic Jungle
    • Pyramid (known in this version as the Decoy Second Baseman)
    • Column: A vertical column which players were required to climb to reach the elevated base.
    • Free Fall
    • Cargo Net
    • Wall Climb to Third Base
    • Slide for Life
    • Tube Slide

(above two were sometimes referred to as the Neon Deion Slide when used to land on Home Plate and conclude the run.)

Track

Moon Race

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: This event made use of Nickelodeon Moon Shoes, which were strapped to the players' feet. Players raced around the track by jumping with the moon shoes on. Players must stay in their designated lanes or they'll be disqualified, and the player who crossed the finish line first was the winner.

Wild Wheels

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Players were buckled into a special recumbent tricycle, which they then pedaled around the track while going through some obstacles such as cones and ramps (and in later playings, the "Car Wash"). Players competed one at a time, and if the player went off the track or missed an obstacle during their run, he or she received a two-second penalty. The player who finished this course in the fastest time was the winner.

Eat My Dust

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: In this event, players, going one at a time, rode a BMX bicycle around the track, while having to deal with obstacles such as the "Bump n' Dump" ramp, a sand trap, the "Tippin' Tubular Tunnel", the "Sack Attack" (a series of swinging punching bags) and a final ramp before crossing the finish line. A two-second penalty was imposed on a player if they went off the track during their run. The fastest time was the winner.

Blade Runners

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: The contestants wore in-line skates, which they used to race around the track, going through some obstacles as they went along, including a pair of low hurdles (the Limbo Bars), a series of flags or cones (the Frantic Flags, or the Slalom), some swinging punching bags (the Sack Attack), a low tunnel (the Car Wash), and a final ramp. Players received a two-second penalty if they stepped off of the track during their run. Fastest time won.

Tornado Run

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: In this event, the track had many different obstacles that the players had to navigate around, including running on top of a "river" (a simulated pond with stepping stones), then over a "rocking earthquake" (pieces of faux pavement that tilted up and down), after that scampering through and then climbing jungle vines (one set in early playings, and later two sets), and racing through a "swamp fog" on the final ramp. A wind also blew leaves onto the players during the race to make it more challenging. The more common version of this game had all three players run around the track, with the one crossing the finish line first being the winner. Alternate playings of this event had the players run through the course one at a time, with the winner being determined by the fastest time.
  • Note: This is the only event where an injury occurred to a player that actually kept them out of the remainder of the competition. This happened in a Global GUTS episode (1995), where all three players fell after crossing the river, but one of them, CIS contestant Katya "The Asteroid" Afansjeva (in blue) sprained her ankle and was unable to continue on in the GUTS competition (she was then replaced by fellow Ukrainian, Stepan "The Serpent" Serdyuk). From that point on, players competed individually in Tornado Run.

Mad Max

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: Played like Wild Wheels (with a reclining tricycle), this event (likely inspired by the movie of the same name) had many obstacles to overcome. As they pedaled around the track, contestants passed "The Junkyard" (a part of the track with scrap lying on it), then navigated over a series of speed bumps, then raced through "Pothole Pass", and finally crashed through a "Dead End" wall on their way to the finish line. The two-second off-the-track penalty applied to this event as well. Fastest time was the winner.

Pool

In the first two seasons, the pool was located in the field, but in season 3, the pool was moved to the scoreboard area. Also in season 2, plexiglass was added in to avoid water splashing outside the pool.

Invisible Boat

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Players were hooked to an elastic cord and given a paddle. The players used the paddle to walk themselves across the pool before touching the end of the pool with their paddle; this was made more difficult by means of several water cannons creating rapids in the pool. Fastest time won. In the 1994 season, this event was made a bit more difficult, in that players were now required to paddle to the end of the pool and then back. As such, in this version of the event, not touching both ends of the pool with one's paddle resulted in an automatic third place finish.

Boogie Down

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: With rapids active, players, who were hooked to a harness, use a rope to pull themselves from one end of the pool to the other and back while kneeling on a kneeboard (boogie board), high-fiving a spotter at each end to assure a complete run. Fastest time won the event.

