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Pop-Up Video

Pop Up Video is a VH1 television show that shows music videos annotated via "pop-up" bubbles — officially called "info nuggets" — containing trivia and witticisms relating to the video in question. The show was created by Woody Thompson and Tad Low and premiered October 27, 1996. For a time, it was the highest-rated program on VH1, though Behind the Music overtook it by 1998.[1] It was originally produced by Spin the Bottle Inc., and later by Eyeboogie Inc. during its original run.

Pop-Up Video
2012 version of logo
Created byWoody Thompson
Tad Low
StarringVarious singers/groups
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasonsOriginal series: 6
Revived series: 2
No. of episodes209
Production
Running time22 minutes (per episode)
Release
Original networkVH1 and VH1 Classic
Original release
  • Original series:
    October 27, 1996 (1996-10-27) - August 8, 2002 (2002-08-08)
  • Revived series:
    October 3, 2011 (2011-10-03) - September 21, 2012 (2012-09-21)

In October 2011, Pop Up Video was revived by VH1, featuring new videos with new trivia and commentary. The revived production was continued by Eyeboogie Inc.

The show's pioneering use of pop-up bubbles to provide additional information about what is happening onscreen has seen many imitators and parodies, as well as some official licensed spinoffs, including Pop Up Video UK.

Format

Most episodes of Pop Up Video play four or five music videos each, selected to include new, older, "classic", and "campy" videos. The bubbles that pop up in each video generally appear about every 10–15 seconds; their content is divided between information about the recording artist featured, the production of the video, and random facts inspired by the theme or content of the video. One of the show's staff writers is assigned to each video.[2] Production costs for each episode total about $30,000.[1]

The "random" information presented in bubbles frequently included statistics and demographics, medical, scientific, and historical trivia, definitions, and lists of a wide range of subjects.[3] Gary Burns, in the Journal of Popular Film and Television, also notes as a recurring theme "the producers' attempt to turn practically every popped-up video into a dirty joke."[1]

Often the film crew for the video in question would be interviewed in the research process; everyone from the director to make-up artists, choreographers, models, and extras might be used as sources.[4] In addition, the producers solicited information by means of a phone line (displayed during the closing credits) and web site page.[2] General facts are double- or triple-sourced, according to the producers.[1]

History

Thompson and Low previously worked together on Brandon Tartikoff's late night talk show Last Call, before it was cancelled in 1994. They spent the next two years making pitches of ideas for television shows to various networks;[5] in late 1995, the original iteration of the show concept, titled Pop Up Videos, was sent to VH1 executives, alongside a number of other concepts making use of aspects of songs or music videos. The pilot episode cost $3000 to produce; the first video to be played on the show was Tina Turner's "Missing You".[6]

1997 saw Pop Up Video's profile expand as popular news publications such as The New York Times, Newsweek, and Entertainment Weekly all produced articles about the show.[7]

In 2000, Entertainment Weekly reported that Low was no longer involved with the production of the show.[8]

Specials and other versions

Special episodes of Pop Up Video aired throughout the series' run. Many focused on specific artists, including VH1 staples Madonna, Culture Club, U2, Prince, and Elton John. Others ran on different themes, such as "Women First," "Road Trip," "Movies," and "Duets". There were also several holiday specials, including Halloween and several Christmas episodes. Some theme episodes broke with the show's format by including a montage of clips from many videos.[9]

During a week of 1980s-themed programming on VH1 in March 1998, Pop Up Video became Pop Up '80s.[1] These episodes featured additional clips of 1980s news events and pop culture tidbits between music videos.

The 1996 VH1 Fashion Awards, Divas Live, The Oprah Winfrey Show (aired in syndication), several episodes of the Brady Bunch (aired on Nick at Nite in 2001, effectively named "Pop Up Brady"),[1] ABC's Original TGIF 1998 and 1999 line-up's season premieres and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (December 2000)[1] also got the Pop Up treatment. Other proposals, such as a Pop Up Video edition of the entirety of Grease during its 1998 theatrical re-release, were never realized.[10] It was also used in a second version of the remake of the original 1974 Meow Mix commercial in 2002, which lacks the lyrics.

