64 Mario Stadium

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64 Mario Stadium
Logo of 64 Mario Stadium
General information
Format Variety show
Presenter(s) Tooru Watanabe
Noriko Katō
Atsuko Sudo
Closing theme "Tsumetaku Shite Kudasai"
"SPIRAL DESTINY -Yume no Mama Ja Nai Desu-"
"PINK"
"Kitto Kaze wa Fukudarō"
"Zutto Soba ni Ite"
"Daikirai"
"INNOCENT SKY"
"Crazy about you"
"Door no Mukō"
"Mimi o Sumashite"
"Hatsu Yuki"
"Just wanna be with you"
"LOVE ME ETERNALLY"
"Voice of Heart"
Composer(s) Noriko Katō
SPYKE
Sakura Uehara + Tokyo Music Salon
Renai Shingō
VINYL
Sachiko Suzuki
Cool As Ice
Natsu Tōdō
Atsuko Sudo
Angelique
Yumi Yoshihara
Y'z factory
Country of origin Japan
Original language Japanese
Production
Producer(s) Shigeto Ito
Koichi Yokota
Production company TV Tokyo
Maxcom
Distributor(s) Nintendo
Runtime 30 minutes
Broadcast
First aired July 4, 1996[?]
Last aired September 28, 2000[?]
Status Ended
Chronology
Predecessor Super Mario Stadium (1993)
Successor Mario School (2000)

64 Mario Stadium[1] is a variety show focused on Nintendo game consoles and software that was broadcast on TV Tokyo affiliates from July 4, 1996 to September 28, 2000. It aired every Thursday from 6:30 to 7:00 pm. It is the successor to Super Mario Stadium, which had previously aired in the same Thursday 6:30 pm slot, and was renamed and renewed when sponsor Nintendo released the Nintendo 64. The Pokémon-related projects that the show implemented were carried over to Pokémon Sunday, which began airing in 2004.

Cast[edit]

Hosts[edit]

  • Tooru Watanabe
  • Noriko Katō (July 4, 1996 - March 26, 1998)
  • Rie Ichinomiya (April 2, 1998 - March 25, 1999)
  • Atsuko Sudo (April 2, 1998 - September 28, 2000)

Regular[edit]

  • Shinji Uchiyama (July 4, 1996 - ?)

Performers[edit]

64 Mario Stadium often features young comedians as guests. At the time, it featured several groups of comedians who were still unknown and had rarely appeared on television, as well as comedians who had appeared on Fuji TV's Vocabulary Heaven series.

  • Ari to Kirigirisu (TV debut)
  • Asarido (later regular)
  • Othello
  • Umi-shari Suigyo
  • Great Chicken Powers (Regular in first half)
  • Sokonuke AIR-LINE (later regular)
  • Take2
  • TKO
  • X-GUN
  • BOOMER
  • Folk Dance DE Narikozaka
  • U-turn
  • Dangerous
  • Unjash
  • Nonkies

Program contents[edit]

Quiz Battle[edit]

A quiz segment where four groups of two people and a celebrity answer Nintendo-related questions. The celebrity plays the game. The winner wins a Nintendo 64 console, second place wins a Game Boy Pocket, third place won an N64 controller, and last place got a special telephone card for the show.

Aim to be the Mario Kart 64 Time Trial Grand Champion![edit]

Every week, five challengers attempt a time trial in Mario Kart 64's Mario Raceway. The contestant who completes the race in under 1 minute 30 seconds receives an official license from the show, and the contestant who records the best time receives an original gold controller and the latest N64 software. Champ Maruyama, a member of the Super Mario Club, was in charge of commentary.

Pokémon League[edit]

A match using Pokémon Red and Green. Initially, a specially designed (communication-enabled) Super Game Boy and two monitors were used, but after the release of Pokémon Stadium, the match was played using the monitor. The basic rules are that three people participate in a team, each team shows the other their six Pokémon, and three are chosen from them. The types and levels of Pokémon that could be used were changed several times, but in all cases, Mewtwo and Mew were not allowed to be used. Regarding bulbapedia:status conditions, it is not allowed to freeze or put more than two of the opponent's Pokémon to sleep. If one wins three weeks in a row, they will be inducted into the Hall of Fame, and presented with a copy of Pokémon Blue with Mew inside. The commentary was provided by Trancell Taneichi, who was an editor of Family Computer Magazine at the time.

Matches also took place in the second games, Pokémon Gold and Silver, but they were merely qualifiers for the national tournament or exhibition matches, and never became an established feature like they were in the previous games.

Pokémon Snap Best Photo Contest[edit]

The contest was held in 1999 to coincide with the release of Pokémon Snap for the Nintendo 64. There was a category sponsored by TV Tokyo 64 Mario Stadium and another sponsored by Shogakukan CoroCoro Comic[2] and five winners were chosen from each category, with snapshots of ten different Pokémon made into cards. It is said that 15 or 20 of each type of card were issued.[3]

Below are the Pokémon that served as models for the grand prize cards in the categories sponsored by this program, TV Tokyo 64 Mario Stadium.

Ending themes[edit]

  • Noriko Katō: "Tsumetaku Shite Kudasai"
  • SPYKE: "SPIRAL DESTINY -Yume no Mama Ja Nai Desu-"
  • Sakura Uehara + Tokyo Music Salon: "PINK"
  • Renai Shingō: "Kitto Kaze wa Fukudarō"
  • VINYL: "Zutto Soba ni Ite"
  • Michiyo Heike: "Daikirai" (Heike appeared as a guest on the show once)
  • Sachiko Suzuki: "INNOCENT SKY"
  • Cool As Ice: "Crazy about you"
  • Natsu Tōdō: "Door no Mukō"
  • Atsuko Sudo: "Mimi o Sumashite"
  • Atsuko Sudo: "Hatsu Yuki"
  • Angelique: "Just wanna be with you"
  • Yumi Yoshihara: "LOVE ME ETERNALLY"
  • Y'z factory: "Voice of Heart"

64 Mario Stadium Special postponement[edit]

64 Mario Stadium Special was scheduled to be aired on December 30, 1997 as a special year-end and New Year program, but due to the Pokemon Shock that occurred on December 16 of the same year, the special program was postponed and replaced with a re-broadcast of episodes 25 and 26 of the anime Moomin. Though Nintendo was the only sponsor, it was treated as a PT program. The special program was instead aired on January 18, 1998, after the New Year.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese 64マリオスタジアム[4]
64 Mario Sutajiamu
64 Mario Stadium

References[edit]