Bug Alert
Encyclopedia
Bug Alert is a British
Children's television series
, first shown on GMTV
in 1996. It featured the antics of a range of bug-like
characters who lived in the kitchen of an unnamed house. These creatures apparently only came out when the resident humans were "not about." In the third and final series the characters moved out of the house and opened a somewhat seedy restaurant ("Bug Bites") where they set about serving Weasel Curry to their regular clientele. 78 episodes were made in total and are repeated regularly on GMTV.
After the first two series the show format was bought by Channel 4
which commissioned 26 further episodes. These, and the previous series, were aired in their weekend morning slot. The show was characterised by its somewhat adult references and themes, most of which went way above the heads of watching children.
The 78 30-minute scripts were co-written by the director Peter Eyre
and the main puppeteer, Francis Wright
. The executive producer was Catherine Robins of Two Sides TV.
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...
Children's television series
Children's television series
Children's television series, are commercial television programs designed for, and marketed to children, normally scheduled for broadcast during the morning and afternoon when children are awake. They can sometimes run in the early evening, for the children that go to school...
, first shown on GMTV
GMTV
GMTV was the national Channel 3 breakfast television contractor, broadcasting in the United Kingdom from 1 January 1993 to 3 September 2010. It became a wholly owned subsidiary of ITV plc. in November 2009. Shortly after, ITV plc announced the programme would end...
in 1996. It featured the antics of a range of bug-like
Insect
Insects are a class of living creatures within the arthropods that have a chitinous exoskeleton, a three-part body , three pairs of jointed legs, compound eyes, and two antennae...
characters who lived in the kitchen of an unnamed house. These creatures apparently only came out when the resident humans were "not about." In the third and final series the characters moved out of the house and opened a somewhat seedy restaurant ("Bug Bites") where they set about serving Weasel Curry to their regular clientele. 78 episodes were made in total and are repeated regularly on GMTV.
After the first two series the show format was bought by Channel 4
Channel 4
Channel 4 is a British public-service television broadcaster which began working on 2 November 1982. Although largely commercially self-funded, it is ultimately publicly owned; originally a subsidiary of the Independent Broadcasting Authority , the station is now owned and operated by the Channel...
which commissioned 26 further episodes. These, and the previous series, were aired in their weekend morning slot. The show was characterised by its somewhat adult references and themes, most of which went way above the heads of watching children.
The 78 30-minute scripts were co-written by the director Peter Eyre
Peter Eyre
Peter Eyre is an American actor.Eyre was born in New York City, New York, the son of Dorothy Pelline and Edward Joseph Eyre, a banker. He was sent to a public school in England at the age of twelve, and has been based in the country ever since. Although offered a place at the Royal Academy of...
and the main puppeteer, Francis Wright
Francis Wright
Francis Wright is a British actor, puppeteer, and writer.-Biography:Wright was educated at St Paul's School, and studied drama at the Arts Educational Schools, where he graduated with honours...
. The executive producer was Catherine Robins of Two Sides TV.
Main characters
- Grub Bug: The father figure of the family. Pompous, red and fat, he had a rather military manner and a fondness for popping down to his shed to "tend his vegetables". He was sensitive about his incipient balding and once sought to hid it under a ginger wig. Very fond of Mystic Mug, they holidayed together at Frinton-on-sea.
- Mystic Mug: Originally loosely modelled on celebrity fortune teller "Mystic Meg", her metier was crystal ball reading, where (in the first two series) she would retail "Mystic Mug's Amazing Facts". Increasingly eccentric as the series progressed, she often teetered uncertainly on the edge of sanity.
- Doodle Bug: Ill-tempered Mr Fixit who would design and build all manner of gadgets with which to wreak havoc over a twenty minute time slot. Something of a sadist.
- Plug Bug: Doodle Bug's close chum. He is a craven coward and a little flowery in nature, but stubbornly protective of his sink when it comes to what everyone puts down it. Good to his mother.
- Buggins: Orange worm-like creature. Irritatingly enthusiastic and jolly. Regularly beaten into line by the previous two, he generally came up smiling...until the next time.
- Grunge and Slopp: A pair of dirty, green, hairy hippie types who told jokes and sang songs. Very rarely referred to by name. They also occasionally got involved in the main action, often playing pranks on the other characters.
- Gorgon and Zola: A husband and wife team of fuzzy worms. Aggressive to all and sundry, they were also resident jokesters. Background dancers for most of the songs.
Minor characters
- The Customer: Arrived in series 3. Real name; Roy, he lived in a mobile home on the side of the A3. Spent a lot of time in the cafe but rarely actually seemed to eat anything.
- The Health Inspector: Came and went in the course of one episode. Got stuck to Grub Bug and, after various threats, posted a glowing report on the cafe.
- The Genie: Came, offered wishes, left.
- Baxter: Plug Bug's dear chum, a practical joker. Came unstuck when he played one joke too many on Mystic Mug. Last seen disappearing down a large hole.
- Bernard: A robot built by Doodle Bug with a nice/nasty switch on his back. Wrought havoc over two episodes.
- Henri: A French chef to whom Mystic Mug took rather a shine. Tied up Grub Bug and then came to a violent end.
- Doodle Bug's Granny: Appeared in Series 2, transpired it was Doodle Bug dressed up all along.
- Squelch: Buggins' cousin. So called because that was the noise people tended to make when he sat on them.
Regular strands
- Raid the Fridge: A short interstitial sequence where Grub Bug would show how to make some unspeakable culinary confection.
- In the Bin: Ditto, but involving Doodle Bug creating something out of the items he found in his bin.
- Through the Washing Machine: Short sequence where some child demonstrated something of little interest.
- Through the Cat Flap: Short sequence shot from a Scottish cat's point of view as he tramped about observing humans.
- Mystic Mug's Amazing Facts: Series 1 and 2 only. Mystic Mug presents items of trivia related to the day's topic.