A United Kingdom-specific version entitled Pop Up Video UK, aired on Channel 4, and still occasionally airs on VH1 UK and Europe. This version featured music videos by British artists such as Robbie Williams, Spice Girls, and Elvis Costello.

In January 2000, the spinoff program Pop Up Quiz debuted on VH1. Utilizing the same format as Pop Up Video, the show presented trivia questions inspired by the content of each music video shown;[11] for example, the game "Phil in the blank" was played over the video for "Sussudio" by Phil Collins.[12] Launched at a time when the Pop Up Video brand had become a "veritable franchise",[13] the show was called a "weak spin-off" among several "duds" launched by the network at the time.[11]

The 25th anniversary DVD release of The Rocky Horror Picture Show features a Pop Up video clip of one of the film's musical numbers, "Hot Patootie – Bless My Soul", as an extra on the second disc.

MSG Network currently airs a show called TXT MSG, which gives the "pop up" treatment to classic sporting events from MSG's library. This is an official Spin the Bottle production, and Low is credited as an executive producer.

Controversy

Artists such as Billy Joel, Jakob Dylan of The Wallflowers, and The Police, as well as others such as director Mark Pellington and Sony Music Entertainment president Tommy Mottola complained about what they perceived as harsh treatment on the show and the videos in which they were featured were pulled. The show's creators called these the "Pops They Stopped."[14] In contrast, some artists, including Joan Osborne and Paula Abdul, made appearances on the show to provide further information on their popped videos.

Reception and commentary

Pop Up Video is most frequently compared to the contemporaneous television programs Beavis and Butt-head and Mystery Science Theater 3000, which were known for their on-screen commentary ridiculing, respectively, music videos and films.[1][15][16][17] As these shows were described as "TV-for-people-who-are-sick-of-TV",[17] Pop Up Video has been called "a show for people who hate videos".[16]

Reboot

VH1 ordered 60 new half-hour episodes of Pop Up Video that started airing on October 3, 2011.[18][19] In addition to the traditional music video format, five of the most popular episodes from season one of Jersey Shore were given the pop-up treatment in spring of 2012.[20] A second season aired starting on August 6, 2012.[21] The series was not renewed for a third season.

Derivatives and parodies

Early on, the show's popularity led to several copycats, most notably on an episode of the ABC television series Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (September 19, 1997)[22] and a series of Bell Atlantic commercials.[23] Spin The Bottle, the creators of Pop Up Video, publicly derided these Pop Up imitators on its website.[24] Some series, such as NewsRadio, Family Guy, The Drew Carey Show, Bill Nye the Science Guy, High School Musical (and its sequels), Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Cake Boss and Kate Plus 8 also featured special or repeat episodes that employed pop-up facts.

The History channel's series Pawn Stars and its spinoff, Cajun Pawn Stars, also employ the use of pop-up style notes when explaining the item being sold or pawned.

At the height of the show's popularity, MAD Magazine ran a series of Pop-Off Video takeoffs which mocked the artists, their fashions, their songs, and their music videos.

The North American anime distributor A.D. Vision (ADV Films) incorporated a feature on some of its DVD releases called "AD Vid-Notes," which provided trivia and cultural notes in pop-up bubbles when the feature was turned on. ADV-released shows incorporating the feature included Excel Saga and Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi.

A similar show is aired on the Argentine TV channel I.Sat. It is called Video Maní (peanut video), because the pop-ups are a 3-D rotating peanut. It features a series of true/false questions on things regarding the theme of the video, and after a few seconds it shows "true" or "false". As I.Sat is a movie channel, the videos are used as fill between movies.

Disney Channel occasionally uses Pop-Up styled videos during special airings of DCOMs, such as High School Musical 2 and Jump In!. These are referred to as the "What's What Edition".

During the ending of the movie Music and Lyrics, the conclusion of the film is revealed through a Pop-Up Video of "PoP! Goes My Heart".[25]

In 2001, Nick at Nite created Pop-Up Brady, which took select episodes of The Brady Bunch and added pop-up trivia notes collected by Woody Thompson from interviews with cast members.[26] The NickMom series What Was Carol Brady Thinking? featured a Pop-Up Video-style format to show satirical thoughts of how Carol Brady regarded scenes during episodes of The Brady Bunch; this was a non-Spin the Bottle production and had no involvement from anyone with the Brady Bunch series, including Florence Henderson.

