
thefilmarchived.blogspot.com A blooper is a short sequence of a film or video production, usually a deleted scene, containing a mistake made by a member of the cast or crew. These bloopers, or outtakes as they are also called, are often the subject of television shows or are occasionally revealed during the credit sequence at the end of comedy movies. (Jackie Chan and Burt Reynolds are both famous for including such reels with the closing credits of their movies.) Humorous mistakes made by athletes are often referred to as bloopers as well, particularly in baseball. Some films that there were bloopers in include A Bug's Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., Valiant, Cheaper By the Dozen, and Cheaper By the Dozen 2. Comedian Dick Emery showcased his own out-takes as an epilogue entitled A Comedy of Errors to his BBC shows in the mid 1970s. The later British show It'll be Alright on the Night, which has been running on ITV since 1977, and hosted by Denis Norden (replaced by Griff Rhys Jones in 2008) showed out-takes from film and TV. The BBC's answer to the show, Auntie's Bloomers, presented by Terry Wogan (and its spin-off sporting-mistakes show, Auntie's Sporting Bloomers, also presented by Wogan), ran until approximately 2001, and was replaced by Outtake TV, which began as a series of one-off specials in 2002, hosted by Paul O'Grady, before a series was commissioned and subsequently broadcast on BBC One in 2004, but this time hosted by Anne Robinson. Special Weakest Link <b>...</b>
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