Craps dice odds. Tutti Frutti was the German version of the Italian game show Colpo Grosso ('Big Score'). It was aired from 21 January 1990 through to 21 February 1993 on RTL plus for three series, totaling approximately 140 episodes. It was the first erotic TV show on German television and was also available to viewers across Europe as it was broadcast without encryption via the Astra satellite which could be received over a wide area and was popular with 'early adopter' satellite enthusiasts in the UK. The show caused substantial outrage at the time, as partial nudity was a central feature (the show featured scantily dressed and stripping women).
The show was innovative in broadcasting 3D effect film clips where the background was scrolled across the screen at a slower speed than dancers in the foreground, thereby giving the effect of depth on a 2D screen using the Pulfrich effect.
The program[edit]
The host of the show was Hugo Egon Balder, who was supported by up to three co-hosts:
- Series 1: Monique Sluyter,[1] Tiziana d'Arcangelo, Nora Wenck
- Series 2: Sluyter, d'Arcangelo
- Series 3: Gabriella Lunghi
Jun 24, 2019 It's summer and we are looking for a fresh new look. The best thing to get inspired by is fruits! So let's create a gorgeous look for this model in a tutti frutti way! Start by picking her skin tone and her hairstyle. She can have buns, braids or ponytails in the color you desire. Then continue by creating a top. It can be a blouse, a shirt or a crop top. You can customize the color and then. Three special features can be found whilst playing Tutti Frutti, which are: Wild – the fruit salad is the wild. When this symbol is used as part of a winning combination, the fruit will mix. Free spins – oddly enough, you won’t know how many free spins you can generate until you spin in at least 2. How to play Tutti Cuti Ice Cream Parlor Click and/or drag the items to put them together and serve them to the customers. The juicer needs 3 oranges to work, and don't forget to place the cups. Work quickly, these cuties are impatient!
The program was staged on a staggering basis in the studios of the production company ASA TV in Cologno Monzese, a suburb of Milan. The shooting time was around four weeks each. The set design, the format and the cast with each season changing were completely taken over by Colpo Grosso, as well as the song sung in Italian. Other Colpo Grosso adaptations were in Spain (¡Ay, qué calor!) and Sweden (Tutti Frutti). In Brazil, a version that was not taped in Italy, but almost completely copied, was called Cocktail. Even today, the Italian version is broadcast on various satellite channels worldwide.
Objective[edit]
Two contestants could win points during guessing game rounds, which were invested into removing various clothing items of a stripper. The contestants would call 'heiß' or 'kalt' (hot or cold) to make their guess. If the lady was almost entirely undressed, a so-called 'Länderpunkt' (country point) was awarded (the term 'Länderpunkt' is still widely associated with the show even today). The number of obtained 'Länderpunkten' then determined the winnings, which could occasionally reach up to 5000 ECU coins. The studio band played throughout the program to create a loose atmosphere.
'Cin Cin Girls'[edit]
Tutti Frutti Game Discovery Toys
A significant portion of success of Tutti Frutti is attributed to the so-called 'ballet Cin Cin' (in the original Italian, 'ragazze cin cin'). This was a group of internationally well-known models, who were hired permanently to fill certain roles in the show. Each was representing a certain fruit and some are still known as this fruit. Former German 'Playmates of the Year' Stella Kobs (lemon in series 1) Jolie Mitnick Salter (blueberry in series 1) and Elke Jeinsen (strawberry in series 2) filled this role, among others.
Reception[edit]
When Tutti Frutti was first broadcast, the Federal Republic of Germany was changing. Tutti Frutti as the first erotic TV show on German television acted, so to speak, as a kind of 'erotic wall opening'. The program was then criticized as being Misogynistic, but the fact that Tutti Frutti dared to deal with the bare facts hardly led to a scandal. Rather, the debate in the German tabloid and quality press at the time documented the 'normalization of publicly staged nudity.' The mostly devastating judgments of TV criticism aimed more at the questionable aesthetics of the program than at moral questions.[2]
Financially, Tutti Frutti was a great success for a long time, as the advertising revenue far exceeded the minute price of the program. Tutti Frutti drew attention to itself, among other things, by filing a complaint by the responsible state media authority against RTL for the display of sponsorship advertisements (hence the display of permanent commercials or the subsequent blurring of the logos), by recorders with strips in 3D (see Pulfrich effect) in the second season and through a very extensive merchandising (sound carriers, magazines, calendars, videos). Neue Revue magazine sponsored the first season.
Above all, fans appreciated the show's rather anarchic charm. 'Tutti Frutti was what would later have been called a cult,' said media critic Hans Hoff.
References[edit]
- ^Was macht eigentlich..Monique Sluyter in Stern vom 9. Dezember 2003
- ^Christian Pundt: Konflikte um die Selbstbeschreibung der Gesellschaft: Der Diskurs über Privatheit im Fernsehen. In: Ralph Weiß, Jo Groebel: Privatheit im öffentlichen Raum: Medienhandeln zwischen Individualisierung und Entgrenzung. VS Verlag, Wiesbaden 2002. S. 272–273.
External links[edit]
Tutti Frutti Game
- Tutti Frutti on IMDb
Tutti Frutti Card Game
Tutti Frutti Game How To Play
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