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The show was then known by its placeholder title E. A. T., pending a trademark dispute between TAPE, Inc. and TVJ Productions which eventually concluded in favor of the latter. [9] [10] [11] Apart from Eat Bulaga!, the company is exploring other production interests for the possible revival of Iskul Bukol.
Eat Bulaga Olympics is a game segment that challenges Eat Bulaga! hosts to complete a series of physical challenges to test their strength and agility. The segment's concept is derived from the show's original segment and predecessor, Bulagaan Olympics. The segment only airs on Saturdays, debuting on July 13, 2024.
Eat Bulaga! Lenten Specials is an annual anthology special by the Philippine noontime show Eat Bulaga! in observance with the Holy Week. The episodes usually release during the Holy Monday to Holy Wednesday. The series runs from 1981 to 2008 but later returned in 2014, the series goes in hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 to 2023. The ...
Eat Bulaga! RPN ABS-CBN GMA Network: July 7, 1981 [1] – January 5, 2024: The longest-running noontime variety show produced by TAPE, Inc.; now produced by TVJ Productions and airing on TV5 (first known as E.A.T.) since July 1, 2023 (and later reverted to Eat Bulaga! since January 6, 2024) Heredero: RPN: July 23, 1984 – September 4, 1987
The longest-running noontime variety and entertainment show is Eat Bulaga!, which will celebrate its 46th anniversary on July 30, 2025. [3] [4] The two other long-running noontime variety shows are Student Canteen for 19 years and followed by It's Showtime, which celebrated its 15th anniversary on October 24, 2024.
It seems like the fact of the matter is, the version of Eat Bulaga! produced by TAPE from 2023 to 2024 was the same program as before with new hosts, and as a result, the previous hosts organized a facsimile of the show on TV5 called E.A.T. while filing a claim for the Eat Bulaga! trademark and format in court.
Rodriguez joined Eat Bulaga! at the age of 25, replacing Helen Vela, who left the show due to medical and health reasons that led to her death a year later. In 2021, she left Eat Bulaga! after 31 years as a co-host–counting her hiatus in hosting the program due to the COVID-19 pandemic –due to her having to take care of her son who has ...
Seguerra first appeared as a three-year-old contestant of Eat Bulaga!'s "Little Miss Philippines". He subsequently became part of the show from 1987 to 1997. [4] As a child star, Seguerra appeared in more than 30 movies and TV shows to date. He often portrayed the role of actor and fellow Eat Bulaga! host Vic Sotto’s