That’s Yer (Pi)Lot: Scrabble

By | February 10, 2016

Blimey it’s been ages since I last did one of these, the best part of a year in fact.

Two pilots were recorded today, one in the afternoon and one in the evening. This write-up comes from the afternoon recording, there were large suggestions that this was still work in progress and they were still deciding things, also we’ll never know how it gets edited so please bear these things in mind when reading.

  • This is set for ITV afternoons from what I can gather.
  • So after Monday’s news it certainly raised an eyebrow when Jeff Stelling came out as the host. If both Scrabble and Alphabetical take off surely he won’t be hosting both? There may have been a different host this evening. Anyway Jeff was avuncular and professional throughout.
  • The set is minimalist but quite nice – the backdrop is a large videowall of various gradated shades of green with slightly darker line drawings of a large repeating diamond pattern. The stage is domianted by a giant LED (?) screen which shows the board at a slight incline. This looked really good on the studio monitors by the way, really pops out. In front of the board is a giant version of a tile rack, with seven screens to represent the tiles (you can’t really see these from the audience to be honest and you only really see it on screen when they do a wide shot). Host desk behind the board, team desks in the north-west and north-east corners.
  • This version of the show is played by two teams of two, a celeb and a civilian. Celebs this afternoon were Nina Wadia and Aled Jones. Civilian contestants seemed like normal reasonable people.
  • The show plays out like the traditional game you know and love with a few differences for telly. Both teams play from the same rack. Teams get 30 seconds to declare a word and start putting it on the board (they don’t have to finish within the time) using their touchscreens. Teams can challenge opponent’s words, forfeiting their go if they’re wrong (Jeff refers to the “Scrabble God” upstairs (in his ear) when this happens).
  • The biggest change is the bonus games. There are 14 special squares on the board, indicated with a picture. If your word uses a special square you get to play a bonus game for bonus points.
  • Some of these are quite good fun, such as What’s In A Name where you saw pictures of celebrities and had to use their initials to make the names of shops or whatever. Holey Vowels is like a Wheel of Fortune puzzle board with all the consonants removed. Word Worm was finding words in a small grid Trackword style, there was another one where you saw pictures and when you put them together they sound like something else, can you work out what they are? Each question in a bonus round is themed. Games repeat and you’re reminded of the rules each time, which struck me as being mildly annoying.
  • They’re also easy. Ridiculously easy. Each bonus game tasks the contestants to solve seven puzzles in 70 seconds and you can pass three times. Every bonus game was won, sometimes within 30 seconds, going to the wire basically once throughout. Each correct solve is worth five points, there is no bonus for completing (you’d think rounding it up to 50 would fit thematically, no?). Right now you might as well just award 35 points everytime someone crosses them.
  • While we’re having a moan, how come the contestant’s devices are less whizzy and useful than that of Challenge’s TV Scrabble fifteen years ago? Everyone seemed to be struggling to make things go where they needed to go.
  • Also the blanks should probably be filled for the audience at home for simplicity.
  • Teams initially get eight turns each, then a hooter goes off and it’s SPEED Scrabble, which is just like the regular turns except you only get twenty seconds to come up with a word and the points are doubled.
  • The problem here really is that it if the idea is to come across a bit more quickfire it certainly didn’t feel any speedier (perhaps they will cut quicker in the edit, dunno). One of the issues here is that the bonus games are still in play and unchanged (and undoubled) – if you’re going to keep the difficulty of these as is at this point, at least make them a bit more interesting. Double the points and halve the time maybe.
  • With one turn to go and the result basically in the bag for the winners, Stelling suddenly declared that the losers should still try because their points will get converted into pounds, which seemed to take everybody by surprise.
  • As an aside, today’s game started off quite dull with unfortunate tiles drawn, one team pulled ahead, the other caught up with good use of bonus squares then other team managed to pull away again with copious use of Qs. As proof of concept the bonus squares worked as an extra dimension to keep the game interesting today, although there’s every chance the winning team could be better with words AND dominate the bonus squares as well so you may still get 60 minute blow-outs.
  • The winner’s points are converted into cash and they will get the chance to win thousands extra playing Scrabble Scramble, and this is especially exciting as they get to stand at the south-west corner of the set to do so.
  • In Scrabble Scramble the team have two minutes to get from the centre to one of the triple word scores, earning money for each premium space used (Double letters are worth £50 (apart from some which are worth £500), triple letters £100, double words £500 and triple words £1,000). They do this by playing words onto the board as usual. If they don’t make it to a triple word in time they win nothing from Scrabble Scramble.
  • The best tactic is short words diagonally down, covering the £500 double words as far as possible. This makes the most money, unfortunately it’s a bit boring and feels rather lacking in finesse. Today’s winner was quite smart to get into a position where he had a letter that could end the game at any time and started racking up a bit of money doing the same tactic elsewhere.
  • Not only is this not very exciting but this was rather exacerbated by having to wrestle with the touchscreen and seemingly the game pausing after every word to be verified. I’m pretty sure my ZX Spectrum version was a bit more hi-octane.
  • Right now I struggle to see it fitting on ITV in honesty without putting rather more work in. Right now it doesn’t seem quite challenging or fun enough. You never know though.