In 2010, NickToons released a Pop-Up Video style format for all 61 episodes of Avatar: The Last Airbender entitled "Avatar Extras".

In 2014, HGTV released House Hunters Pop'd featuring families looking to purchase a home while trivia questions and facts pop up on the screen.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Burns, Gary (2004), , Journal of Popular Film and Television, 32 (2): 74–83, doi:10.3200/jpft.32.2.74-96, ISSN 0195-6051, S2CID 191579784, archived from the original on 2005-01-11
  2. ^ a b . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1999-05-05. Retrieved 2007-01-04.
  3. ^ . Mandi's Weird Web Page. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  4. ^ Lineberger, Kathy. . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1999-05-05. Retrieved 2007-01-04.
  5. ^ Hubbard, John D. (November 1997). . The Colgate Scene. Archived from the original on 2007-02-06. Retrieved 2007-01-04.
  6. ^ . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1998-12-02. Retrieved 2007-01-04.
  7. ^ O'Brien, Carrie (September 2, 1998). . Saint Mary's College. Archived from the original on April 5, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-04. A number of published articles are described here as mirrored on the official Pop Up Video web site at the time; however, the Internet Archive apparently did not archive these URLs.
  8. ^ Brown, Scott; Morgan, Laura (June 23, 2000), "Monitor", Entertainment Weekly (546): 16
  9. ^ The "Madonna III" episode included 15 different videos.
  10. ^ Jacobs, A. J. (December 19, 1997), "Pop Up Culture", Entertainment Weekly (410) However, The music video for the 1998 single "The Grease Megamix" was featured on the "Movies III" episode.
  11. ^ a b Wallenstein, Andrew (January 2000). . Media Life. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  12. ^ "Louise's Phil Collins & Genesis Video Lists". Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  13. ^ Tiffany, Laura (August 1999). "Laughing All The Way". Entrepreneur.com. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  14. ^ . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1999-02-03. Retrieved 2007-01-03. Pellington was involved as the director of Jon Bon Jovi's "Midnight in Chelsea", while Mottola was referenced in the treatment of Mariah Carey's "Honey". The artists in question were still featured on later episodes, such as The Wallflowers with "Heroes" (Episode 108) and "6th Avenue Heartache" (Episode 135), and The Police with "Wrapped Around Your Finger" (Episode 122) and "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic" (Episode 138).
  15. ^ Rutsky, R. L. (2002), "Pop up theory: distraction and consumption in the age of meta-information", Journal of Visual Culture, 1 (3): 279–294, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.489.6601, doi:10.1177/147041290200100302, ISSN 1470-4129, S2CID 42972859
  16. ^ a b Vowell, Sarah (October 3, 1997). . Sound Salvation. Salon.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2008. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
  17. ^ a b Beato, Greg (October 13, 1997). "A Fan's Footnotes". Suck.com. Retrieved 2007-01-05.
  18. ^ Guthrie, Marisa (2011-05-25). "VH1 Rebooting 'Pop Up Video' With 60-Episode Order (Exclusive) - The Hollywood Reporter". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2011-05-26. After a 10-year hiatus, VH1 is resurrecting Pop Up Video with co-creator Woody Thompson on board as executive producer. The network has ordered 60 half-hour episodes set to bow as a strip in the fall.
  19. ^ "Coming Soon: Pop Up Video". VH1. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  20. ^ "Pop Up Video Jersey Shore | Show Cast, Episodes, Guides, Trailers, Web Exclusives, Previews". VH1.com. Retrieved 2013-07-27.
  21. ^ "Pop Up Video | Weekday Afternoons at 12/11c | Watch Videos and Create Your Own". VH1.com. Retrieved 2013-07-27.
  22. ^ . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1999-02-09. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  23. ^ . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1998-12-02. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  24. ^ . Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on 1999-02-20. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
  25. ^ Hung, Mindy (March 23, 2012). "Lone Great Features of Six Otherwise Terrible Movies". The Awl. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  26. ^ LINAN, STEVEN (18 July 2001). "'Brady Bunch' Trivia Is Popping Up" – via LA Times.

