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3-2-1 Contact



First Aired in 1980

The product of three years' development, 3-2-1 Contact™ (B. 1980 D. 1988) stands as the third-longest-running series ever produced by the Children's Television Workshop (as it was then called). Its premise was to bring the world of science, and all its excitement, to middle-school students, particularly girls and minorities. Through seven seasons, various hosts traveled around the world to find science in everything. Over the years, features such as clever animation, biographies, and the detective series The Bloodhound Gang were included. Complementing the series for middle-school students and teachers alike was 3-2-1 Contact magazine, edited by Jonathan Rosenbloom.

In the first season of 3-2-1 Contact, three hosts – Lisa, Marc, and Trini – met at a regular set, called the "workshop," to discuss their scientific adventures. It looked every bit the science equivalent of The Electric Company, with loads of animation and regular celebrity segments. But the stars of the show were Lisa, Marc, and Trini, going off on scientific adventures (some of which were repeated numerous times throughout the season). The Bloodhound Gang, produced by Daniel Wilson Productions, featured wonderful mysteries (most written by Sid Fleischman) related to whatever theme 3-2-1 Contact was devoted to that week.

The Bloodhound Gang, not to be confused with that musical act of questionable behavior, was a smart team of apprentices for the Bloodhound Detective Agency in (by all looks of things) Kenilworth, New Jersey. The gang consisted of Vikki, the super-observant leader; Ricardo, the photographer/amateur magician; and a younger member. The first season was divided between Zach and Cuff, both of whom ran the detective agency CB.

After three years of rerunning 65 programs, CTW gave 3-2-1 Contact a new format for Seasons 2 and 3. Very little material was recycled within these programs, except for adventures of The Bloodhound Gang.

A new team of characters – Robin, Kathy, Miguel, and his ten-year-old brother Paco – brought a new element of reality to the series. Their set was an average basement. Another co-star, Jackie (played by Liz Gorcey) appeared only on location. Biographies of scientists, a sporadic studio element of Season 1, became a weekly feature in the second and third seasons. These new biographies always were filmed on locations where the scientists worked.

The Bloodhound Gang returned with a new member, Skip. In contrast to Zach and Cuff, who one observer said just hung around, Skip was the computer whiz who complemented Vikki and Ricardo immeasurably.

Season 4 relied more heavily on location work. All the hosts returned, as did two new ones, Mary and Diego. Studio shots were limited to "color" sequences featuring Paco and his new partner, Mary. All installments of The Bloodhound Gang (not seen during Tropics Week, Episodes 126-130) were held over from Season 3 since, sadly, Marcelino Sanchez (Ricardo) had been diagnosed with the cancer that would take his life in November 1986.

Season 5 marked a transition of the cast members. Robin, Miguel, Mary, and Diego appeared only during Motion Week (Episodes 156-160). Paco was the only mainstay from the previous three seasons (he was absent from Episodes 151-155). But the most significant aspect of Season 5 was its co-production between CTW and FR3, a French public television network. With English and French versions in full swing, 3-2-1 Contact became one of the first shows to air on TVOntario's new La Chaîne Française (now TFO) when that network signed on in January 1987. The Bloodhound Gang mysteries were again recycled segments from Season 3.

Season 6 introduced a new opening sequence. It also revisited old sequences (mostly from Seasons 1 and 2). In fact, Architecture Week (episodes 176-180) featured a great deal of sequences rescued from Building Week in Season 2, which had aired for the last time just months before. The Bloodhound Gang was totally absent for the only season in the show's history.

Season 7 leaned more heavily on Stephanie Yu, a factor that would prove to drown out the team concept. Also deterring the team was Season 7's reliance on more elaborate location theme weeks featuring one performer. Reruns of The Bloodhound Gang re-emerged briefly if for no other reason than to ensure that all participants from the old mysteries would get their space in the show's crawl.

Production funds for 3-2-1 Contact were provided by:
• The National Science Foundation (all seasons)
• U.S. Department of Education (all seasons)
• Corporation for Public Broadcasting (all seasons)
• United Technologies Corporation (Season 1)
• The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations (additional funding in Season 2)

By the time production of the regular series ended in 1988, CTW began producing a succession of 3-2-1 Contact Extras. Some of these Extras are still being sold by a company called GPN, which also holds audiovisual rights to the sequel series 3-2-1 Classroom Contact.

CTW (renamed Sesame Workshop in 2000) withdrew a total of twenty 3-2-1 Contact programs between 1986 and 1990 inclusive, before the entire series was dropped by PBS October 2, 1992. To this day, 3-2-1 Contact™ and the logo are trademarks and service marks of Sesame Workshop, © 1980-1988.

