Uutisvuoto (Dryicor)

Uutisvuoto (English: Newsleak) is the Dryicoran version of the British panel comedy show , aired on BOD 1 since 1993. The show's name is a play on words in Finnish. Unlike most shows, there is no Icelandic-language version.

The show's continuous new sources of material have made its popularity endure for many years. It has aired every Friday night in a series, which usually lasts for the last 12 weeks of the year until the week before Christmas. A series always ends with a Christmas special.

The host always rotates episode after episode since original regular host Emyr Tyrfel left in 2003, however he has returned regularly as a guest host and panellist. The two team captains, well-educated Robert Nyman and slightly more surreal Angus Steinsson, have stayed on since the show's premiere. They are accompanied by two guests, usually a politician and comedian.

Gameplay
The show always opens with a monologue from the host usually starting with "In the News This Week", which is three regular top stories or hypothetical situations introduced by the host and a funny, if at some times awkward, film piece with it. Afterwards, Steinsson and his guest will try to guess the recent story from a film clip.

This is usually followed by the "Picture-Spin Quiz" when a picture relating to a news event is shown in close-up then spun out into full view. The wrong answers which come in from Steinsson are often hilariously funny.

Afterwards is the Odd One Out round, where panellists have to guess which of four things is the odd one out. After there is often a game related to the guest host or a panellist. Some of them, for example The Price Really Isn't Right and Deal or No Deal, have become part of Dryicoran culture.

Afterwards is Missing Words, where the panellists suggests word(s) to fill in the blanks for an incomplete newspaper headline. An episode will feature a strange and rather specialist "guest publication", a memorable one being The Nut Job, with Nyman saying "Angus!" for the headline "Bloody -- does grab the nuts very quickly, doesn't he?"

Game show parodies

 * Everybody's Equal
 * In this October 1994 parody of the show when host Ercole Mäkkinen was a panellist, the show was spoofed when on a 10-second question, all 350 of the audience as well as the other three panellists and Tyrfel went for the wrong answer straight away, completely nullifying the whole game.
 * Who Wants to Win 1 Kr and 3 mints?
 * Broadcast in November 1999, this parody of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? featured Steinsson and Nyman playing the game when Mäkkinen returned as a panellist. Whilst Nyman walked away at 0,25 Kr (the 250 000 Kr level), Steinsson answered the 1 000 000 Kr question wrong ("What is the first letter of the Finnish and Icelandic alphabets? A: C, B: D, C: A, D: B), he answers "C", which Mäkkinen takes as Option A: C, therefore answering wrongly.
 * Shagged
 * Broadcast in September 2004, this odd spoof of Shafted was presented by Aatto Raikkönen. Highlights include the incomplete question "The comic book character known in Germany as 'Willi Wakker'-", and the decision of whether to "Share" or to "Shag", with Raikkönen saying "I think you'll be leaving with nothing tonight if you have the temptations." Instead of the usual "You've shafted each other out!", when Steinsson and Nyman both pressed the "Shag" button Raikkönen simply said "You've shagged each other!", leading to complete anarchy for the rest of the episode.
 * The Price Really Isn't Right
 * This show, a spoof of The Price is Right, involved guessing items' prices. All the panellists were invited to play. Most of the prices were heavily inflated, making the game almost impossible to win. A parody version of Plinko was played, won by Nyman with 2 300 Kr, and Steinsson played a brilliant spoof of Hole in One where, after getting none of the six items in the right order, Steinsson smacks the ball too well and the set breaks down. On the showcase, Nyman, who got 100 first time on the wheel, won by guessing spot-on 1 488 838 299 Kr for a beach ball.
 * Deal or No Deal
 * Broadcast in December 2005, this spoof of the Channel 4 hit involved Noel Walston at the helm. All 444 audience members had identical sealed boxes instead of the usual 26 on the show and the aim was to win 0,25 Kr, which one of the boxes had in it, yet some boxes had joke items such as "A run-out pen" or "A half-eaten tuna sandwich". Nyman and the panellist in then-Foreign Secretary Wyn Jones dealt at 0,01 Kr and a fish food flake; and Steinsson and comedian Harv Marksson won a pen after their box had no label, with the 0,25 Kr in the box they should have swapped for.