And now 20-ish years later-please don’t do the math, I swear I’m still young-I’m still doing that.
Twelve-Year-Old Me would’ve ruined her Limited Too shorts if she’d gotten a chance to do the Temple Run, but I had to live vicariously through the kids who were able to compete on the show. He also didn’t give too much away about the show’s new format or what kind of challenges the next-gen Silver Snakes and Blue Barracudas-yes, the teams will still be the same-would have to face. Stone, whose company is also behind the reboot, was politely evasive when asked whether Fogg or Dee Bradley Baker, the voice behind Olmec’s oversized head, would be coming back for the new version.
“Of all the shows I have done, Legends is THE show I get asked about the most, particularly with millennials.” “The audience asked for it,” Scott Stone, who co-created and executive produced the OG show, told VICE. The show also involved a talking stone head named Olmec, chambray-and-khaki-clad host Kirk Fogg, and the kind of obstacle course that required both elbow pads and mesh water shoes. Legends of the Hidden Temple was the Orlando-based network’s fourth game show, and each episode was based around historic legends that probably weren’t fact-checked and an associated artefact (The Electrified Key of Benjamin Franklin, the Enormous Nose Ring of Babe the Ox) that had to be recovered from one of the title temple’s 12 rooms. That year, Nickelodeon premiered a new show that it hoped would be a mouthguard-wearing mashup of Jeopardy! and the Indiana Jones movies.
#Blue barracudas legends of the hidden temple full#
If you were a kid in 1993, you probably mumbled through everything but the ‘A licky boom boom down’ parts of Snow’s inescapable “Informer,” you talked about the poop scene in Jurassic Park for a full week, and you spent a tremendous amount of time watching Nickelodeon shows like GUTS, Double Dare, and anything else that came on before Nick News.