External links

  • Pop Up Video on VH1
  • Spin the Bottle, Inc., Pop Up Video's original production company
  • Eyeboogie, Inc., Pop Up Video's subsequent production company
  • Pop Up Video at IMDb

video, video, television, show, that, shows, music, videos, annotated, bubbles, officially, called, info, nuggets, containing, trivia, witticisms, relating, video, question, show, created, woody, thompson, premiered, october, 1996, time, highest, rated, progra. Pop Up Video is a VH1 television show that shows music videos annotated via pop up bubbles officially called info nuggets containing trivia and witticisms relating to the video in question The show was created by Woody Thompson and Tad Low and premiered October 27 1996 For a time it was the highest rated program on VH1 though Behind the Music overtook it by 1998 1 It was originally produced by Spin the Bottle Inc and later by Eyeboogie Inc during its original run Pop Up Video2012 version of logoCreated byWoody ThompsonTad LowStarringVarious singers groupsCountry of originUnited StatesNo of seasonsOriginal series 6Revived series 2No of episodes209ProductionRunning time22 minutes per episode ReleaseOriginal networkVH1 and VH1 ClassicOriginal releaseOriginal series October 27 1996 1996 10 27 August 8 2002 2002 08 08 Revived series October 3 2011 2011 10 03 September 21 2012 2012 09 21 In October 2011 Pop Up Video was revived by VH1 featuring new videos with new trivia and commentary The revived production was continued by Eyeboogie Inc The show s pioneering use of pop up bubbles to provide additional information about what is happening onscreen has seen many imitators and parodies as well as some official licensed spinoffs including Pop Up Video UK Contents 1 Format 2 History 3 Specials and other versions 4 Controversy 5 Reception and commentary 6 Reboot 7 Derivatives and parodies 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksFormat EditMost episodes of Pop Up Video play four or five music videos each selected to include new older classic and campy videos The bubbles that pop up in each video generally appear about every 10 15 seconds their content is divided between information about the recording artist featured the production of the video and random facts inspired by the theme or content of the video One of the show s staff writers is assigned to each video 2 Production costs for each episode total about 30 000 1 The random information presented in bubbles frequently included statistics and demographics medical scientific and historical trivia definitions and lists of a wide range of subjects 3 Gary Burns in the Journal of Popular Film and Television also notes as a recurring theme the producers attempt to turn practically every popped up video into a dirty joke 1 Often the film crew for the video in question would be interviewed in the research process everyone from the director to make up artists choreographers models and extras might be used as sources 4 In addition the producers solicited information by means of a phone line displayed during the closing credits and web site page 2 General facts are double or triple sourced according to the producers 1 History EditThompson and Low previously worked together on Brandon Tartikoff s late night talk show Last Call before it was cancelled in 1994 They spent the next two years making pitches of ideas for television shows to various networks 5 in late 1995 the original iteration of the show concept titled Pop Up Videos was sent to VH1 executives alongside a number of other concepts making use of aspects of songs or music videos The pilot episode cost 3000 to produce the first video to be played on the show was Tina Turner s Missing You 6 1997 saw Pop Up Video s profile expand as popular news publications such as The New York Times Newsweek and Entertainment Weekly all produced articles about the show 7 In 2000 Entertainment Weekly reported that Low was no longer involved with the production of the show 8 Specials and other versions EditSpecial episodes of Pop Up Video aired throughout the series run Many focused on specific artists including VH1 staples Madonna Culture Club U2 Prince and Elton John Others ran on different themes such as Women First Road Trip Movies and Duets There were also several holiday specials including Halloween and several Christmas episodes Some theme episodes broke with the show s format by including a montage of clips from many videos 9 During a week of 1980s themed programming on VH1 in March 1998 Pop Up Video became Pop Up 80s 1 These episodes featured additional clips of 1980s news events and pop culture tidbits between music videos The 1996 VH1 Fashion Awards Divas Live The Oprah Winfrey Show aired in syndication several episodes of the Brady Bunch aired on Nick at Nite in 2001 effectively named Pop Up Brady 1 ABC s Original TGIF 1998 and 1999 line up s season premieres and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire December 2000 1 also got the Pop Up treatment Other proposals such as a Pop Up Video edition of the entirety of Grease during its 1998 theatrical re release were never realized 10 It was also used in a second version of the remake of the original 1974 Meow Mix commercial in 2002 which lacks the lyrics A United Kingdom specific version entitled Pop Up Video UK aired on Channel 4 and still occasionally airs on VH1 UK and Europe This version featured music videos by British artists such as Robbie Williams Spice Girls and Elvis Costello In January 2000 the spinoff program Pop Up Quiz debuted on VH1 Utilizing the same format as Pop Up Video the show presented trivia questions inspired by the content of each music video shown 11 for example the game Phil in the blank was played over the video for Sussudio by Phil Collins 12 Launched at a time when the Pop Up Video brand had become a veritable franchise 13 the show was called a weak spin off among several duds launched by the network at the time 11 The 25th anniversary DVD release of The Rocky Horror Picture Show features a Pop Up video clip of one of the film s musical numbers Hot Patootie Bless My Soul as an extra on the second disc MSG Network currently airs a show called TXT MSG which gives the pop up treatment to classic sporting events from MSG s library This is an official Spin the Bottle production and Low is credited as an executive producer Controversy EditArtists such as Billy Joel Jakob Dylan of The Wallflowers and The Police as well as others such as director Mark Pellington and Sony Music Entertainment president Tommy Mottola complained about what they perceived as harsh treatment on the show and the videos in which they were featured were pulled The show s creators called these the Pops They Stopped 14 In contrast some artists including Joan Osborne and Paula Abdul made appearances on the show to provide further information on their popped videos Reception and commentary EditPop Up Video is most frequently compared to the contemporaneous television programs Beavis and Butt head and Mystery Science Theater 3000 which were known for their on screen commentary ridiculing respectively music videos and films 1 15 16 17 As these shows were described as TV for people who are sick of TV 17 Pop Up Video has been called a show for people who hate videos 16 Reboot EditVH1 ordered 60 new half hour episodes of Pop Up Video that started airing on October 3 2011 18 19 In addition to the traditional music video format five of the most popular episodes from season one of Jersey Shore were given the pop up treatment in spring of 2012 20 A second season aired starting on August 6 2012 21 The series was not renewed for a third season Derivatives and parodies EditEarly on the show s popularity led to several copycats most notably on an episode of the ABC television series Sabrina the Teenage Witch September 19 1997 22 and a series of Bell Atlantic commercials 23 Spin The Bottle the creators of Pop Up Video publicly derided these Pop Up imitators on its website 24 Some series such as NewsRadio Family Guy The Drew Carey Show Bill Nye the Science Guy High School Musical and its sequels Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Cake Boss and Kate Plus 8 also featured special or repeat episodes that employed pop up facts The History channel s series Pawn Stars and its spinoff Cajun Pawn Stars also employ the use of pop up style notes when explaining the item being sold or pawned At the height of the show s popularity MAD Magazine ran a series of Pop Off Video takeoffs which mocked the artists their fashions their songs and their music videos The North American anime distributor A D Vision ADV Films incorporated a feature on some of its DVD releases called AD Vid Notes which provided trivia and cultural notes in pop up bubbles when the feature was turned on ADV released shows incorporating the feature included Excel Saga and Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi A similar show is aired on the Argentine TV channel I Sat It is called Video Mani peanut video because the pop ups are a 3 D rotating peanut It features a series of true false questions on things regarding the theme of the video and after a few seconds it shows true or false As I Sat is a movie channel the videos are used as fill between movies Disney Channel occasionally uses Pop Up styled videos during special airings of DCOMs such as High School Musical 2 and Jump In These are referred to as the What s What Edition During the ending of the movie Music and Lyrics the conclusion of the film is revealed through a Pop Up Video of PoP Goes My Heart 25 In 2001 Nick at Nite created Pop Up Brady which took select episodes of The Brady Bunch and added pop up trivia notes collected by Woody Thompson from interviews with cast members 26 The NickMom series What Was Carol Brady Thinking featured a Pop Up Video