The adventures of a group of young kids who are amateur computer experts and detectives.The adventures of a group of young kids who are amateur computer experts and detectives.The adventures of a group of young kids who are amateur computer experts and detectives.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
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Theme tune correction
Hello,
I've been following the discussion with interest - Whiz Kids was my favourite show on British TV when I was growing up. This and Tron left a big impression!
Just a quick note: the music isn't Rossini, it's adapted from Mozart's 'Elvira Madigan' (Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major). It's an amalgam of highlights from Part I of the concerto.
My favourite theme of all time :)
I do love Whiz Kids. I wish they'd release the DVD already!
I've been following the discussion with interest - Whiz Kids was my favourite show on British TV when I was growing up. This and Tron left a big impression!
Just a quick note: the music isn't Rossini, it's adapted from Mozart's 'Elvira Madigan' (Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major). It's an amalgam of highlights from Part I of the concerto.
My favourite theme of all time :)
I do love Whiz Kids. I wish they'd release the DVD already!
- Dave
For a 12 year old computer geek, this show was it!
I am really trying to remember 20 years ago to this show. It was very much a spin-off of the success of War Games. Richie had a computer that could do almost anything. It was built from a lot of spare parts that must have been around the studio. If it could flash, it went in the computer.
At the time I loved the show because I was young and though computers were neat. I would like to see the show again just to see what I think now.
The thing that I remember most about the show is that EVERYTHING seemed to be run by computers. In one episode they were locked in some room. In that room was some discarded terminal that they were able to connect to the building sprinkler system and set it off. Deus ex Machina situations like this happened way too often...and Richie was always like MacGuyver with a keyboard.
Still...I remember liking the show back then.
At the time I loved the show because I was young and though computers were neat. I would like to see the show again just to see what I think now.
The thing that I remember most about the show is that EVERYTHING seemed to be run by computers. In one episode they were locked in some room. In that room was some discarded terminal that they were able to connect to the building sprinkler system and set it off. Deus ex Machina situations like this happened way too often...and Richie was always like MacGuyver with a keyboard.
Still...I remember liking the show back then.
Of and Ahead of Its Time
It's a perfect time capsule from 1983 and 1984 - the music, the clothes, and the naive fascination of what computers were capable of. As for the computer content - it's all fairly plausible, but much like War Games, the temptation of what a person with a modem could get away with in 1983 was way too intimidating to try for most people, which kept it rare. Whiz Kids may have stoked the imagination a little too much, but it would be another 10 long years before the rest of the world caught up. There's no other reason for this show to go off the air after only one season. It practically showed a person how to hack, but in 1983, you had to be both a genius and rich to afford the kind of set up Ritchie has in Whiz Kids.
For the time capsule part, if you're a fan of Stranger Things, Whiz Kids is a pretty good example of life back then from a style perspective. It was still a mixture of 70's and 80's because not everybody could afford the newest and shiniest.
I wish this show could've lasted throughout the 80's. It would've been interesting to see the different directions it might've gone. But it wasn't meant to be. Sadly, it's not even possible to get a good DVD of it, just third rate bootlegs and YouTube.
For the time capsule part, if you're a fan of Stranger Things, Whiz Kids is a pretty good example of life back then from a style perspective. It was still a mixture of 70's and 80's because not everybody could afford the newest and shiniest.
I wish this show could've lasted throughout the 80's. It would've been interesting to see the different directions it might've gone. But it wasn't meant to be. Sadly, it's not even possible to get a good DVD of it, just third rate bootlegs and YouTube.
The Show that Started my Computer Life
The Whiz Kids TV Show was, primary the "kicker" of my computer interests. Just a few months before the first showing in October 1983, my dad and I went to Philippines, for my 1st visit. I met my cousin, Carl, whom built his first computer out of Zilog Z80 computer chips, and he gave me computer chips to bring back to USA, in August 1983, a week before the assassination of Benigno Aguino (August 21, 1983). The computer chips were from Zilog Corporation in Philippines. I place those chips onto a shelf because I was busy with the Commodore VIC-20 computer.
