Watching Telly: Beat the Pack

By | February 11, 2013

New daytime quiz beginning apparently March 4th. TV’s Paul Brassey suggests the inspiration for it comes from not being able to convert early poker tournament leads into actual victories which is very interesting and you can see in the format, although apparently he hasn’t been involved with it for a long time.

  • This was filmed in TVC4, TV geeks. Incedentally TVC6 is currently set up for Millionaire? – it had been closed but they’ve reopened it up for that and the gallery is currently sitting in large OB vans outside the studio. Ray Turner was on warm-up duty, about 100 people in the audience I reckon.
  • Set is futuristic without being overly dark – looks like lots of neon lighted steps in the background in between large vertical dot matrix style screens. Studio is wide – large walkway in foreground, Jake Humphrey and Control player stand on the left, a large screen on the right and “the pack” behind a large light up desk on a higher level in the background.
  • So the game. Eight people begin, usually one is selected randomly before the show (but see later) to be the Control player, the other contestants are The Pack. One person can walk away with up to £12,000.
  • The object is for the Control to bank as much money as possible AND stay ahead of The Pack through a game of six categories, shown at the start of the game. Control also gets one Double Answer (i.e. they can choose two answers instead of one) to be deployed after any question. If the Control player changes at any point, they too will get a Double Answer to use once.
  • Control picks a category. They are shown a question with four possible answers worth £2,000. The Pack also all answer in secret.
  • Control must decide to answer the question or pass it.
  • To remain in the game, Control MUST get a question right before The Pack does or he is eliminated. However if he gets a question wrong he’s also imediately eliminated.
  • If he passes, it’s revealed who in The Pack got it right via a 12 second (I counted) dancing light tension thing. Whoever got it right can go to “The Safe Area” – a bench back left of set, and cannot be eliminated this round. Another (easier, importantly) question is then played but the value is halved (i.e. £1k, £500, £250 etc.). This keeps going until he decides to answer a question or the Pack beats him.
  • If Control gets a question right, the value is added to the bank. Control also gets to eliminate a member of the Pack who hadn’t made it to safety. It’s in The Pack’s best interests to answer correctly, but there is a risk if Control Beats the Pack you look like too much of a threat and get eliminated anyway.
  • Either way the game continues either with the current Control (the safe members of The Pack is bought back into the fold) or if he was eliminated (important note: the money they won is lost from the game), the best performing Pack member gets to become the new Control. Astute readers will notice that that means after every category The Pack gets smaller which makes the decisions to play or pass more interesting as the game progresses. This also has baring on your category selection – it’s usually wiser to get rid of your weak categories earlier as the more people in The Pack, the less likely they will strike you out.
  • After six categories we are down to Control and one remaining Pack member for the final, playing for the money built up in Control’s bank (which might be up to £12k, or if Control gets in late in the game, not much at all. And if Control gets knocked out on the very last question, they’re playing for the right to come on again in a later episode beginning as Control).
  • Control must stay in control for 75 seconds of quickfire questions. These are mainly pretty easy questions and they muct be answered in three seconds. If they get it wrong or take too long, the last of The Pack can answer. If they can push the Chaser back three times then they win all the money instead of Control, otherwise Control wins.

And that’s that. It does some quite neat things – namely the race to Beat the Pack but there are issues. The initial questions in each category is very hard to the point of being boring pub quiz machine trivia in a lot of places and these are the questions you are going to see most. The main game features about 10 questions in the space of 40 minutes, I think it’s going to have a pacing issue (each episode took 2-2.5hrs, but although the game was fairly enjoyable (it is actually the sort of thing you could rig up with pen and paper) they felt like loooong sessions). This afternoon, without spoiling too much, in the two episodes we were playing for the high tension final prizes of £250 and the chance to return the next episode. The central idea is quite neat, but clearing the bank after every change of Control just feels immensely cheap – imagine it happening near the end on Breakaway, then multiply it by quite a lot because that sort of thing is inbuilt as a feature of the game.

Jake Humphrey is a very assured host – and also good fun and pleasant off camera. If there was one criticism he does tend to push the devil’s advocate line a bit too much, asking and reasking if that’s what they want to do, yet persuading the contestant to change their mind precisely zero times.

This felt like a long day, they started recording at 1:30 and finished the second episode at about 7:30, with a 45 minute break in the middle (we were sent back to the foyer, but the cafe wasn’t open so cheers then). In fairness it might have been a bit quicker had one of the contestants in the second recording not fainted (apparently in the heat of the studio lights) which was of concern. Happily it looks as though he was OK and will return in a future recording, as we were only one question into the show it was decided to start again with a stand-by (who were apparently just two minutes away from getting home).

