Puppet History is a game show YouTube series produced by Ryan Bergara, Steven Lim, and Shane Madej through their company, Watcher Entertainment. Bergara, Lim, and Madej met when they worked at BuzzFeed but later left to seek more artistic control.[1] Bergara and Madej are best known from their series BuzzFeed Unsolved.
Puppet History began in January 2020. The show's premise sees a colorful puppet historian known as the Professor presenting a game show about one or two distinctive persons or events from history. The two contestants answer questions, and the Professor gives them points; the contestant with the most points wins the title of "History Wizard" and a hat. Before season six, the contestant with the most points won the title of "History Master" and a small trophy. A season six was announced on Shane Madej's social media and was released on July 7, 2023.
Format
The show begins with the Professor, a blue puppet, greeting the guests from a puppet theater stage. The contestants are almost always Ryan Bergara and one other person. The Professor then tells a story about history. He stops every few minutes to ask the two guests questions, which are sometimes multiple choice; whoever answers correctly, or as close to correctly as possible, receives points (referred to as "jelly beans").
The scoring is relatively loose, and a contestant may be awarded more than one point, or just half a point, for their answer, as well as extra points being awarded as the Professor sees fit. The show presents parts of the story and answers to some questions through reenactments of scenes using paper cutouts of people from history. The prize is a small plastic trophy containing jelly beans or another small prize. The Professor refers to it as the "coveted cup and title of History Master" in his opening speech and at other times during the episode.
The Professor encourages the guests to tell jokes and is often more attentive towards the guests than to Bergara. Before the end of the show, the Professor leaves to "tally the score" using "our complex victory algorithm," and another puppet or puppets come onto the stage and sing a song about the historical event.
For the first four seasons, the Professor claims that the algorithm has awarded the cup and title of "History Master" to the guest contestants, regardless of who actually acquired more points.[lower-alpha 1] In season five, this trend was inverted, and Bergara won almost every episode (with the exception of episode six) regardless of his point total. However, due to a "supply chain issue" in sourcing the trophies, Bergara instead won a Puppet History-themed moisturizer every episode (except episode 5, when a "Yankee Dodge"-flavored vape was presented as prize). This is later revealed to be a plot by the Professor, actually an evil holographic doppelganger, to steal Bergara's flesh and use it as a body.
In season six, the algorithm machine has been destroyed and replaced by the Professor's adoptive dinosaur parents who serve as judges and hand out hats as prizes, referred to as the "coveted cap and title of History Wizard". The guests receive a hat with the words "history wizard" written on it, while Bergara receives a hat saying "beef" (a reference to his name as a pun on "burger"), with misspellings thereof.
Characters
Each episode includes:
- The Professor, a blue puppet voiced by Shane Madej.
- Ryan Bergara, as himself.
- A guest contestant, typically another YouTuber.
- At least one other puppet, also voiced by Shane Madej.
- (Pre-season 6) A genie who pursues the Professor through time and space, played in live-action by Shane Madej.
- (Post-season 4) Dinosara and Dinosir, a Tyrannosaurus rex and a Pteranodon voiced by Joyce Louis-Jean and Garrett Watts respectively.
- (Season 5) Concupiscence McNasty, a holographic clone of the Professor voiced by Shane Madej.
Episodes
In season one, Bergara and the other contestant sat in chairs in the same room as the puppet theater. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, seasons two and three were carried out virtually and the show was named Puppet History: Online University.[2] In season 4, the show returned to being in person. Each episode also has a musical guest puppet who sings at the end, which is usually but not always an object, animal or other entity relevant to the episode's subject matter.