White Water

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: With rapids active, players had to paddle an inflated raft around two buoys and to the end of the pool, where they gave a high five to a spotter to end the race. If a player did not go around a buoy, he or she got a five-second penalty added to their time. The player with the fastest time won the event. In the first two seasons, if the player exceeded a 60-second time limit, he or she would get an automatic third place. In season 3, the Wave Runner event (see below) was renamed to White Water. In Global GUTS, the Wave Ball would still be used, but the pylons were replaced by buoys again.

Totally Tubular

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: The swimming pool was divided into three lanes for this event, and each lane had an equal number of inner tubes. Players simultaneously swam to the other end of the pool, having to put the inner tubes over themselves as they swam along. After touching the end of the pool, they had to swim back to the starting point with the tubes still on them. The player who made it back to the starting point first was the winner. However, if a player did not touch the end of the pool before coming back to the starting point, or missed any inner tubes, he or she was disqualified.

Splash Down

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Three inflated tubes were attached to each other (with bungee cords) in a triangular fashion, with one player on each tube. With the rapids active, players shook the tubes with their bodies in an attempt to knock their opponents into the pool. The last player remaining above the water was the winner. This event was timed at 45 seconds, and if all three players stayed on top of their tubes, they all received first place points.

Hang Ten

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: While on a bodyboard (surfboard), players had 30 seconds to collect as many of ten buoys scattered around the pool as possible, while at the same time trying to battle against large waves created by a Wave Ball. In order for the buoys to count, they had to remain on the players' arms. Whoever collected the most buoys won.

Wave Runner

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: This followed basically the same format as the White Water event, except that now, players had to make their way around two pylons, and instead of rapids, they would be hindered by waves caused by the Wave Ball. Again, fastest time won.

Power Ski

  • Year of debut: 1993
  • Objective: Hanging from a harness, the player's feet were strapped to a special (trick) water ski. With the Wave Ball active, the object was for the players to pull themselves from one end of the pool to the other and back while on the ski, high-fiving the spotters at each end. The fastest time won the event.

Skurfin' Safari

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Strapped to a water ski (skurfboard), players had to pull themselves to one end of the pool and back in the rapids. However, five buoys were lined up in the player's path, and the contestant had to maneuver their way around the buoys in a slalom fashion in both directions, also having to high-five the spotter to end their attempt. Any time a player did not navigate around a buoy resulted in a two-second penalty. The penalty would also be imposed on any player who lifted their skurfboard out of the water for more than two seconds during their run. The player who cleared this event in the fastest time won.

Field

Free Kick

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Two automated cannons shot several soccer balls at each of the players, who stood in front of each of three goal nets. Players had to block as many of the soccer balls as they possibly could in the allotted time (30 seconds in seasons 1 and 3, and 45 seconds in season 2 and Global GUTS), and the one who blocked the most shots won. If the player stepped outside of his or her own box, he or she was given an automatic third place finish.

Wild Pitch

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Cannons shot several baseballs at high speeds directly at the three players. In earlier playings, the object of this game was to dodge as many balls as possible in 30 seconds, with the player getting hit the fewest times being the winner. The second and more familiar version of this event gave the players a baseball bat to use. Here, they tried to hit as many balls as they could with their bats in 30 seconds (45 seconds in season 2), with the winner being the person who hit the most balls. Players had to stay in their own boxes or else they would be disqualified. In season 1, the players were outfitted in catchers' gear, and in season 2, they wore batter's helmets, safety goggles, and protective chest pads.

Aces

  • Year of debut: 1992
  • Objective: Several cannons shot a series of tennis balls over a net at each player. Using a tennis racquet, the player had to return as many serves as possible back over the net in 30 seconds. The player with the most serves returned won.

Slap Shot

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: The field was divided into three separate lanes for this event. Each lane had barricades on alternating sides of the lane, and a revolving goal at the end of it. The players used a hockey stick, a pair of roller skates, and a ball for the puck; the object was to navigate around the barricades, keeping the ball in front of their stick, and try to score a goal by hitting the ball into the revolving goal. They would then skate back and repeat the process. The player with the most goals scored in 60 seconds (45 seconds in one episode) was the winner.

