[quote name=\'Matt Ottinger\' date=\'Apr 27 2004, 01:26 PM\'] To expand on that comment from the always-insightful Mr. West, there's a difference between Goodson's pseudo-stars and other people's pseudo-stars. The Goodson camp knew how to find and/or nurture bright, funny people who could play their games and look like they were having fun doing it, regardless of how far up the celebrity food chain they had climbed.
For a long time, those people came out of the NYC theater scene. Folks like Anita Gillette, Alan Alda, Bert Convy, Florence Henderson, Elaine Joyce, Larry Blyden, Orson Bean, Peggy Cass and countless others were "discovered" as TV panelists after a stage credit or two. In some cases, they became stars. In others, their legit careers never took off. But once their ability to play games had been established, they were "in".
Today (or even back then under almost any other packager) the object is to get people that the public knows, regardless of whether they know how (or have any interested in learning how) to play the game. Heatter-Quigley could get away with that because they almost never gave the celebrity anything particularly challenging to do. With Goodson (and later, with an independent Bob Stewart) a celebrity had to know what he or she was doing, or else risk looking foolish.
The last time that a panel was chosen for its game playing rather than its celebrity was probably TTTT'90. (
David Niven Jr, anybody?) Everything since, including Match Game '98, O'Hurley's TTTT, Oxygen's IGAS and those abortive WML? pilots (to say nothing of lesser stuff like
You Lie Like A Dog)appear to have simply picked entertainers and assumed they'd be entertaining.[/quote]
Matt, you mentioned one person without even pointing it out. John O'Hurley was a good host of TTTT, and he's played
Pyramid well too. There's every reason to believe he'd be just as good as a panelist. I'll qualify that: He would be good on true "panel" shows, like TTTT or WML. He wouldn't embarrass himself on MG or HS, but he wouldn't be the highlight of the show, either.
And that's why panel shows don't work today. The end.
If you mean that recent shows
haven't worked, I agree with you. If you mean that they
cannot work, I'm a little more optimistic than you. I think if someone did what we've discussed, such a show would work. (Note to packagers: Bill Cullen was a pretty funny guy in his own right. Lesson: Hire people who can play the game, and the laughs will follow.)