POLL RESULTS LIVE! and Afterparty #bbpoll

By | January 20, 2015

Join us LIVE at 9pm for the results of the UKGameshows.com/Bother’s Bar Poll of 2014. The link will propagate on Twitter and you will be able to watch the live stream here. At the end of the broadcast the written report will go up on UKGameshows.com and the voting percentages here, like in the last few years.

If you have questions tweet them with #bbpoll and we’ll try to answer them if we remember to check Twitter.

Here is the recording and here is the final report. Join us after the cut where I’ll post voting percentages and the results of other polls we conducted during our broadcast.

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Watching Telly: You’re Back In The Room

By | January 20, 2015

ybitrlogoNew hypnotism game show hosted by Phillip Schofield and Irish hypnotist Keith Barry. Interestingly it looks like Barry Jones from comic magicians Barry and Stuart was on hand as an off-camera consultant (I didn’t realise this until the warm-up Stuart Holdham pointed it out). It was filmed at ITV Studios (Studio One, studio fans). It is a Tuesday’s Child production.

  • The set is a large stage surrounded by LEDs. These are normally coloured purple. The large LED screen which forms the back of the stage will have the logo displayed and a back drop of swirling clocks – basically what you see above in fact.
  • Our five contestants sit on black chairs to the left of the stage.  There is kind of a separate area sectioned off to the right of the stage, but all the games will mainly play on the main bit of the stage.
  • Keith comes on and introduces himself and explains suggestion and hypnotism to the audience, that there was an audition tour and the contestants on tonight proved the most suggestible. He does a couple of simple things with the audience – hands getting heavy, hands getting stuck together, that sort of thing. Some of the audience come across as very suggestible and are  told they should apply if it comes up again.
  • Phillip says he believes it and wouldn’t be involved with the show if he thought it was fake. Also that he’s not going to let Keith try it on him,he doesn’t think he’s very suggestible. I thought the contestants were very convincing (although one thing nagged at me at the end of the show which I’ll go into), the big question (and really the success of the show is going to depend on it) is how cynical the audience are and if they’ll buy into it, and these days they are very cynical.
  • Under law they can’t show you Keith putting the contestants under in case he puts the whole audience under, so you see a brief clip of him doing it off-stage. Or you see the contestants zonked out on some sofas at any rate. We are told we should applaud and encourage the contestants by the warm-up but not do anything to break their trance although I’m not quite sure what if anything could be done. There were also substantial breaks between rounds so he could top them up, apparently.
  • That’s the set-up, here’s the format: the contestants will play four games to build up a cash pot of up to £25,000 which they will play for in the fifth and final game. The show is set-up to be non-threatening and light-hearted, as such the money is suggested to be a “thank you for participating” rather than anything seriously lifechanging. The  contestants don’t know each other, they’ll split the money equally.
  • Right, I think the set-ups are unique to each episode but there are still episodes left to film. To avoid any future participants getting too many ideas as to what might happen to them I’ll detail the games used but I’ll only detail the hindrances for the first one and keep the rest a surprise for broadcast, as I’m sure you’ll pick up the idea. I am aware this might feel like a bit of a cop-out, reader, perhaps I will come back to this once all the shows are in the can.
  • In the first game, the contestants have to make sculptures out of clay based on a word given to them in envelopes. At the end of the time all the other contestants will try and guess what it was they were trying to sculpt, and correct answers win £1,000 for the pot. However, AND SLEEP (the studio goes all dark blue at this point), one contestant will believe that the clay is a sort of cream that makes you look younger, one will believe the clay smells of dog poo, one will believe they are a famous French sculptor who is disgusted by the poor tools that are given and will frequently stop and listen to a song on the radio. The fourth contestant believes that all the sculptures everyone else is making are obscene. The final contestant will, whenever he hears the theme from the film Ghost (which comes on when the French one turns the radio on), he will immediately rush over to the other guy and pretend to be Patrick Swayze in that famous pottery scene. When they’re told they’re “back in the room”, the LED backdrop changes to a picture to set scene and indeed be a room.
  • So a lot of the elements interplay with each other, and it works and is funny, helped along immeasurably by Schofield playing along with and frequently up to the contestants. Keith is off-stage throughout so it’s up to Philip to (attempt to) keep control until the klaxon goes to end the game.
  • In game two the contestants must blow up balloons for a children’s party. Two of them blow them up, two tie them to sticks and one of them must take them and put them in a stand. And when a balloon bursts they must hide behind a table. Something very funny happened here before the game starts which they probably are not going to be able to show in a primetime broadcast, but if they don’t I’ll tell you what it was when it comes round. Each balloon is worth £250.
  • Game three is The Music Quiz (it was suggested that this has come up before). Ten music questions worth £500 each, each one subtly related to the effect they’ve been put under. In addition, one of them plays a bonus round, an additional set of ten questions only they will answer (but with everyone else still doing crazy things in the background) again worth £500 for the pot each.
  • Game four involved serving dinner and drink to popular TV chefs – each one should have meat, mashed potato, gravy, carrots and a glass of champagne, each one for each chef worth £250. Amusingly the contestants got into their roles before Schofield had a chance to introduce the game and the celebrities and a yellow raincoat but ever the professional took it in his stride and just ad libbed around the chaos. One contestant loses a shoe and it takes production several minutes to find it.
  • The final. The room is set up with laser boundaries, one of which turns off briefly (acting as a door). On the left side of the room is a massive trough holding 500, maybe more golden balls. On the left side of the room is an empty trough, and all the contestants have to do is get as many balls into the empty trough as possible. Each ball is worth 1/250th of the prize fund (but rounded up to the next fiver, so if they built up £22k, say, they’d play for £90 a ball rather than £88). Contestants have two minutes thirty to do this, a new member entering the room every twenty seconds and then all of them for the remaining time. But of course all of them have been given something to make it more difficult (one is a pirate who has forgot his wooden leg, another believes the floor is made of ice and so on).
  • At some point during proceedings Keith may give them new suggestions to replace the ones they were given.
  • Whatever value of balls in the trough at the end is what they’ll collectively take home, and if it’s not all of what they’ve built up it’s likely to be most of it.
  • And that’s it, a bit of a mammoth record at five hours but it should edit really well.
  • I thought the contestants were convincing, they certainly stayed in their roles well after the games until Keith “reset” them. EXCEPT. Except. At the end of the final game where they seemed to drop the suggestion pretty damn quickly after the klaxon went, and Keith didn’t remove it until several minutes later. It’s very possible I missed something, and I’m probably more sceptical than most, but I did notice and it did jar. Maybe when the lasers dropped the “room” stops existing and so does the suggestion. I don’t know.
  • And that is going to be question that hangs over the show. It certainly is funny and it certainly should edit well, and it’s fun, but these days a lot of people are going to think “is it staged, and if it is why am I bothering?” and a decently large segment of the audience are going to proclaim it is anyway.  I don’t think there’s going to be a middle ground here, it’ll be a massive Paul McKenna-style hit or a massive flop. I think I’m pulling for the former.