Anyway I sort of like it, I reckon it’s slightly below Breakaway series one in quality, fans of gamey games will enjoy it, fans of fun questions probably won’t quite. It’ll be interesting to see how it edits and is received.

Can you feel it? Can you feel it? CAN YOU FEEL IT?

By | February 9, 2013

It being the buzz surrounding the final of Britain’s Brightest this evening.

The answer is ‘of course not’.

This was meant to be a big Saturday night gamble for the BBC – could you take a successful German show (we will DEFINITELY do a feature on this next weekend. I’m writing this here to force the issue), make it demonstrably worse, then still have it be successful? Not really seems to be the answer.

Poor editing and pacing. Repeated use of games which weren’t that interesting in the first place partly because of poor direction (Did you really need to swap people in and out of Kinect Spelling five times?). Bad question writing (rebuses). A baffling and arcane scoring system. An elimination format apparently devised because that’s how things are done rather than because that’s what makes a show entertaining. Not putting answers up for the endgame, and indeed an endgame which initially looks clever and fun but turns out not to really be clever or fun (you could kill two birds with one stone if you just didn’t let people return to a used question, as it is it gives too much of an advantage to the second player). A general sense of worthiness when it needed more of a general sense of fun.

And yet we mainly get angry because we wanted to like it and it feels like a massive missed opportunity. It got a pretty consistant low 4m rating which is not brilliant but not quite a disaster, I almost want it to come back so it can have a chance to prove itself.

IN OTHER NEWS, We’re playing poker tomorrow at 8pm, a game of Razz as part of Mix It Up Real Good. Come and join us!

MIA

By | February 7, 2013

OK, we get schedules change all the time but we’re quite interested in shows that we thought were starting that seem to have mysteriously disappeared. Presumably they’ve just been pushed back, but is that a sign of confidence or something more… sinister? So, does anyone know anything?

  • My Man Can – apparently ITV’s big Saturday night hope was originally suggested to go out in January. It’s DISAPPEARED.
  • Prize IslandIn theory we thought this sounded quite good. Sounds like it’s going out in the Spring, although I thought it was earlier. Incidentally, people have suggested there’s another series of The Cube that’s not yet been broadcast yet they’re making another one, so that’s got to fit somewhere.
  • My Little Princess – A big press release suggested E4 would be showing this in January. They haven’t. Again, quite looking forward to this, a dating show by way of Takeshi’s Castle/Wipeout from one of the brains behind the brilliant Banzai.
  • The Common Denominator – Again, press release suggesting this was going to begin on Monday 4th Feb but Face the Clock (which yesterday barely scraped 250k viewers) is still on, and on next week also. Did they just miscount the amount of episodes or something?

Meanwhile fans of The Line Up can be pleased to know that there’s a new episode coming soon. Thanks to our friends at QuizQuizQuiz.com for supplying the questions. Quizicoatal’s costume designer isn’t telling me how it’s dressing this episode yet.

Also POKER on Sunday at 8pm, Game two of Mix It Up Real Good concerns Razz – seven card Stud Low. It’s a lot of fun and here’s a crib sheet so you know what to look out for. I have an engagement all day Sunday and might actually be late for the game myself but if you want to play and are not a member of the Poker Club yet it’s very very important you apply sooner rather than later because if you wait until Sunday I can’t guarantee I’ll be able to admit you in time. FAIR WARNING. Tell your friends!

Ahead of the game, as ever

By | February 5, 2013

So! About a week ago I was watching Britain’s Brightest on catch-up as you do (or not) and said the following things on Twitter:

‘Ello ‘ello ‘ello, what’s all this that’s turned up at Buzzerblog today then?

Also Robot Combat League which looks absolutely terrific. Starts in the US Feb 26th.

Wat Weet Nederland

By | February 4, 2013

FOTB VierkanteO shouted that a new Endemol Quiz began in The Netherlands last night, I won’t bother writing it up as he has done a perfectly good job already (if you’d like to watch it before reading about it, if you’re the sort who quite likes to try and work things out on their own accord, here’s the Watch Again link. The host has some amazing hair going on.)

It’s basically a masterclass in having a thing that looks exciting and clever and turns out not to be exciting or clever. Decent end game though, like a funner version of the Blockbusters Gold Run.