Blast It

  • Year of debut: 1995
  • Objective: Players stood in a center circle as soccer balls poured out of an elevated tube. There were three separate goals set in a triangular fashion outside the circle (each one representing the player's color), and the object was to score as many soccer goals as they could in 60 seconds. Players could not leave the center circle or touch the ball with their hands. The player with the most goals scored was the winner.

Ski slope

Vertiboggan

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Modeled after tobogganing, each player (who was hooked to a harness) would navigate on a toboggan down a fabricated ski slope (which used soap bubbles to keep it slick), making some sharp turns (such as the "Nerve Curve" and the "Face Plant Slant") as they went along and passing through some moguls (known as "Mogul Mania"), until they reached the finish line. The player with the fastest time was the winner.

Spin Out

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Players used a luge sled to make it down the ski slope and to the finish line, with the fastest time winning.

The Edge

  • Year of debut: 1994
  • Objective: Played like the other two Ski Slope events, this event had the players strapped to skis and using two ski poles for navigation down the slope. As always, fastest time would win.

The Aggro Crag

The fifth and final event, the Aggro Crag (later renamed the Mega Crag, and finally the Super Aggro Crag) ultimately decided the winner. All three contestants raced to climb a fabricated mountain, activating a series of lighted targets commonly referred to as "actuators" (six and later seven in the first season; eight from the second season on) on their way to the peak. If a contestant missed an actuator along the way, that player could not complete the climb until he or she returned and activated the target they missed. The climb was made more difficult with special effects that simulated lightning storms, rock avalanches, flying "snow" in the form of glitter and confetti, "nuclear flying crystals", and steep walls. Each contestant had a separate but identical side of the mountain to climb, and was not permitted to cross into another's path. The first contestant to successfully activate each target, including the final one at the peak of the mountain, earned first-place worth 725 points. The second- and third-place contestants earned 550 and 375 points, respectively.

A number of violations on the Crag could result in a player automatically receiving third place points. These included:

  • Inadvertently crossing into another player's section of the mountain, even by grabbing another player's hand rail
  • Accidentally hitting someone else's actuator (excluding the final actuator)
  • Making a false start at the beginning of the climb, i.e., beginning before the whistle
  • Finishing the climb without lighting all of one's own actuators
  • Not stepping on all of the boulders in the Crag's "Boulder Canyon" section at the base of the mountain, a rule introduced in the second season.

The increased point structure in the event allowed contestants to come from behind to win, despite earlier mistakes. It also nearly ensured that no two contestants could achieve a tie score. The only way two contestants could tie on the Crag was if they both violated the rules as outlined above. Although theoretically possible, a tie in the contestants' total scores never happened, even when two contestants were disqualified on the Aggro Crag.

The highest possible score for a contestant was 1925 points, and was attained several times throughout the show's run. Three contestants who achieved this score in 1992 were invited back to compete in a one-hour "GUTS All-Star Special" in 1993.

The Aggro Crag went through several revisions in the show's run, each longer and more difficult than the previous version. In the first two taped seasons (1992 and 1993), the mountain was called the Aggro Crag. For the show's third season in 1994, the mountain was renamed the Mega Crag. For the show's final season, Global GUTS (1995), it changed yet again to the Super Aggro Crag. In the third season in 1994, its color was changed to be molten.

The total height of the Aggro Crag is 28 feet.

It should be noted that the Aggro Crag was not actually made of rock, but out of foam and particle board. Thus, being awarded an actual piece of the rock was intrinsically impossible -- the winning contestant received the glowing trophy shown on camera.

Winning

The player with the most points after all five events won the game and received a gold GUTS medal, as well as a faux glowing piece of the Aggro Crag. When the show changed to Global GUTS, the medals were redesigned to reflect the show's new logo. With all seasons of the show, second place received a silver medal and third received a bronze medal.

