Undercover Boss | |
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Created by | Stephen Lambert |
Original work | Undercover Boss (United Kingdom) |
Years | 2009–present |
Films and television | |
Television series | Undercover Boss (seefranchises) |
Miscellaneous | |
Genre | Reality television |
First aired | 15 June 2009; 15 years ago (2009-06-15) |
Distributor | All3Media |
Official website | |
Production website |
Undercover Boss is a reality television series franchise created byStephen Lambert and produced in many countries. It originated in 2009 on the BritishChannel 4.[1] The show’s format features the experiences of senior executives working undercover in their own companies to investigate how their firms really work and to identify how they can be improved, as well as to reward hard-working employees.
Each episode features a high-ranking executive or the owner of a corporation goingundercover as an entry-level employee in his or her own company. The executives alter their appearance and assume analias and fictional back-story. The fictitious explanation given for the accompanying camera crew is that the executives are being filmed as part of a documentary about entry-level workers in a particular industry, or a competition with another individual with the winner getting a job with the company. They spend approximately one to two weeks undercover (one week being the norm in some editions, such as the US version, and two weeks in some other versions, such as the Australian edition), working in various areas of their company's operations, with different parts and in most cases a different location each day. They are exposed to a series of predicaments with amusing results, and invariably spend time getting to know the people who work in the company, learning about their professional and personal challenges.
At the end of their time undercover, the executives return to their true identity and request the employees they worked with individually to travel to a central location—often corporate headquarters. The bosses reveal their identity, and reward hard-working employees through promotion, or financial rewards; while other employees are given training, better working conditions, or, in extreme cases, termination.
The Australian version of the franchise premiered on Network Ten on 18 October 2010[2][3] The show ran for 2 seasons.
The Austrian version ofUndercover Boss premiered onORF eins on 16 January 2013 with the CEO ofASFiNAG, Klaus Schierhackl.
The Bulgarian version ofUndercover Boss is namedШеф под прикритие (Shef pod prikritie). Premier of the show is on 9 February 2016 onNova TV. The first show is forDomino's Pizza Bulgaria.
The Brazilian version ofUndercover Boss is namedChefe Secreto. Premier of the show was on 27 September 2015 as an part ofFantástico newsmagazine onRede Globo. The first show is for Adezan, a company which produces industrial packings, with his managing manager Pedro Stivalli
The Canadian version ofUndercover Boss premiered onW Network on 2 February 2012 with the CEO of Toronto Zoo, John Tracogna.
The Chilean version ofUndercover Boss, namedEl jefe en tus zapatos ("The Boss in your shoes"), premiered onChilevisión on 17 August 2016 with the CEO of Monarch, Alejandro Magnasco.
The Colombian version ofUndercover Boss, namedJefe encubierto, launched onRCN Televisión on 3 December 2017.
The Czech version ofUndercover Boss, namedUtajený šéf, premiered onTV Nova on 25 April 2018. Six episodes were aired.
Patron incognito is broadcast onM6.
The German version ofUndercover Boss premiered onRTL on 28 March 2011 with the CEO of Eismann, Mika Ramm.
The Hungarian version ofUndercover Boss, namedFőnök inkognitóban, premiered onRTL Klub on 29 April 2019. Six episodes were aired.
Undercover Boss Israel, premiered in January 2013 and has aired 15 episodes over 2 seasons.
The Italian version ofUndercover Boss isBoss in incognito. The show premiered in January 2014. It is broadcast onRai 2 and has had so far ten seasons. TV channel NOVE ofDiscovery Networks broadcasts the UK and US versions.
The Japanese version ofUndercover Boss is namedFukumen Research Boss Sennyū. The show premiered on 28 March 2015. It is broadcast onNHK BS Premium and has had so far three seasons.
The Norwegian version ofUndercover Boss premiered on TV2 on 8 March 2011 with the CEO ofRimi, Thor Linge.[4] Ten episodes are scheduled.
The Polish version ofUndercover Boss isKryptonim szef. The show premiered on 2 September 2015 at broadcasterTVP1.[5] Ten episodes are scheduled.