Reruns briefly surfaced on Noggin, then co-owned by Nickelodeon and CTW, when that network signed on January 31, 1999. (Programs seen on Noggin have been identified with the letter N in the production codes column.) On occasion, Nickelodeon rebroadcast selected 3-2-1 Contact programs as part of their Cable in the Classroom project. But after a short run in great time periods, this and other CTW series were given less convenient time periods in the ensuing months. Ultimately, 3-2-1 Contact was taken permanently from all airwaves in the spring of 2003.

This does not, however, prevent some people from trying to raise awareness in the original 3-2-1 Contact series.
If you see any mistakes on this page or if you have more infomation about this show, please submit a comment


Episodes:


Season 1:
1. Noisy/Quiet: Production & Processing of Sound
2. Noisy/Quiet: The Ear
3. Noisy/Quiet: How People & Animals Use Sound
4. Noisy/Quiet: Music
5. Noisy/Quiet: Range of Vibration
6. Forces and Motion
7. Forces and Fields
8. Forces: Buoyancy and Gravity
9. Forces and Machines
10. Forces: A Spectacle of Forces
11. Growth/Decay: Sex and Seeds
12. Growth/Decay: Human Growth
13. Growth/Decay: Decay
14. Growth/Decay: Human Cultures/Land Forms
15. Growth/Decay: Cycles Upon Cycles
16. Fast/Slow: Speed Up, Slow Down
17. Fast/Slow: Rhythms of Nature
18. Fast/Slow: Lifetimes
19. Fast/Slow: Speed and Racing
20. Fast/Slow: Time and Time Again
21. Communication: Human Communication
22. Communication: Animal Communication
23. Communication: Machinery of Communication
24. Communication with Other Species
25. Communication: Feedback
26. Food/Fuel: Animal Food
27. Food/Fuel: Human Food
28. Food/Fuel: Growing and Processing Food
29. Food/Fuel: Fueling Machines
30. Food/Fuel: The Sun Makes Everything Go
31. Hot/Cold: People's Temperatures
32. Hot/Cold: Animal and Plant Adaptations
33. Hot/Cold: How Hot or Cold Can It Get?
34. Hot/Cold: Heat and Work
35. Hot/Cold: Temperatures on Earth/In Space
36. Light/Dark: The Sun
37. Light/Dark: Adaptation of Plants/Animals
38. Light/Dark: Electromagnetic Spectrum
39. Light/Dark: The Eye
40. Light/Dark: Light Sources
41. Near/Far: Seeing Isn't Always Believing
42. Near/Far: Mapping and Navigating Near Home
43. Near/Far: Mapping and Navigating Over Earth
44. Near/Far: Space Travel
45. Near/Far: Knowing Where You Are
46. Order/Disorder: Regular Patterns
47. Order/Disorder: The Body – An Ordered System
48. Order/Disorder: Social Order
49. Order/Disorder: Disordered
50. Order/Disorder: Sum of Its Parts
51. Surfaces: Protection
52. Surfaces: Shapes and Functions at the Surface
53. Surfaces: Surface Tension and Bubbles
54. Surfaces: Surface of the Earth
55. Surfaces: The Atmosphere—Skin of the Earth
56. Big/Small: Animal Sizes/Scaling
57. Big/Small: Animal Habitats
58. Big/Small: Dinoaurs
59. Big/Small: Volume & Efficiency
60. Big/Small: How Big is Big?
61. Crowded/Uncrowded: Human Crowding
62. Crowded/Uncrowded: Optimum Populations in Nature
63. Crowded/Uncrowded: Contrasts in Densities of Materials
64. Crowded/Uncrowded: Down Among the Atoms (Liquids & Solids)
65. Crowded/Uncrowded: Human Survival/Controlling Densities

Season 2:
1. Survival: Breathing
2. Survival: Temperature
3. Survival: Protection
4. Survival: Energy
5. Survival: Teamwork
6. Sports: Training Analysis
7. Sports: Time, Rate, Measurement
8. Sports: Energy Transfer
9. Sports: Impact Analysis
10. Sports: Coordination
11. Flight: Flying Animals
12. Flight: Air Resistance
13. Flight: Lift
14. Flight: Thrust
15. Flight: Acceleration
16. Babies: The Code of Life
17. Babies: Growth and Development
18. Babies: Behavior
19. Babies: Colonization
20. Babies: Change
21. Senses: Taste and Smell
22. Senses: Sight
23. Senses: Hearing
24. Senses: Touch
25. Senses: Special Sensors
26. Shapes in Nature
27. Shapes and Gravity
28. Shapes: Streamlining
29. Shapes: Form and Function
30. Shapes: Clues
31. Water: 3 Phases – Gas, Liquid, Solid
32. Water: Medium for Life
33. Water and People
34. Water: Distribution
35. Water in the Body
36. Building: Materials
37. Building: One of a Kind
38. Building: Standard Parts
39. Building: Modular
40. Building: Communication

