The Hustler

By | January 6, 2021

Sidenote, don’t forget Poll of the Year closes Saturday night, and also closing then is the Bother’s Bar Game Night Awards poll, so remember to get your votes in.

The Hustler had a “series preview” on Monday ahead of Thursday’s “season premiere” because American TV is mental. It’s a format devised by Richard Bacon of 19 Keys fame and once again Stephen Lambert is on hand to redefine the gameshow genre in exec producer role, this time it’s another Quiz Whodunnit where one person knows all the answers to the questions but must avoid detection whilst also adding money to the pot they could take home.

Let’s get this out of the way first – the production on it is superb – I love the Victorian library set, the vibe, the fonts, all that. I love that losing contestants get shoved out of secret doors (albeit in a comically rubbish manner). I think Craig Ferguson is absolutely terrific, the Crystal Maze host who never was.

Five people work together as a team to answer multiple choice questions that one of them definitely knows the answer to as they relate to their interests. There are ten questions, each one preceded by a fact about the Hustler, the first nine worth $10,000, the last one doubling or halving the pot. At various points during the game, The Hustler gets to secretly determine which two players get sent home. At the end the final three have a discussion, if the two contestants can unanimously agree on who The Hustler is, they split the pot between them. If not, the Hustler wins it all to themselves. The Hustler, then, is trying to lead the team into getting questions right to put money in the pot without giving away their position.

There’s a pretty immediate issue that comes across – everybody is encouraged to discuss and find The Hustler through the clues given, but The Hustler then gets to eliminate people without recourse, so you’re punished for Doing The Thing the game wants you to do to win. This doesn’t seem quite right – sitting in the background would be the best strategy but it’s not much fun. Because of the way the prize structure works there also doesn’t seem to be much in the way of incentive for The Hustler to do something gutsy except possibly the final question. Maybe if each question had an increasing value they’d be more inclined to stick their neck out, as it is, apart from a few times they asked “is $x,000 enough?” it’s easy to get too comfortable, and there are diminishing returns.

Did I at any point really care who The Hustler was? Not really. But there’s enough entertaining stuff going on that it’s not a washout by any means.

All Quiz Whodunnits in the past have worked on the premise that somebody’s got all the answers. But what if they actually did it like The Mole and the villain had to persuade the team to get answers wrong to earn themselves money? After all, the more successful ideas based on this sort of thing understands that everybody messes up from time to time, but who’s doing it deliberately?

The Poll of the Year 2020 is now OPEN

By | January 2, 2021

It’s the most wonderful time of the year! TV Production has faced many, many difficult challenges this year making things under a pandemic, and now it’s time to ruthlessly decide who coped with it best in the annual Poll of the Year.

You can go straight to the Google Form if you know what you’re doing.

Edit: Beat the Chasers begins its second run tonight from 9pm and continues daily, I’m not going to bother with a second Show Discussion post, it’s likely changes are minimal. Here’s the original.

Show Discussion: Lingo

By | December 31, 2020

Starts Friday, New Year’s Day at 4:35pm on ITV,
Continues weekdaily 3pm ITV

Over thirty years since it was last on UK screens, and not long after lots of long-running European versions have ended, Ben Shephard’s production company have tapped up Good Morning Britain host and comic Adil Ray to front a revival, seemingly based on the recent two-series-and-done Dutch version.

What does that mean? More emphasis on Word Mastermind and greatly downplayed bingo element, although ball drawing still happens (Edit: Nope). Whatsmore we’re looking at three teams being whittled down to one within the hour who will get to chance to win their bank, double it or lose it all in the final game.

We always quite liked Lingo, cheery fun. Whether I like 60 minutes of Lingo remains to be seen.

Watched it? Let us know what you think in the comments.

My new Bezost Friend

By | December 30, 2020

Happy New Year, we will have a Show Discussion post for Lingo on Friday 1st Jan and the Poll of the Year 2020 will open Saturday 2nd.

In the meantime we pointed out a little while ago that Amazon Prime Video UK have added Aussie Survivor season 3, soon after joined by seasons 4 and 5, but they’ve basically added loads of US reality games from that period where big fun stuff was coming out and took a bit of effort to watch, stuff like Wipeout, Beauty and the Geek (plus Aussie versions!), Fear Factor et al, fingers crossed for Solitary at some point and DOUBLE fingers crossed they’ll get the rights to all of US Survivor in the future as well.

Show Discussion: Blankety Blank

By | December 23, 2020

Friday (Xmas Day),
BBC1, 7pm

It’s another Christmas special, (as David Walliams put it, “we’ve called it a special and not a pilot in case it doesn’t do very well,” or words to that effect) this time with the nation’s sweetheart Bradley Walsh in charge of Emilia Fox, Jimmy Carr, Amir Khan, Danny Jones, Anita Rani and Sue Perkins helping (or not) members of the public to win prizes by filling in blanks.

This probably wouldn’t have happened without the successful Match Game revival in the US – note the Match Gamed-up logo and set. For me there’s a question mark as to whether Bradley Walsh is going to be the correct person for it – not a sleight against him, more a requirement of the format, but we hope we’re proved wrong.

Let us know what you think in the comments!

Show Discussion: Miranda’s Games With Showbiz Names

By | December 23, 2020

Thursday (Christmas Eve),
BBC1, 9:45pm

This is quite interesting, or at least more interesting than it might look, it’s actually a version of Celebrity Game Face, a show developed for NBC’s online operation, where Kevin Hart challenged celebs to play silly games remotely.

Now Miranda Hart’s doing it with Shirley Ballas and partner Danny Taylor, Jermaine Jenas and his wife Ellie and Robbie Williams and his drummer Karl Brazil.

Together they play a host of games – from stuffing sprouts in their mouths, and nailing viral dance moves, to dashing round their houses on a hunt for mystery items.

The competitive spirit abounds, not least because the winning team get to proudly lay their hands on Miranda’s hefty bust – a glimmering and enviable trophy sculpted in her image.

Monkey’s press release

The Main Event lives! Might be mildly good fun, and only half an hour to boot. Let us know what you think in the comments.