The Alphabet Game

By | February 8, 2016

So this is quite interesting, there was a call out for contestants for this on UKGameshows.com last week (you’ve got to the end of the week to apply), today it’s been revealed that Jeff Stelling will be fronting a revival of Andrew O Connor’s  The Alphabet Game (originally on BBC daytime years ago) to be called Alphabetical for ITV Daytimes, 10×60′ (so sounds like a summer Chase replacement).

From Broadcast:

Taking elements of international versions of the original ITV Studios format, Alphabetical will be “less like the comedic parlour game” and take the form of a straight general knowledge quiz, with three contestants battling against each other for the chance to take on the returning champion.

i.e. it’s going to be more like Pasapalabra, the international version of the show with its famously tough endgame with its famously massively large rollover jackpots – over €2.1m at one point. It’s also going to have returning champions which is unusual these days.

 

The show is going to be made by Gameface Productions, part of Andrew O Connor’s ITV-owned indie group Cats on the Roof Media.

Edit: Probably worth acknowledging that it won’t necessarily be a straight adaption and it would be trivially easy to change things whilst being in keeping with the international format, probably won’t be getting multi-million pound jackpots just yet. It’s being sold on having lots of questions right now.

Win Your Wish List is back tonight

By | February 6, 2016

At 8:30pm on BBC1, and this time there’s a new entry into the Host Holding a Question Card in a promo shot stakes:

wishlistcard

This is clearly the Bother’s Bar legacy, and what a legacy to have. We will get round to doing that feature on classic Host Holding The Question Card promo shots we’ve been promising for about a year now. Thanks to John R for finding this one.

Anyway here was our discussion post for series one. The show’s had two series on TF1 in France in the intervening year.

 

Taskmaster Tickets

By | February 5, 2016

Great news for fans of 2015’s OFFICIAL second best new show Taskmaster, TVRecordings have tickets for a recording on the evening of 14th March (presumably there are more to come) at the Fountain in Wembley.

The contestants will be revealed in due course. My understanding is that series two and three will be being filmed at the same time, although whether that’s just one task filming block and two different studio filming blocks I don’t know.

In other news I chanced across an episode of Sticky Moments On Tour on Youtube last night. Sticky Moments was a show where Julian Clary set quizzes and challenges to people plucked from the audience queue in the hope of being the grand champion and winning a rubbish prize, kind of like The Generation Game for late night, and being any good took second place to being game. Rude but never quite vulgar (JC always went big on innuendo) it feels a bit tame by 2016 standards but is still capable of providing some big laughs, I hope more turns up at some point. This was one of Julian’s many collaborations with Paul Merton. On Tour was basically an excuse to dress the studio up and pretend they were somewhere else on a weekly basis, a bit like The Noel Edmonds Saturday Roadshow but more camp.

This vid has the first couple of minutes cut off unfortunately.

 

In other news I’m on a bit of a US Remote Control kick at the moment, but I would probably kill a man if there was a promise of an upload of a UK edition with the legendary Tony Wilson, Frank Sidebottom, Phil Cornwell and basically most of the stars of The Fast Show before they were famous.

It’s science (sort of)! It’s entertainment! It’s Dara!

By | February 3, 2016

Johnny Ball for the new millennium Dara O’Briain will be hosting the new Robot Wars alongside Philippa Forrester for the new millennium Angela Scanlon. Jonathan Pearce is back!

An intriguing choice and one I can’t quite picture, but we’ll see.

You will be able to get tickets from Lost in TV, the show films in Glasgow.

The big question is how far is production prepared to make destruction of robots go? It’s quite the big dichotomy between what viewers want and what the people who make the robots want.

A-Maze-ing

By | February 2, 2016

So last night I started playing popular hipster puzzle game The Witness on my PS4. Do you remember The Witness? Everyone was banging on about it last week. Anyway it’s a game built around mazes, some on panels, others cleverly built into the environment.

So here is an episode of early 90s US kids show Masters of The Maze, with – who else? The X Factor‘s Mario Lopez.

 

Of possibly more interest to quiz nerds, albeit in Serbian, we were chatting about a quiz called Lavirint in a comments box not so long ago. I can’t work out if it’s a version of All3Media’s 1001 Rooms – Beat the Matrix or not, but looks like a similar idea.