Gunge is a British colloquial name for ‘‘slime’’ a term used in the US and other countries to define a runny substance similar to paint, that is often featured in game shows. It is used by covering or dropping over a victim, often inside a Gunge Tank, with the intention to cause embarrassment and making a mess. More recently, Gunge has been popularized by the BBC and ITV with shows like Get Your Own Back and Mad for It. It has also been used on Big Brother. Gunge is often used in charity and fundraising events too, in which certain figures are often sponsored to get gunged in front of a public audience.
The slime meaning for the word originated in the late 1930s, probably as an alteration of the word gunk. In the US it has been popularized by networks such as Nickelodeon using slime in both its games and as its well known “Splat” logo.
In Britain and Europe, in the early eighties, children's gunge-based gameshows were the norm. Particularly shows like How Dare You! on ITV and Crackerjack on the BBC ensured that the gunging element featured on shows for the decade to come. On How Dare You!, one of the main games was 'Teach Them a Lesson', where children got the opportunity to drench their teacher or representitive from their school in gunge whilst sitting above a knee deep filled gunge tank. After this game the teachers were sometimes knocked off their perch by one of show's presenters and into the gunge tank.
Later in the eighties, the BBC launched Double Dare, based on the US style format, but much sloppier than its US counterpart. Also, gunge started to appear on mainstream shows such as Game for a Laugh on ITV and Noel Edmond's Saturday Roadshow on the BBC. Other countries in Europe also started to have gunge elements on mainstream shows. Un Dos Tres on TVE in Spain often had contestants throwing buckets of gunge at each other. Also, Donnerlippchen, a TV show in Germany, had many messy games; the climax of the show was dunking the team's suited boss in a dunk tank and pouring custard down inside every team members pair of boxershorts.
The entertainment factor attached to the process of gunging was realised by the producers of the charity event Comic Relief, who held an event, in cooperation with the Guinness World Records at the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham where an attempt to set a record for the Most People Gunged Simultaneously took place on March 12, 1999. 184 gallon s of gunge was splattered over 731 people.
All across Europe TV producers were ordering more gunge segments to be fitted into mainstream TV shows due to its popularity with viewers. In Germany, on SAT1, Halli galli
, Glücksritter (RTL)
, Glücksspirale
, plus the German version of NHP - Gottschalk's Haus-Party, all involved a high dose of gunge. Halli Galli had audience members plucked out of their seats and sent down a messy gunge slide and into a pool. Likewise, Glücksspirale and Glücksritter had contestents plucked out of the audience and gunged in the most spectacular ways.
Towards the end of the nineties, with the demise of Noel's House Party and the dwindling audience figures for other European shows, the gunge segment in many mainstream shows started to fade.
Throughout the 1990s, gunge became a focal feature in many children's TV shows. Teenagers and celebrity guests are often seen competing in quizzes on Live & Kicking, and are gunged if they lose. Popstars Lee Ryan, Ben Adams, Katy Hill, Lesley Waters, Katherine Merry, Heather Suttie and Victoria Hawkins were gunged on this show. Many other shows used gunge throughout - Fun House, Get Your Own Back, Run the Risk and Double Dare.
The 2008 remake of Swap Shop (Basil's Swap Shop) features gungey games. "Question Line", a game where children ask the celebrity guest questions and if the celebrity chooses to answer it the child doesn’t get gunged. If however, the celebrity chooses not to answer the question the child asking the question slides in to the gunge tank (a pool of gunge similar to the one on Waaa!!!). The children move as they are sitting in or lying across a rubber ring on a ramp with their legs hanging out on the "gungeulator" a red and white travelator. If the child does slide into the gunge tank then they have to move over and sit in the gunge tank until the game is over. Another game called Dunk Beds, is where there are 3 teams of 2 children, 1 is on a bed attached to a platform and the other child is off the bed. The child off the bed pushes the bed off along the platform , where along the platform are scoring zones. Up to a point, the points are negative then past a certain point, the points become positive until finally off the scale. If the bed goes off the scale the child on the end of the bed slides into a tank of green coloured water. 0 points are awarded if the child gets dunked. Each child from each team is on the bed once during the duration of the game. In the final Game, the final 2 children, left over from the previous game, play on a moving platform called the gungeulator collecting objects, avoiding obstacles, to get them back to the start of the "gungeulator". If a child falls then he/she is automatically gunged and the child that is left continiues the game. However if the child left wins then prizes are awarded to both the children but if both children are gunged the game is over and no prized are awarded. Whilst playing these games the children are barefoot execpt the final game where the children are dressed in fat suits wearing trainers on a moving platform. These gungey games meant the return of gunge to Saturday Morning children’s TV in the UK.
Gunge tanks can also signify an enclosure where the gunging occurs. A gunge tank does not have to be used, however this gives the gunging an authentic look. Other alternatives can be used such as a bath were someone pours the gunge onto the victim who is sitting in the bath, a shower cubicle - which is similar to the Gunge tank but has no seat or release mechanism (so someone will have to pour the gunge over the victim's head standing on a high object). Gunge games or a messy game makes use of gunge or alternatives. Sometimes a Dunk tank is filled with Gunge/Slime and when the target is hit the victim (the person sitting above) falls in.