Shortly after the initial showing of Whiz Kids in October 1983, I began to interface my Zilog computer chips with the VIC-20. I wanted to be just like Richie; in fact, my room was almost set up the same way Richie had his in the TV show. I was only 13 years old at that time.
Though I watched Wargames in the Cinema, I could not miss an episode of Whiz Kids when it was on TV. My mother went to church on Wednesday night as I had to stay home to watch Whiz Kids.
Throughout my Junior High and High School time, I was best known as a "computer geek." In 1983, I was a power user of the TRS-80 Model III computer system. By 1985, I was a power user of the Apple Macintosh. In 1986, I was a power user of Commodore Amiga 500 and Commodore 64 computers. I didn't go to my High School Prom because of my Geek Hobby.
At my graduations, I remember having my friends over to watch my recorded shows of the Whiz Kids on Betamax. I remembered that I had every episode of Whiz Kids, recorded, but I don't know what happened to that tape, as of 1992.
I'm still waiting for CBS to release the Whiz Kids onto VHS or DVD... Now that I'm in the Philippines, I'm not sure if I can be able to receive any videos from CBS. I had been asking at the video stores, but there has been nothing on Whiz Kids even been shown in the Philippines.
Shortly after the initial showing of Whiz Kids in October 1983, I began to interface my Zilog computer chips with the VIC-20. I wanted to be just like Richie; in fact, my room was almost set up the same way Richie had his in the TV show. I was only 13 years old at that time.
Though I watched Wargames in the Cinema, I could not miss an episode of Whiz Kids when it was on TV. My mother went to church on Wednesday night as I had to stay home to watch Whiz Kids.
Throughout my Junior High and High School time, I was best known as a "computer geek." In 1983, I was a power user of the TRS-80 Model III computer system. By 1985, I was a power user of the Apple Macintosh. In 1986, I was a power user of Commodore Amiga 500 and Commodore 64 computers. I didn't go to my High School Prom because of my Geek Hobby.
At my graduations, I remember having my friends over to watch my recorded shows of the Whiz Kids on Betamax. I remembered that I had every episode of Whiz Kids, recorded, but I don't know what happened to that tape, as of 1992.
I'm still waiting for CBS to release the Whiz Kids onto VHS or DVD... Now that I'm in the Philippines, I'm not sure if I can be able to receive any videos from CBS. I had been asking at the video stores, but there has been nothing on Whiz Kids even been shown in the Philippines.
Went downhill after Dan O'Herlihy arrived...
The problem wasn't with O'Herlihy (it never is), it was his character. Prior to his coming on, the show was an entertaining adventure about a quartet of junior crimefighting computer experts that was every bit as much fun as Philip DeGuere's other then-current show "Simon & Simon" (Jeffrey and company even joined forces with A.J. Simon in one episode) - it was closer in tone to "WarGames" than "Scooby-Doo," which was fine with me even then; it also had some good writing to boot, such as one episode ending with their teacher informing the class that even though the FBI had commended them for their work that week, she was still going to punish the boys (the token female had done the homework) for not doing an assignment!
Unfortunately, when they were recruited to work for O'Herlihy's organisation (in secret of course), the thrill of their being freelancers was gone. It was the same mistake made when the Hardy Boys (Stevenson and Cassidy version) were taken on by the Justice Department - they went from playing outside the system to being part of it, and the show was never the same. But it was fun while it lasted...
Unfortunately, when they were recruited to work for O'Herlihy's organisation (in secret of course), the thrill of their being freelancers was gone. It was the same mistake made when the Hardy Boys (Stevenson and Cassidy version) were taken on by the Justice Department - they went from playing outside the system to being part of it, and the show was never the same. But it was fun while it lasted...
Did you know
- TriviaApparently CBS has lost the masters for the TV series, according to someone who spoke with one of the key people behind the show. This is the reason why there is no streaming version or DVD version of the show. There is a French version of the show that has 12 of the 18 episodes on DVD, however they are at 25fps and have some quality issues.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Eastbound & Down: Chapter 8 (2010)
- How many seasons does Whiz Kids have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Computer Kids
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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