Poll Results LIVE! – Tuesday at 9pm

By | January 18, 2015

poll2014The votes have been counted and verified and for the first time on Tuesday night we’re doing a LIVE Youtube broadcast with the results. What did YOU vote best and worst new shows of 2014? And what was your favourite show overall? Has Osmania (*) run rampant like last year? Have you voted for the wrong things?

Well only I know the answer (and the results are juicy) but on Tuesday night you will as well. We’ll have LIVE expert analysis from David Bodycombe, Daniel Peake and Lewis Murphy and I’ll have all facts on hand if we remember to take live questions on Twitter so try and join us if you can, although the broadcast should be available to watch at your leisure afterwards.

The written report will go up on UKGameshows.com immediately after we finish the broadcast, as will the after party stats here. So join us!

In other news, Get Your Act Together starts tonight.

(*) I was dismayed to discover that “Osmaniacs” was already coined by Mark Labbett 🙁

Quiz the Nation

By | January 15, 2015

OK, this has been on my radar for a while but it looks like it launches properly this Sunday night, Quiz the Nation (@quizthenation) is TV show/pub quiz backed by people who used to make The Krypton Factor and is fronted by Gordon Burns. In theory anyone with Sky or Freesat can play along with the iTunes app and win prizes (the TV show goes out at 8pm on Sunday on Showcase TV (Sky 192, FreeSat 402)) but they’re pushing the play-at-the-pub aspect. Questions are a meant to be a mixture of general knowledge and mental agility.

Unfortunately I don’t have satellite and don’t know any pubs participating locally. But if you do and have a go, let us know what you thought.

Edit: It’s been pointed out you may be able to watch live using the links on the right on the Information TV page, although I don’t know if there’s any broadcast delay which might impact your enjoyment.

Edit Edit: Android app available now here.

Third time lucky

By | January 13, 2015

This week is the calm before the storm – we’ve got some fun stuff lined-up for you next week including the POLL RESULTS (hopefully) and very very possibly a recording review and maybe looking at my diary there’s room for another BATTLE MODE the weekend after next.

In the meantime we thank Gordon Donaldson for alerting us to this – a short lived daily version of Strike It Lucky from Australia. This dates from 1994:

 

What I particularly like is the especially Australian quiz trait of the time of taking the theme from an existing and well-established international version and then doing something weird with it. The host seems rather low-energy compared to Michael Barrymore.

There was a suggestion doing the rounds a while ago that Strike it Lucky was one of the formats thought to be in line for an ITV revival. It would be interesting to see how it would go down, Barrymore says himself the format is basically rubbish and the show’s international standing (i.e. it basically flopped everywhere but here) would suggest that it basically worked because it’s the Barrymore Messes With The Public With Prizes Half Hour, so goodness knows who would fit his shoes these days.

Poll closed

By | January 12, 2015

The Poll of 2014 has now closed, thanks for all your entries, it’s been yet another record breaking year.

I’m going to spend the next week collating the votes and comments and we’re hoping to do a LIVE Youtube-cast with the results once they’ve been written up, so join us for that.

In the meantime here’s this month’s Raab-cast BONUS ROUND (once it’s finished processing) – if you’re not bothered about Raab but quite enjoy us arsing about doing quizzes, here’s the quick and dirty edit you need. This month David brings us a pop quiz and Wits and Wagers and Dan brings us Order Order! A quiz where you put things in order:

 

The next edition will go out March 28th. The EXCITING NEWS is that the third and decisive Schlag den Brig will likely (although this is not set in stone yet) be happening March 21st, and we’ll be filming some more OB stuff earlier in the month, so keep that free in your diaries. If you want.