In the 1990s, Dark Night was the title of YTV's annual Halloween celebration: a candy haze, pop and chip frenzy induced bumper marathon of spooky kids shows.
These included series like Goosebumps, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Freaky Stories, all linked together with epic interstitials starring PJs Phil, Paul, Jenn, Katie, Krista and many more.
For children of the '90s, Dark Night was annual appointment TV, almost as important as Halloween itself.
Here's how it came about.
The PJ Way
PJs (or Program Jockeys) began to appear on YTV in 1991, helping to fill out precious time between programs where advertising could not be sold, and to bolster the Canadian content quota mandated by the CRTC.
It didn't take long for the first crop of PJs like Jazzy Jan (Janis Mackey Frayer) and Gord the PJ Man (Gordon Woolvet) to catch on and develop cult followings.
However, it was the fortuitous arrival of one Phil Guerrero aka PJ Phresh Phil that triggered a seismic shift in YTV's image, vibe, and street credibility.
When YTV launched in 1988, they billed themselves as "the spirit of youth"; now they had a Reverend to preach it.
By 1993 the PJs were the face of YTV, and after great success with 1992 Canada's Wonderland set Festival of Friends, PJ-fronted specials outside of program blocks like The Zone and The Alley began happening with greater frequency.
The Dark Night Rises
And what better event to build a special night around than one that marketing had determined was key to kids — Halloween.
The very first Dark Night premiered in October of 1993, featuring a triple helping of Are You Afraid of the Dark? along with special Halloween-themed episodes of shows like Rugrats and Garfield.
The evening was hosted by PJs Phil, Jenn and Ashna in a darkened and cramped candle-lit set.
Enter the Green Skull
Proving to be a massive ratings success, Dark Night 2 followed in October of 1994 and was sponsored by Smarties, who provided glow-in-the-dark sleeping bags while the PJs promoted sleepovers during the marathon of fearful episodes.
Also around this time, the utterly legendary YTV Green Skull first appeared, and forever became associated with scary things on YTV, especially Dark Night.
Dark Night 3
In October of 1995, YTV's atomic creative explosion knew no bounds and the production of Dark Night 3 kicked the enterprise up several notches by shooting at Casa Loma, bringing a real sense of scale to the nominally low-key PJ special events.
Paul McGuire aka PJ Paul remembers: "Dark Night was a big deal at the time. We were used to the small Zone studio and working with nothing, now we've got multiple crews, lightning rigs and dollies."
McGuire recalled the production as "Scooby Doo-esqe".
"Shooting it at Casa Loma with all those hidden rooms and secret passages was far scarier than it was on the air," he said.
However, as ambitious as the 3rd installment had been, it was merely a dress rehearsal for 1996's industrious and chilling 4th installment.
Dark Night 4
Dark Night 4 found PJs Phil and Paul wandering around the fog-shrouded Toronto streets, looking for a Halloween party.
All the while Phil struggles with the fact he has become uncool while Paul's arm has been bitten by a creature and he may be turning into a monster.
In those days, YTV HQ was located at 64 Jefferson Avenue (ironically now home to Moses Znaimer's Zoomer empire), and the surrounding area afforded suitably creepy locations for the Dark Night shoots.
"I remember getting home at like 7am in the morning, after shooting all night around YTV in the warehouses there. Before it became Liberty Village, it used to be a landfill, with abandoned buildings and warehouses. It was crazy," recalls Phil Guerrero.
"You gotta remember, back then it wasn't called Liberty Village, it was Lower East Parkdale. When we were shooting (Dark Night 4), in the park there were vagrants, needles and condoms scattered around on the ground, you know? It was a totally different place," adds McGuire.
Marketing the Dark Nights
As the plots of Dark Night became more inspired, so did the merchandising and promotional tie-ins.
From YTV-branded bowling ball bags for severed heads, to watches with a disappearing YTV skull icon to an actual Dark Night puzzle, the merchandise became a huge part of the Dark Night experience.
Hasbro Canada provided mind-blowingly massive prize packs rewarding eagle-eyed viewers who participated in 1-800 trivia contests.
One year the response was so overwhelming the jammed phone lines eventually took down New Brunswick's network, underlining the furious passion surrounding Dark Night.
Dark Night 5
Dark Night 5 in 1997 was perhaps the apex of them all, prophetically featuring a reality TV twist which beat 1999's The Blair Witch Project to the "found footage" horror genre.
The PJs held fort at YTV's control room while monitoring supernatural events unfolding in a small (fictional) town called Tweed. It was as if X-Files had hijacked The Zone and transported it into the heart of Twin Peaks.
Was it perhaps too much for kids to see their trusted daily hosts placed into such otherworldly peril?
"There was a lot of controversy back then - if it wasn't kids gambling with Pogs, the horror stuff was too much for them, or the Power Rangers were making kids beat each other up in the school yards."
"Every time we did a Dark Night, we wondered if it was too scary," recalls Guerrero.
Halloweird
Things were certainly reigned in for the following year's Dark Night, which was not numbered and featured a monstrous game show parody from the production team behind YTV's smash UH-OH.
In 1999, Dark Night was replaced by something called "Halloweird", and by then both Phil and Paul had moved on from YTV.
The winds of change were blowing, and those innovative and anarchic madcap '90s YTV stylings were soon a thing of the past.
Legacy of Dark Night
Ellen Page once tweeted: "Halloween approaching makes me remember the limitless, undying joy that YTV's Dark Night gave me. Any Canadians in the house hearin me?"
The legacy of Dark Night indeed lives on in the hearts and minds of '90s kids who came of age during that innocent time before the internet irreversibly changed everything, even how we celebrate Halloween.
"That was the '90s for you," Guerrero thoughtfully explains with a sly hint of PJ Phresh Phil sneaking back into his patois.
"Great time to be a kid, lame time to be an adult".
0 comments:
Post a Comment