Season | Episode | Guest | Release date | Musical Guest Puppet |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Life During the Black Death Pandemic | Steven Lim | January 10, 2020 | Death |
Stealing the World's Most Expensive Necklace | Kate Peterman | February 27, 2020 | A big pile of diamonds | |
Surviving the Titanic: History's Luckiest Woman | Jenny Lorenzo | April 10, 2020 | The Britannic's propeller | |
The Dancing Plague | Jermaine Fowler | May 22, 2020 | God, shown as a one-eyed purple humanoid | |
2 | How America's First Female Detective Saved Abe Lincoln | Kate Peterman | August 14, 2020 | The train that was supposed to take Lincoln to Baltimore |
The Terrifying Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius | Matt Real | August 21, 2020 | Mt. Vesuvius | |
Hatshepsut: The Forgotten Pharaoh | Ryann Graham | August 28, 2020 | A mummified goose from the tomb of Hatshepsut | |
The Disastrous 1904 Olympic Marathon | Kristin Chirico | September 4, 2020 | The Olympic Torch | |
Isaac Newton's Nemesis | Keith Habersberger | September 11, 2020 | A clipped coin | |
The World's Greatest/Rudest Samurai | Garrick Bernard | September 18, 2020 | Two oars, one of which has been carved into a sword by Miyamoto Musashi | |
Policarpa: The Revolutionary Teen Spy | Curly Velasquez | September 25, 2020 | A spool of thread | |
The Grisly Journey of the Donner Party | Joyce Louis-Jean | October 2, 2020 | A snowman full of human bones and organs from the shores of Donner Lake | |
Special | The Story of St. Nicholas | Kate Peterman | December 25, 2020 | (in order of appearance)The big pile of diamonds, the oars, the mummified goose, the bones of St. Nicholas |
3 | The Beast of Gevaudan | Sara Rubin | March 12, 2021 | The Beast of Gévaudan |
The War of the Golden Stool | Kate Peterman | March 26, 2021 | The Golden Stool | |
Ziryab: The World's First Rock Star | Zach Kornfeld | April 2, 2021 | Ziryab's oud and the Professor on guitar | |
The Affair of the Poisons | Garrick Bernard | April 9, 2021 | Two deadly bottles of poison | |
Ching Shih: The Pirate Queen | Joyce Louis-Jean | April 16, 2021 | The flower boat that Ching Shih once worked on | |
The Great Molasses Flood | Garrett Watts | April 23, 2021 | A horse from the streets of Boston (later revealed to be named Stanley Melvin Murphy), and God | |
4 | The Great Emu War | Kate Peterman | August 28, 2021 | A stalk of wheat and a flock of emus |
Mansa Musa: The Richest Man in History | Ify Nwadiwe | September 4, 2021 | A fraction of Mansa Musa's fortune | |
America vs. Smallpox: How Vaccines Saved the Nation | Jermaine Fowler | September 11, 2021 | A lump of pus, and a walnut shell full of smallpox scabs | |
José Rizal: The Philippines’ Reluctant Revolutionary | Josh Weinstein | September 17, 2021 | A book written by José Rizal | |
The Bloody Revenge of Saint Olga of Kyiv | Selorm Kploanyi | September 24, 2021 | Two birch trees holding the corpse of Igor of Kyiv | |
The Demonic Possessions of Loudun | Sara Rubin | October 3, 2021 | The demon Asmodeus. Satan also appears at the end of the episode with a minor singing role. | |
Special | The Puppet History Holiday Spectacular! | December 24, 2021 | All musical guests from Seasons 1 to 4 except for God, Asmodeus, Satan and Death | |
5 | How Hippo Meat Almost Saved America | Sara Rubin | November 11, 2022 | A hippopotamus |
The Defenestrations of Prague | Brian David Gilbert | November 18, 2022 | A stained glass window | |
The Vietnamese Sisters Who Fought An Empire | Maya Murillo | November 25, 2022 | An immortal white tiger | |
America's First Black Aviatrix | Ryann Graham | December 2, 2022 | A cloud | |
The Bloody Life of England's Fastest Surgeon | Aria Inthavong | December 9, 2022 | Concupiscence McNasty, evil holographic clone of the Professor | |
The Dreadful Demise of the Dinosaurs | Garrett Watts Joyce Louis-Jean | December 16, 2022 | The Professor and the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs | |
6 | The Unkillable Weirdo Who Invented The Saxophone | Steven Lim | July 7, 2023 | An unused prototype saxophone |
The Concubine Who Killed Her Way To The Throne | Joyce Louis-Jean | July 14, 2023 | A Chinese dragon said to have been Wu Zetian's biological father | |
The Fiery Sports Riot That Nearly Destroyed Constantinople | Ricky Wang | July 21, 2023 | The Hippodrome of Constantinople | |
The Scandalous Life of France's Bisexual Opera Icon | Kwesi James | July 28, 2023 | Cupid | |
How a Pope's Nepobaby Became One of the Worst Tyrants in History | Zach Kornfeld | August 4, 2023 | A pope's mitre and God | |
The Deadly Race To The South Pole | Sara Rubin | August 11, 2023 | The continent of Antarctica |
The Professor
The Professor is a small hand puppet with blue fur and a white nose. He usually wears a safari hat and jacket and carries a satchel. He wears glasses and a bow tie. Sometimes, he wears other costumes. For example, in the episode about Ching Shih, he wore a three-cornered pirate hat, and in the episode about the 1904 Summer Olympics he wears a women's gymnastics leotard.
The Professor sometimes talks about his life through wrong answers to the multiple-choice questions. These answers say the Professor found a magic lamp that had a magical genie inside it. He wished for the genie to turn a "seemingly ordinary household object", revealed to be the Professor's satchel, into a secret time machine. The genie did so, but was also "a total prick about it." In the flashbacks, the genie is also played by Shane Madej. In other episodes, the Professor mentions visiting the past and meeting people from history. Sometimes he talks about the genie chasing him through time, due to the effects from time-traveling bringing the various singing guest puppets to life. For example, in "The Great Molasses Flood," the Professor gets stuck in the molasses and the genie almost catches him.
In the last episode of Season 4, we see the Professor go back in time to the Cretaceous period due to a conspirancy involving Ryan Bergara, Asmodeus, Satan and the genie. A T-rex eats him. Words on the screen tell the audience that the Professor is canonically dead.[3] In the Puppet History Holiday Spectacular, many of the puppets seen earlier in the show acknowledge his death and sing a song in his honor.
Season 5 of Puppet History premiered on November 11, 2022, with an episode titled "How Hippo Meat Almost Saved America". The Professor is somehow alive, and the puppet theater is connected to a mysterious electronic box which he warns the guests not to touch or talk about. He is later revealed to be a hologram originally created by the cycloptic purple puppet version of God to deliver the Professor's eulogy, but elected by the puppets to host the show. The real Professor is revealed to have somehow revived, albeit much larger, and hatched from an egg laid by the same T-rex, who is married to some kind of pterosaur. As the holographic Professor reveals his plans of skinning Ryan and wearing his flesh and the two are involved in a hectic battle, Ryan rubs the genie lamp to bring the Professor and his new dinosaur parents from the Cretaceous period just as the meteor is about to strike, and kills the hologram by defenestration.
Notes
- ↑ For instance, in the episode "Ziryab: The World's First Rock Star", guest Zach Kornfeld answered no questions correctly and still won. However, the episode "Stealing The World's Most Expensive Necklace" ended in a tie, which Bergara still lost.
References
- ↑ Weiss, Geoff (April 8, 2020). "CAA Signs 'Watcher', The YouTube Studio Founded By 3 Former BuzzFeeders (Exclusive)". Tubefilter. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
- ↑ Wen, Aimi (February 7, 2021). "Watcher Is the YouTube Channel Where Horror Meets Food". Studybreaks.com. Retrieved August 22, 2021.
- ↑ Wilson, Andy (October 4, 2021). "Did Puppet History Season 4 Finale Just Kill Off a Main Character?". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved May 20, 2022.