Season 3:
1. Space: Weightless
2. Space: Getting There
3. Space: Living There
4. Space: Working There
5. Space: Anybody Out There?
6. Measurement: How Long? How Far?
7. Measurement: What's the Area? What's the Volume?
8. Measurement: How Heavy? How Dense?
9. Measurement: How Many? How Much?
10. Measurement: How Fast? How Slow?
11. Earth is Change
12. Earth: Maps
13. Earth: Climate
14. Earth: Flora and Fauna
15. Earth: Building Models
16. Electricity: What is It?
17. Electricity and Magnetism
18. Electricity: Where Do We Get It?
19. Electricity Runs in a Circuit
20. Electricity: You Are Electric

Season 4:
1. Tropics: Rubber
2. Tropics: Metals
3. Tropics: Rice
4. Tropics: Working Animals – Monkeys and Elephants
5. Tropics: Endangered Animals
6. Light: From the Sun; To Your Eyes
7. Light: Color
8. Light: Eyes
9. Light: How Animals See
10. Light: Bending and Bouncing
11. Farms: Sheep and Pigs – Selective Breeding
12. Farms: Plants and Pigs – Plant Production
13. Farms: Hybrids
14. Farms: Cows and Pigs – Animal Products
15. Farms: Chickens and Pigs – Animal Production
16. Stuff: Metals
17. Stuff: Clay
18. Stuff: Shaping It
19. Stuff: Feathers and Rubber
20. Stuff: Using It

Season 5:
1. Signals: Lingo
2. Signals: Talking Birds, Talking Rooms
3. Signals: Looking for Visual Clues
4. Signals: Getting Them Around
5. Signals: Cracking Codes
6. Oceans: On the Sea
7. Oceans: In the Sea
8. Oceans: From the Sea
9. Oceans: By the Sea
10. Oceans: Of the Sea
11. Motion: What's Up?
12. Motion: Bones
13. Motion: Smashing
14. Motion: Getting a Grip
15. Motion: Heave Ho!
16. Eating: Tooth Detectives
17. Eating: Picky Eaters
18. Eating: Zoo Food
19. Eating: Down the Hatch
20. Eating: Leftovers

Season 6:
1. Japan: Precious Oysters, Rare Salamanders
2. Japan: Landslide!
3. Japan: Paper and Kites
4. Japan: Earthquake!
5. Japan: Judo and Computers
6. Detectives: Skin and Bone Detectives
7. Detectives: Tool and Trash Detectives
8. Detectives: Wildlife Detectives
9. Detectives: Dinosaur Detectives
10. Detectives: Pattern Detectives
11. Architecture: Raising the Big Top
12. Architecture: Home
13. Architecture: Stack It Up
14. Architecture: Made to Fit
15. Architecture: Light But Strong
16. Mammals: Rats and Bats
17. Mammals: Keeping Warm
18. Mammals: Live Birth, Warm Milk
19. Mammals at Play
20. Big Mammals: The High Cost of Living
21. Modeling: Things on Wheels
22. Modeling: Through Ice and Air
23. Modeling: The Earth
24. Modeling: Knees and Small Things
25. Modeling: Spaces
26. In the Air: Finding Your Way
27. In the Air: Drifting with the Wind
28. In the Air: Born to Fly
29. In the Air: Fat Things That Fly
30. In the Air: Unbelievable Flying Objects

Season 7:
1. Antarctica: Getting There
2. Antarctica: Getting Around
3. Antarctica: Life On The Edge
4. Antarctica: Life Under The Ice
5. Antarctica: The Desert Continent
6. Your Body: Twins
7. Your Body: Having a Baby
8. Your Body: Sleep
9. Your Body: Spinning
10. Your Body: Your Health
11. Australia: Platypus & Echidna
12. Australia: Moths & Beetles
13. Australia: Emu & Kookaburra
14. Australia: Koalas
15. Australia: Kangaroos
16. Structures: Bubble, Bubble
17. Structures: Pipes and Reeds
18. Structures: Chaos and Computers
19. Structures: Running Robots
20. Structures: Suspended in Air
21. Greece: The Journey Begins
22. Greece: Under The Ash
23. Greece: Before History
24. Greece: Sheep & Cheese
25. Greece: The Parthenon
26. Island: Parrot Fish
27. Island: Lizards
28. Island: Coral
29. Island: Flamingos
30. Island: Conch



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