Английская Википедия:Crónicas marcianas

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Шаблон:About Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox television Crónicas marcianas (Martian Chronicles)Шаблон:Efn was a Spanish late-night talk show produced by Шаблон:Ill and broadcast by Telecinco from 1997 to 2005. It was directed and presented by Шаблон:Ill, and had Miquel José and Jordi Roca, with whom Sardá had created Шаблон:Ill on Cadena SER, as deputy directors and screenwriters.

It is the longest running and most watched late-night talk show in the history of Spanish television.[1] Despite being characterized by some as a classic example of Шаблон:Ill (trash TV),[2] it won several honors during its run, including one Ondas Award, two Шаблон:Ill, and six TP de Oro Awards.[3][4]

In December 2023, it received a surprise return to screens with Crónicas marcianas: El Reencuentro, a series of episodes collecting memories of the programme from Sardà and other collaborators on the show. The show received a new title sequence and good ratings, however nothing has yet been confirmed regarding a full reboot.

History

Crónicas marcianas began airing on 8 September 1997 to compete with Antena 3's Шаблон:Ill, which was then the ratings leader.[5] In principle, Crónicas marcianas contributed less sensationalism and a softer form of humor, with comedians, co-presenter Martí Galindo, wild animals, videos of pratfalls, and interviews with celebrities such as Cindy Crawford, Marta Sánchez, David Copperfield, Enrique Iglesias, and Ricky Martin.[6]

Crónicas marcianas came to surpass La sonrisa del pelícano in audience, and became the undisputed leader in its time slot after the latter was canceled amid controversy. Boris Izaguirre began appearing on the show to give "semiotic" analysis of celebrity gossip, in addition to performing "transformism" and striptease numbers.[7] New comedians and public figures were often featured, such as Шаблон:Ill, Шаблон:Ill, Paz Padilla, and Шаблон:Ill. Political and social topics were discussed by guests such as Cristina Almeida, Anna Balletbó i Puig, Celia Villalobos, Begoña Ameztoy, Шаблон:Ill, Loles León, Javier Nart, Шаблон:Ill, Шаблон:Ill, Ivonne Reyes, Шаблон:Ill, and Empar Moliner. Шаблон:Ill moved to the program from Шаблон:Ill to host a crime segment, and Carmen Vijande hosted one on sexology.[8]

For his part, Javier Cárdenas toured Spain to find different characters to interview. Some of these interviews were criticized for mocking their subjects, and Cárdenas and Sardà were ordered to pay €15,000 in compensation after a 2002 segment in which a court found they had committed "illegitimate meddling in the honor" of a young man with a disability.[9] Some interviewees became popular, such as Paco Porras, Leonardo Dantés, Tamara, Шаблон:Ill, La Bruja Lola, Carmen de Mairena, and El Mocito Feliz, and they appeared together with Cárdenas in the feature film Шаблон:Ill. The controversial singer Tamara (later known as Yurena) had a number one single with "No cambié", and the program also sponsored the release of several music compilations.[10]

In 2000, Crónicas marcianas began to exploit the phenomenon of reality shows such as Gran Hermano and Шаблон:Ill, to such an extent that many of their former contestants became participants, replacing the previous ones. Examples include Aída Nízar, Sonia Arenas, Jorge Berrocal, Dinio García, María José Galera, Шаблон:Ill, Carlos "El Yoyas" Navarro, Silvia Fominaya, Marta López, Шаблон:Ill, Noemí Ungría, and Raquel Morillas. The discussion tables were occupied by Nuria Bermúdez, Borja Hernán, Erika Alonso, Mari Cielo Pajares (daughter of actor Andrés Pajares), Italian nobleman Шаблон:Ill, Coto Matamoros, Шаблон:Ill, Mayte Alonso, Mila Ximénez, and other personalities. Themes such as celebrity relationships, accusations of drug abuse and trafficking, and the practice of prostitution became more prevalent. In this last period, Carlos Latre, Шаблон:Ill, and Шаблон:Ill joined Sardà as co-presenters.

The program's ratings declined in the 2004–2005 season, as it lost viewers to shows such as Шаблон:Ill. Its cancellation was announced at the end of the season, while it was still the late-night ratings leader.[11][12][13] Many of its production staff eventually moved to premiere El Hormiguero in 2006.

In November 2023, Telecinco surprised many by announcing Crónicas marcianas: El Reencuentro, a one-off special of the show with memories of the original from former collaborators, for 12 December 2023. While not considered a full revival, the show won the timeslot and improved Telecinco's late-night slot performance by five percentage points.[14] No word has, however, been given by Telecinco on a reboot of the show based on its favourable performance.

List of contributors

Файл:Coto Matamoros 2018.jpg
Coto Matamoros in 2018

Шаблон:Columns-list

Ratings by season

Season Beginning Ending Ratings Ref
Viewers Share
1 1997 1998 1,826,000 22.5% [1]
2 1998 1999 1,568,000 24.5% [1]
3 1999 2000 1,548,000 28.7% [1]
4 2000 2001 1,818,000 33.7% [1]
5 2001 2002 1,792,000 31.3% [1]
6 2002 2003 1,871,000 32.7% [1]
7 2003 2004 1,981,000 37.7% [1]
8 2004 2005 1,471,000 29.4% [1]
Average 1997 2005 1,734,000 30.1%

International versions

The TV format created in Spain, was exported in two countries on the world.

Country Name Presenter Channel Year Aired
Шаблон:Flagu Cronache marziane Fabio Canino Italia 1 2004-2005
Шаблон:Flagu Noites marcianas Carlos Cruz SIC 2001

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links