The XYZ Show

The XYZ Show is a Kenyan satirical puppet show.[1][2]

The XYZ Show
GenrePolitical satire
Created byGado
Based onLes Guignols de l'info
Written byLoi Awat, Titus Maina , Edward Khaemba
Directed byKing Muriuki & Abdi Shuria
Presented byKeff Joinange
Country of originKenya
Original language(s)English, Swahili
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes110+
Production
Executive producer(s)Marie Lora Mungai
Godfrey Mwapembewa
Producer(s)King Muriuki , Edward Khaemba and Titus Maina
Production location(s)Godown Arts Centre
Running time27–30 minutes
Production company(s)Buni Media
DistributorBuni Media Distribution
Release
First shown inCitizen TV
Original release2009 – present
External links
buni.tv
Production website

The Story

Inspiration

Everything started in 2003. On a trip to Paris, for an exhibition Gado took time to visit the set of "Les Guignols de l'Info", or the "News Puppets". Les Guignols, just like XYZ, is a spoof newscast featuring latex puppets. It has been on the air for more than 20 years and is one of France's most popular shows ever.

To Gado it was immediately obvious that the same concept would not only be a huge success in Kenya, but could also have an important social impact by exposing, with humor, the rampant corruption and mismanagement of the country.

The Return

Back in Kenya, Gado shopped the idea around to the TV stations, but many had trouble understanding the concept. Still, Gado pressed ahead, and in 2004 he managed to convince the French Embassy in Nairobi to send sculptor Gerald Olewe to France for a month. There Olewe was trained by the team of experts who create the French puppets, and he learned how to work with sophisticated materials such as foaming latex. He came back with a fully finished puppet of Kibaki in his luggage. Olewe held his breath as he innocently walked through the JKIA customs. Luckily, he was not stopped.

Two more struggling years went by until in July 2007, Gado scrapped together a few shillings, got a little bit of money from the French embassy and produced a pilot for the show.

Pilot

Producing the pilot was a challenge, but it brought together some key team members who would stick around for ever after that: director James Kanja, visual effects guru Pete Mute alias Majiqmud, and the talented group of puppeteers led by Jack Kibedi.

With the pilot in hand, Gado embarked on a new round of visits to the TV stations. He hit a new wall, or rather two. One, the show was political and controversial. That made a lot of TV executives uncomfortable. Two, it was expensive. There were puppets to make and screenwriters, voice artists, puppeteers, cameramen and more to hire. No one wanted to pay for it.

Redefined

Gado went back to the drawing board, plotting his next move. Then in November 2007, a TV journalist, Marie Lora, came to interview him for a story about how editorial cartoonists viewed the upcoming presidential elections in Kenya.

After the interview, Gado showed her the XYZ pilot. Straight away, Marie thought that this show absolutely needed to be on the air - and she knew she could help. But the next month, all hell broke loose in Kenya. We now call this period "the post-election violence", but the term doesn't give justice to the madness of these terrible months. At that time, it became even more obvious that Kenya needed a show such as XYZ. Humor appeared like the only possible way to dig ourselves out of the dark hole we had fallen into.

The Series

Gado and Marie met again. Marie proposed a complete change in strategy: if the show is too expensive for local stations, then let's make it free. But of course, because a TV Show cannot actually be free, that meant finding the money elsewhere. So Gado and Marie embarked on a year-long journey into Nairobi's NGO and foreign embassies underworld. They knocked on every door, they made dozens of contacts, they wrote countless proposals and budgets. They pitched XYZ relentlessly.

The rest, you know. Several courageous and enthusiastic donors came through with some money. Citizen TV agreed to air the show, and Wachira Waruru became one of XYZ's strongest supporters. A full team of about 50 people representing 11 different communities was hired.

And in May 2009, the first episode of The XYZ Show finally aired.

Series

SeasonYearDatesNo. episodesTV Station
Season 1200917 May13 EpCitizen TV
Season 2201025 April13 EpCitizen TV
Season 3201020 Sep13 EpCitizen TV
Season 420111 May13 EpKiss TV
Season 5201125 Sep13 EpKiss TV
Season 6201227 July13 EpKiss TV
Season 7201312 Jan13 EpNTV
Season 820137 Aug13 EpNTV
Season 920141 march13 EpNTV
Season 1020144 August13EpNTV
Season 1120165 April26 EpKTN
Season 12201713 AprilNTV

|Season 9 |2014 |1 March |13 Ep |NTV |- |Season 10 |2014 |4 August |13 Ep |NTV |- |Season 11 |2016 |5 April |26 Ep |KTN |}

Awards

2013: The XYZ Show wins the award for Best TV Series at the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards in Nigeria. Buni Media co-founders Gado Mwampembwa and Marie Lora-Mungai visit Lagos, Nigeria as guests of the Ford Foundation Nigeria and IIE. The objective of this visit is to interact with Nigerian media, political scene and market and with potential partners of Buni TV.

YearAwardeeAcademyAwardResult
2013The XYZ Show2013 Africa Magic Viewers Choice AwardsBest Television SeriesWon

Format

The show commences with the current news events of Kenya. Other segments include:

  • what if...
  • Poli-tricks with Amanuel Ijumaa
  • BS News at 9
  • Upclose & personal with Keff Joinange
  • Political Hits

Characters

  • Jeff koinange, host
  • Mr. Wu
  • Mwaniki
  • Sonko
  • Si Mutoko

Politicians

International politicians

U.S presidential candidate Donald John Trump

Rwandan president Paul Kagame

Tanzanian president John Pombe Magufuli

See also

References

  1. "The Story of XYZ". xyzshow.com. Retrieved 15 August 2013.
  2. "#AMVCA: The XYZ Show wins Best Television Series in Africa". xyzshow.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
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