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Getting your player ready...

LOS ANGELES — Dave Baker reaches into an overnight envelope and pulls out a square of what looks like shoe leather.

“Elk backstrap,” Baker says. “It’s nature’s fiberglass.”

Slathering hot glue on the strips of dried meat, he puts the final touches on his first traditional Plains Indian bow — one of several historically accurate implements of death he’ll be building this week as weapons designer for “Deadliest Warrior.”

That’s the show that dared to ask what would happen if a Samurai and a Viking got into a fight. Or an Apache and a gladiator tangled. Or Jesse James’ gang took on Al Capone’s boys.

“We always say it’s the show that settles a thousand bar bets,” says Sharon Levy, the executive in charge of Spike, the cable channel that created “Deadliest Warrior.”

But here’s the problem: The show that settles a thousand bar bets has a lot of viewers who are too young to drink.

Video gamers immediately embraced the role-playing and over-the- top violence on “Deadliest Warrior.” The first part of each show was spent testing each combatant’s arsenal of weapons on ballistic dummies and slabs of meat. The episode ended with an epic confrontation, filmed near L.A. with re-enactors, CGI and buckets of blood.

After two seasons, “Deadliest Warrior” was pulling in 1.7 million viewers an episode, a 70 percent improvement over Spike’s regular prime-time rating. But the median age of its audience is 25.

“We would love this show to be embraced by older guys,” says Levy.

And so would advertisers.

So “Deadliest Warrior” will dial down the blood and guts and focus on the biographies and methods of combatants.

Now, the host is an ex-Navy SEAL, Richard “Mack” Machowicz. One of his first tasks was calculating how many arrows would be required to bleed out one of the elephants used by Hannibal, the legendary general from ancient Carthage.

In Baker’s weapons workshop, he’s been toiling for two seasons downstairs from the studio where the “Deadliest Warrior” indoor scenes are filmed.

Baker’s days of anonymity are numbered, though. Levy wants him on camera, vouching for the authenticity of his handiwork. Perhaps he will revisit some of his earlier tools of destruction, like the historically accurate Spartan shield he built in Season 1.

Is it true, as an expert said on the show, that the shield is so tough it makes the Spartan virtually unbeatable?

Baker snorts and picks the Spartan shield off the wall. He hands it over. It’s about as light as a manhole cover.

“How do you beat a Spartan?” Baker says, grinning. “Wait until his arm gets tired. Then shoot him in the eye with an arrow.”

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