style format to show satirical thoughts of how Carol Brady regarded scenes during episodes of The Brady Bunch this was a non Spin the Bottle production and had no involvement from anyone with the Brady Bunch series including Florence Henderson In 2010 NickToons released a Pop Up Video style format for all 61 episodes of Avatar The Last Airbender entitled Avatar Extras In 2014 HGTV released House Hunters Pop d featuring families looking to purchase a home while trivia questions and facts pop up on the screen See also EditBeavis and Butt head Mystery Science Theater 3000References Edit a b c d e f g h Burns Gary 2004 Pop Up Video the new historicism Journal of Popular Film and Television 32 2 74 83 doi 10 3200 jpft 32 2 74 96 ISSN 0195 6051 S2CID 191579784 archived from the original on 2005 01 11 a b Coming soon Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1999 05 05 Retrieved 2007 01 04 All I Ever Needed to Know I Learned From Watching Pop Up Video Mandi s Weird Web Page Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Lineberger Kathy Back Street Gossip Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1999 05 05 Retrieved 2007 01 04 Hubbard John D November 1997 Pop The Colgate Scene Archived from the original on 2007 02 06 Retrieved 2007 01 04 History Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1998 12 02 Retrieved 2007 01 04 O Brien Carrie September 2 1998 Prospectus Saint Mary s College Archived from the original on April 5 2006 Retrieved 2007 01 04 A number of published articles are described here as mirrored on the official Pop Up Video web site at the time however the Internet Archive apparently did not archive these URLs Brown Scott Morgan Laura June 23 2000 Monitor Entertainment Weekly 546 16 The Madonna III episode included 15 different videos Jacobs A J December 19 1997 Pop Up Culture Entertainment Weekly 410 However The music video for the 1998 single The Grease Megamix was featured on the Movies III episode a b Wallenstein Andrew January 2000 VH1 s long flow of smart ideas at last may be slowing to a dribble Media Life Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Louise s Phil Collins amp Genesis Video Lists Retrieved 2007 01 03 Tiffany Laura August 1999 Laughing All The Way Entrepreneur com Retrieved 2007 01 03 Pops They Stopped Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1999 02 03 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Pellington was involved as the director of Jon Bon Jovi s Midnight in Chelsea while Mottola was referenced in the treatment of Mariah Carey s Honey The artists in question were still featured on later episodes such as The Wallflowers with Heroes Episode 108 and 6th Avenue Heartache Episode 135 and The Police with Wrapped Around Your Finger Episode 122 and Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic Episode 138 Rutsky R L 2002 Pop up theory distraction and consumption in the age of meta information Journal of Visual Culture 1 3 279 294 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 489 6601 doi 10 1177 147041290200100302 ISSN 1470 4129 S2CID 42972859 a b Vowell Sarah October 3 1997 Playing the Air Guitar Sound Salvation Salon com Archived from the original on February 3 2008 Retrieved 2007 01 05 a b Beato Greg October 13 1997 A Fan s Footnotes Suck com Retrieved 2007 01 05 Guthrie Marisa 2011 05 25 VH1 Rebooting Pop Up Video With 60 Episode Order Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 2011 05 26 After a 10 year hiatus VH1 is resurrecting Pop Up Video with co creator Woody Thompson on board as executive producer The network has ordered 60 half hour episodes set to bow as a strip in the fall Coming Soon Pop Up Video VH1 Retrieved 29 August 2011 Pop Up Video Jersey Shore Show Cast Episodes Guides Trailers Web Exclusives Previews VH1 com Retrieved 2013 07 27 Pop Up Video Weekday Afternoons at 12 11c Watch Videos and Create Your Own VH1 com Retrieved 2013 07 27 Sabrina Fiasco Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1999 02 09 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Bell Atlantic Ad Voted Worst of the Year Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1998 12 02 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Pop Up Bell Atlantic Spin the Bottle at the Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 1999 02 20 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Hung Mindy March 23 2012 Lone Great Features of Six Otherwise Terrible Movies The Awl Retrieved October 9 2017 LINAN STEVEN 18 July 2001 Brady Bunch Trivia Is Popping Up via LA Times External links EditPop Up Video on VH1 Spin the Bottle Inc Pop Up Video s original production company Eyeboogie Inc Pop Up Video s subsequent production company Pop Up Video at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pop Up Video amp oldid 1124928486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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