Combat Zone (TV series)

(Redirected from Combat Des Clips)

Combat Zone (formerly known as Combat des Clips) was a music video program on Canadian music TV station MuchMusic featuring viewer voting.[1] It was hosted from 1991 to 1997 by Craig F. Halket. The show involved two popular music videos playing the roles of the combatants. During the hour-long program, viewers could either call in, fax or email their votes for one of the two competing songs. A separate French edition of the program, also titled Combat des clips, aired on MusiquePlus.

During the progress of the show, various other videos of similar genres as the two competing songs are shown, as well as trivia about the champion and challenger along with other songs by those musicians.

By the end of the program, the song with the most votes becomes the champion and is played. In the subsequent weeks, for however long that song continually gets voted champion (maximum five weeks), it faces new challengers. After five weeks as a champion, the song gets placed in the Combat Zone Hall of Fame.

In 1997, MuchMusic launched "Combat des clips" as an interactive competition on its website, inviting PC users to download audio recordings of independent bands and voting for their favourites weekly.[2]

Hall of Fame

edit

Previously, there was no limit on how long a song could reign as champion but after 13 straight victories, I Mother Earth's One More Astronaut was retired and made the first song in the new Combat Zone Hall of Fame. From this point onward, a maximum of 5 straight wins was introduced before a song would be sent to the Hall of Fame.

The next song in the Combat Zone Hall of Fame was Korn's "Freak On A Leash". Eminem holds the record for most songs in the Hall of Fame appearing in nine videos that have been retired.

List of videos in the Combat Zone Hall of Fame

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "'This is surreal': Spirit of MuchMusic alive and well: Former VJs among thousands who attended premiere of documentary highlighting station's legacy". The Spectator. Hamilton, Ontario. 26 September 2023. Retrieved 3 November 2024 – via ProQuest.
  2. ^ Tedesco, Richard (16 June 1997). "Website development". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved 3 November 2024 – via ProQuest.