Other regular features included: As the original two-year weekly run of the series progressed, adjustments were made to the format and eventually the commercials were phased out, along with other segments, leaving only the bloopers and practical jokes.
In 1988, Clark revived it as a series of specials retitled as Super Bloopers and New Practical Jokes, and returned with McMahon as co-hosts.
ABC continued to air reruns of these specials until 2006, and they frequently appeared on TBS as well, mainly in the graveyard slot as filler to bring the schedule back into kilter at the start of the broadcast day after the end of Turner Sports coverage in primetime.
[2] In the fall of 2012, the series was revived by Dick Clark Productions and Trifecta Entertainment & Media under the title Bloopers, in a half-hour, syndicated format, airing twice per week.
However, the practical joke segments in the vein of Candid Camera, which were dropped from the series during the time of the NBC specials, have been reintroduced.
[5][6] During the show's original two-year run on NBC, it sparked a number of imitators on other networks, most notably the ABC series Foul-ups, Bleeps & Blunders.