Global GUTS

A year after its cancellation in 1994, a spinoff was launched called Global GUTS. The format remained the same with four athletic events and the Super Aggro Crag; however, the contestants now included children from the United Kingdom, Mexico, Israel, Germany, Spain, Portugal, the Commonwealth of Independent States (simply referred to as "CIS" on air, this included only Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Georgia, though a press release claims to include Belarus as well, and the flag of Belarus was occasionally seen in the rafters), and the United States. Each country had its own team of broadcasters; O'Malley retained this role for the US and UK broadcasts.

At the end of each Global GUTS episode, in a manner similar to the Olympics, the flags of the contestants' countries were raised while the national anthem of the gold medal winner played in the background (for example, if a player from the U.S.A. won a gold medal, the Star-Spangled Banner would play in the background). Each player then took a lap around the Extreme Arena with his or her country's flag draped over their shoulders.

In each Global GUTS episode there was a medal count to record how many gold, silver, and bronze medals each country won:

Global Guts medal count
Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze
1 United Kingdom United Kingdom 8 2 2
2 Mexico Mexico 7 3 2
3 United States United States 6 4 2
4 Germany Germany 4 6 2
5 Israel Israel 4 3 5
6 Spain Spain 2 2 8
7 Portugal Portugal 1 5 6
8 CIS
Russia Russia
Ukraine Ukraine
Georgia (country) Georgia
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
0 7 5

In addition to airing the program on Nickelodeon in the United States, it aired on the Ukrainian Television Network in the CIS, Ravensburger TV in Germany, the Israeli Children's Channel in Israel, MVS Multivisión in Mexico, Sociedade Independente de Comunicação in Portugal, TVE in Spain, and Nickelodeon UK in the United Kingdom.

As a precursor to Global GUTS, season 3 of Nickelodeon GUTS featured six contestants from the United Kingdom, competing in six separate shows. Of the six, four contestants ended up winning the gold medal.

Famous contestants

In 1992, Backstreet Boy A.J. McLean appeared on GUTS, competing against Amanda "The Accelerator" Bulger and Jamie "The Jackal" Mendelsohn, and finishing with the silver medal. He was in blue and referred to on the show as AJ "Mean" McLean. He had one event win during his appearance, that being a win in the Slam Dunk event.

In 1993, Hollywood stuntwoman Anna Mercedes Morris competed on the show under the name Anna "Roadrunner" Morris. She was dressed in red, competing against "Lawless" Lauren Shealy and Paul "Running Man" Battson, and she finished with the gold medal, despite injuring her knee in the Basic Training event.

In 1993, actor Mike Vogel competed on GUTS with Christy "Blast" Gast and Cam "The Ice Man" Burke, and finishing with the silver medal. He tied with the other players for first place on Over the Top and also won the Aggro Crag event, coming from third place to take second overall. He was known as Mike "Flea" Vogel and was dressed in blue.

In 1994, actress Ashley Drane competed on GUTS with Nicole "The Bomber" Bozard and UK resident Leanne "Panther" Kelley, and finishing with the silver medal. She was known as Ashley "The Face" Drane and was dressed in blue.

In 1994, Houston Dynamo defender Bobby Boswell appeared on GUTS, competing against Robin "The Lizard" Rexroat and Jennifer "The Jaguar" Barnes, and finishing with the silver medal. He was known on the show as Bobby "Lightning" Boswell and won the soccer event "Shoot Out", just a hint of what was to come for the career of Bobby Boswell. (Boswell, who was dressed in purple, also won the Mega Crag event in that very same show.)

Special guests

The following were guests during the 1992 season:

  • Wendy Bruce

The following were guests during the 1994 season:

The guests in the 1994 season would, before each event, give a list of three "Smart Moves" (suggestions) that they felt that the players should follow.

My Family's Got GUTS

A revival of the show, My Family's Got GUTS, debuted on September 15, 2008 at 8 pm eastern/pacific on Nickelodeon. The series again calls the studios at Universal Studios Florida home. This version is hosted by Ben Lyons, along with Australian celebirty Asha Kuerten as the referee.

Reruns

Nickelodeon GUTS reruns were shown on Nickelodeon GAS from March 1, 1999 until the network's closure on December 31, 2007. Five episodes are available for viewing online via TurboNick.

External links