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Wife Swap

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Wife Swap
Format Reality TV
Starring Various couples
Country of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Channel 4
Original run 1 January 2003 – Renewed Through The 2007-2008 season
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Wife Swap is a reality television programme, produced by UK independent TV production company RDF Media. It first aired in 2003 on the UK's Channel 4, and since 2004 an American version has also aired on the ABC network. On 26 January 2007 ABC announced that it had renewed Wife Swap through the 2007-2008 Season.

Contents

Synopsis

The title is a play on the term "wife swapping", a practice associated with the swinging lifestyle, which is not a theme of the show. For the television show, two families, usually from vastly different social classes and lifestyles, swap wives/mothers for two weeks. In fact, the show will usually deliberately swap wives with extreme polar opposite lifestyles, such as a dramatically messy wife swapping with a fastidiously neat one. Though using a phrase from the swinging lifestyle, couples participating in the show do not share a bed with the "swapped" spouse while "swapping" homes. During the first week, the new wife must adhere to the exact same rules and lifestyle of the wife they are replacing. Each wife leaves a house manual which explains their role in the family and the duties they hold. During the second week, the new wives are allowed to establish their own rules, and their new families must adhere to these new household rules. At the end of the two weeks, the two couples all meet together for the first time, and along with their husbands, discuss how they feel about the two weeks. This often descends into personal insults and has degenerated into violence at least once.[1] In 2006 on the American version, a new twist was added whereby the wife can bring in someone to help her (a family member, a friend) to help on one day of the swap. The twist was discontinued early in the third season and only appeared in a few episodes.

Spin-offs

Other countries

Localised versions of Wife Swap were produced by Viasat and aired in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Viasat was the first company in the world to adapt the format locally. The first adaptation aired in Denmark in Fall 2003. A version in Serbia airs on RTV Pink, called Menjam ženu, which premiered in July 2006. Also, Chile premiered its own version of Wife Swap called "¿Quién cambia a quién? Intercambio de Esposas" (Who changes whom?: Wife Swap) on March 14. The show is produced by Canal 13 and hosted by Cecilia Bolocco. The Croatian version airs on RTL Televizija. There is also a Dutch version of wife swap called "Jouw Vrouw Mijn Vrouw" (Your wife My wife). In Germany Wife Swap is called Frauentausch and premiered July 14 2003 on RTL II.

Celebrity Wife Swap

There have been four celebrity versions of Wife Swap produced on the UK version of the show. It is not based on the family format they use in the normal programme but use partners instead. The first one saw Charles Ingram playing host to Jade Goody of Big Brother fame, and the second saw racing pundit John McCririck play host to politician Edwina Currie. The third celebrity version broadcasted on April 1st 2007 and featured magician Paul Daniels and journalist and radio host Vanessa Feltz. The fourth celebrity edition broadcasted on September 30th 2007 and featured 80's pop-singer and Celebrity Big Brother star Pete Burns and former football player Neil Ruddock.

Boss Swap

A spin-off, Boss Swap, aired as a series in the UK. A pilot for a U.S. series aired on ABC, but the series never got commissioned. Husband Swap and Vacation Swap pilots were also aired in the U.S., but were not ordered to series. At least once, however, a husband and a live-in boyfriend swapped while the women stayed with their families.

Parodies

Legal issues

Trading Spouses

In the United States, the Fox network airs another show entitled Trading Spouses, with a near identical format to Wife Swap. In 2004, the RDF Media sued Fox for copyright infringement for reproducing the Wife Swap format without their permission.[2] In 2004, ABC showcased their upcoming Wife Swap show including projections of its popularity. Weeks before the show's debut, FOX introduced Trading Spouses.[3] The producers of Wife Swap, RDF Media, claimed FOX stole their concept,[4] while FOX argued that TV shows have always borrowed from one another and that FOX simply beat ABC to delivery.

British version

In her 2003 appearance on the programme, Lizzy Bardsley was shown to be living entirely on state benefits, which she continued to do so without declaring payments she subsequently received for media work. Prosecuted and found guilty in 2005, she was sentenced to 80 hours community service and ordered to repay £4,879 in overpaid benefits.[5] In February 2007 she was convicted of child cruelty charges, receiving an eight month suspended sentence and a two year supervision order.[6]

American version

  • On March 23 2005, 50-year-old former Wife Swap participant Edward Heiss, Jr., of Warwick, Rhode Island, was arrested on charges of identity theft and for obtaining money under false pretenses. He allegedly used his father's identity to obtain a luxury automobile, loans, and goods with a value of $100,000. Heiss appeared in Wife Swap in the autumn of 2005. His wife Susan said that he is impulsive with money.[7]
  • In November of 2005, Jeffrey Bedford, a participant on the show, sued ABC network for trading his wife for a gay man. He accused ABC of being dishonest, not allowing him contact with his wife, and making him miss college classes. He claims that when he ceased participating with the production of the show, ABC threatened that it would not tell him his wife's whereabouts and would not pay for his wife's return home. He is suing for over USD$10,000,000.00.[8] The producers of the show and ABC have dismissed the allegations and claim that his argument was simply homophobia on his behalf.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttBTqdACr2E YouTube video showing two 'Wife Swap' couples in an altercation
  2. ^ "Wife Swap Producers Sue Fox TV Over Copycat" from Yahoo! News
  3. ^ "Spouse swap a fit for Fox: Net snipes at Alphabet with Trading Spouses" article from Variety
  4. ^ "Wife Swap sues Trading Spouses" article from post-gazette.com
  5. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/4286756.stm
  6. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/6385975.stm
  7. ^ "'Swap' Participant Charged With ID Theft" from MSN
  8. ^ "'Wife Swap' sued over gay guest" article from The Independent

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Wife Swap from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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