Yes, Dick Clark and Ed McMahon hosted Bloopers and Practical Jokes, and I believe Robert Gillaume hosted a copycat version called Foul-Ups, Bleeps and Blunders.
You got to see some incredible footage from different shows- sitcoms, dramas, crime shows, etc., and occassionally they'd bring out a cast member of a certain show to share their memories. Some hysterical moments to be found.
One thing I'm a little disappointed in- at the end of any Pixar movie while the credits roll (Monsters Inc. for example) they show the characters in their own little blooper reel- flubbed lines, distractions, etc.- but they defeat the purpose of what bloopers really are- random, unscripted spontaneous moments captured by the camera. When you go to the trouble to storyboard, animate, and synchronize the voices, to create the ILLUSION of a blooper, it looks kinda... fake? Unfortunately, sometimes when you try too hard to be funny, the results fall flat. I can appreciate the effect they're trying to create, but it's like trying to capture lightning in the bottle.
Some of the funniest bloopers/outtakes ever can be seen from Emmet Otter's Jug Band Christmas, during one scene which required over 100 takes. When the drum rolls out the door and is supposed to land in the street, Jerry and especially Frank come off with some zingers when the props don't cooperate.
All the Disney/Pixar/Dreamworks/Spielberg/Lucas magic in Hollywood can't duplicate moments like that.