- Children's game show featuring two teams competing against each other.
- Children competed against each other doing stunts. The stunts were the type one might have seen on Beat the Clock (another Goodson-Todman Production). The winning team for each stunt scored 100 points. The losing team was allowed to do something else to earn 25 or 50 points. Their consolation stunt was dictated to them by a character called "Mr. Mischief", a crude figure that had been drawn on a wall that had ears and eyelids that moved. The time limit for the stunt would be set by a balloon in his mouth which would inflate until it burst. Finishing up the show was a Choose Up Sides contest called the Super Duper Doo stunt. Each week a child was chosen to compete in an additional stunt for the possibility of winning a grand prize at the end of a several week period. Because the show was so short-lived, the only stunt that was done for the Super Duper Do was having contestants blow 16 sheets of paper off a podium, trying to get them to land in a wastebasket that was set in front of them. The prize promised was a television set. If time allowed, there was the possibility that there would be a team stunt at the end of the show to allow a team to catch up on points. The four children on the winning team won such prizes as watches or bicycles for their effort.
- Gene Rayburn hosts two teams of children, The Space Pilots and The Bronco Busters, who competed against each other. Teams earned points by winning a competition and a grand prize was awarded to the team with the most points at the end of the show.—Mark Cameron
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What was the official certification given to Choose Up Sides (1953) in the United States?
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