While I have to give the show an "A" for effort in energizing a Q&A game show for the new millenium, apparently there's a disconnect between what audiences want to see and what network programmers THINK will work. Every creator and producer I talk with has told me that the networks have zero interest in a traditional studio-based game, but are open to high-concept, big-production, high-energy mega-concepts for games.
Thoughts?
Network execs are either a) really, really persistent, or b) really, really stupid?
I agree with what others have said in this thread...game shows work best when they have some play-along value. I can't stand most of the shows that premiered since NBC's
Deal or No Deal, but I will admit the ones that remain on TV one way or another (
1 vs 100,
5th Grader*,
Singing Bee) have reasonable play-along value.
I have no problem with incorporating physical stunts into a trivia game (see
Double Dare), but the networks are so hellbent on making the next outrageous, over-the-top game show that they're forgetting to incorporate the game. At least the physical challenges on DD still had something to do with the game. It's almost as if Endemol took the idiotic cheesiness of D/ND and replaced it with what you have now. In the end, your game still takes a backseat to the chrome.
/Really misses the primetime shows of 1999-2000
//Overblown budgets and all
*///Not much longer but you get the point