The Romanian version ofUndercover Boss isŞef sub acoperire. The show premiered on 12 September 2019 onPro TV and has 3 seasons.
The Russian version ofUndercover Boss isТрудно быть боссом (Hard to be Boss). The show premiered on 13 May 2018 onNTV.[6] This format is the only that has the on-screen host - Lisa Gamburg.
The Spanish version ofUndercover Boss premiered on 11 June 2011 onAntena 3 namedEl jefe, but it was cancelled after 3 episodes due to low viewership ratings. Three years later,Atresmedia adapted the programme, this time on the channellaSexta, where it premiered on 3 April 2014 under the titleEl jefe infiltrado.
The original UK series, produced byStudio Lambert, started airing on 15 June 2009 onChannel 4 and ended its sixth and final series for the broadcaster on 20 August 2014. In 2021, Studio Lambert put a new series ofUndercover Boss in to production, with the rights to broadcast the series moving over toITV.[7][8] The new series titledUndercover Big Boss, consisting of four episodes premiered on 5 August 2021.[9]
The first episode of the US series, also produced byStudio Lambert, premiered on 7 February 2010 afterSuper Bowl XLIV and featured Larry O'Donnell, then-President and Chief Operating Officer ofWaste Management, Inc.[10]
On 9 March 2010, CBS announced it had commissionedUndercover Boss for a second season.[11][12] On 28 July,CBS announced four company executives fromNASCAR,DirecTV,Chiquita Brands International, andGreat Wolf Lodge, Inc. had signed up for the second season ofUndercover Boss.[13] The second season opener was theChoice Hotels CEO, Steve Joyce on 26 September 2010.
The series was a ratings success for the network, with its premiere episode receiving 38.6 million viewers and a share of 32%.[14] The first season was the most popular new show in any genre in the 2009–10 television season with an average audience of 17.7 million viewers.[15]
CBS's premiere ofUndercover Boss on 7 February 2010, immediately following the network's coverage of Super Bowl XLIV, delivered 38.6 million viewers—the largest audience ever for a new series following the Super Bowl since the advent ofpeople meters in 1987, the largest audience ever to watch the premiere episode of a reality series, and the most watched new series premiere overall on television sinceDolly on 27 September 1987 (39.47 million). It was also the third largest post-Super Bowl audience behindFriends Special on 28 January 1996 andSurvivor: The Australian Outback on 28 January 2001.[16]Repeats ofUndercover Boss were picked up byTLC, beginning 25 July 2011; andOWN: Oprah Winfrey Network, beginning Fall 2012.[17] TLC also picked up selected episodes of the UK, Canadian and Australian versions, which aired asUndercover Boss: Abroad; this series debuted on Monday, 13 February 2012, with TLC broadcasting the series most Monday nights, and OWN airing the series on Tuesday nights beginning 13 March 2012.[18][19] The fourth season premiered on 2 November 2012 on CBS. On 13 March 2014,CBS announced the sixth season renewal ofUndercover Boss.[20] The ninth season premiered on 8 January 2020.[21]
Undercover Boss won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Reality Program in 2013 and 2012 having also been nominated in the same category in 2011 and 2010.[22]
Undercover Boss has been criticised as a reality show for presenting scenarios and situations which rarely happen to employees in real workplaces and are in fact dramatic tricks.[23] Others point out that CEOs in real-life workplaces do not typically go out of their way to provide gifts and other extra benefits to front-line employees at the expense of the bottom line.[24] Alex McLevy ofThe A.V. Club was severely critical of the show: "Undercover Boss is some of the most blatant propaganda on American television. It's a shameless endorsement of capitalist inequality that may as well end each episode by reminding everyday Americans that they should shut up and be grateful their lives are controlled by such selfless exemplars of virtue. It's class warfare in everything but name."[25]
In May 2018 CBS aired a celebrity season of the series,[26] after two celebrity episodes aired as part of the prior season.
The American version has been broadcast on a variety of international networks:[27]
The network inbold indicates that they also air their own version of Undercover Boss.
In addition, international versions have been aired in the United States onTLC andOprah Winfrey Network, under the umbrella titleUndercover Boss Abroad.