Runtime: | 30 minutes |
Presenter: | Nick Spano Valarie Rae Miller |
Country: | United States |
Company: | Wheeler-Sussman Productions |
Network: | Syndication |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Peer Pressure is an American television game show where youths performed stunts and answered questions about moral dilemmas. The show aired in syndication from 1997-1998 in first-run (with re-edited repeats airing until 2000), and was hosted by Nick Spano and Valarie Rae Miller.
Three youths, ages 12–17, competed in this game, whose centerpiece was a life-sized board game spread out on the studio floor. One at a time, each contestant determined his/her moves via a "Magic 8 Ball", which reveals a type of activity (a stunt or a moral-based question) and the number of spaces the contestant can move upon a correct answer or completion of said stunt. Landing on a "Move Ahead" space allowed the contestant to move ahead two more spaces. He/she had to move back two spaces upon landing on "Go Back". However, if the contestant ended up on those spaces when being assessed a penalty, he/she was not allowed to follow its instructions.
Four different activities were possible:
After each contestant has taken a turn, the host asked a "Pop Quiz" question. Correct answers allowed that player to advance three spaces, while a wrong answer (or failing to answer) meant a three-step penalty.
After an undefined time limit, the player making the least progress was eliminated from further play. The remaining contestants advanced to the "Pressure Cooker" round, which were yes/no dilemmas (played just like "Decision"), asked in an alternating format; the player who had made the most progress on the board had the advantage of going first. The first contestant to guess three questions correctly won the game and bonus prizes.
The series aired original episodes for one season in 1997–98. However, the series aired repackaged reruns in the 1998–99 and 1999–2000 television seasons; the first season of reruns edited out references to the "Magic 8 Ball" and added Pop-Up Video-style commentaries. The second season of reruns repackaged the series as Pressure 2 (to accompany the new spin-off series Pressure 1) by means of on-screen graphics and editing out references to "Peer" when the title was spoken.