As some of you know, I host an occasional game with other game show fans. If you have a few moments, would you please answer some survey questions at this link? As a token of my appreciation, I will give one randomly selected person an Amazon gift card. Your answers will not be used for any other purpose besides the game.
Thank you.
Filled it out. Quick and painless.
Ditto.
Done.
It\'s funny, anytime I ever do that (and once many years ago, I actually did it for the real show) I\'m torn between giving my first-instinct answer, which is sometimes pretty \"out there\", and stopping to consider what a \"good\" answer ought to be. In other words, playing the game that hasn\'t even been made yet, and that my very answers will help shape.
I would love to see what results you end up with, because it strikes me that a lot of those questions do not really lend themselves to the sort of bunched-consensus responses the show usually needs to work.
Done.
Just curious, what method did they use to conduct the surveys on the Dawson or Combs series?
It\'s funny, anytime I ever do that (and once many years ago, I actually did it for the real show) I\'m torn between giving my first-instinct answer, which is sometimes pretty \"out there\", and stopping to consider what a \"good\" answer ought to be. In other words, playing the game that hasn\'t even been made yet, and that my very answers will help shape.See note at: recursion.
Quick fun and painless. Thanks for letting me participate.
I would love to see what results you end up with, because it strikes me that a lot of those questions do not really lend themselves to the sort of bunched-consensus responses the show usually needs to work.
When the survey closes and some games are in the can, I\'ll be happy to post a link with the survey results.
Done. You\'re welcome.
It\'s funny, anytime I ever do that (and once many years ago, I actually did it for the real show)What, if anything, did the show provide for compensation?
It\'s funny, anytime I ever do that (and once many years ago, I actually did it for the real show)
What, if anything, did the show provide for compensation?
My guess: the satisfaction that his voice was heard.
It\'s funny, anytime I ever do that (and once many years ago, I actually did it for the real show)
What, if anything, did the show provide for compensation?
My guess: the satisfaction that his voice was heard.
And that\'s also your compensation for a correct answer.
And that\'s also your compensation for a correct answer.
The acknowledgement of Matt Ottinger trumps any renumeration Goodson-Todman could possibly provide.
IIRC, during the earliest ABC days, people who were chosen for and returned their polls got some type of Family Feud bumper sticker. Thanks for the chance to play. I\'m with Matt. Some of the questions screamed first response (even though it might mean, \"The top - and only - three answers are on the board to this question\" - and others were ones where it was fun to write down less obvious answers for the challenge of it. Hope your project goes well. ....
I wanna say I vaguely remember seeing open calls for survey responders on Combs\' Feud. I want to say Gene Wood read a plug calling for a certain demographic, i.e. first time mothers. This would\'ve been early in the Combs run...no later than 1990 or so.
Honestly, with technology being what it is, I\'m surprised the current version isn\'t using its Twitter or Facebook feeds to call for survey answers, as opposed to just retweeting comments from everyone who think the show is so awesome, or how Steve keeps them in stitches. Hell, just have something on the site, with a login process making it so that you can only do a poll once every six months.
Then again, the average Twitter user is probably college age, so you\'d prolly get nothing but a bombardment of \"penis\" or \"420\" responses. Don\'t know if the show would work if that was the answer to every. Single. Survey..........
/Obligatory winky smiley
Question for Chris C.:
Did Card Sharks & Family Feud ever send combined survey questions to those writing in to participate, or did they ever share their individual survey data between the two shows for use as questions on the other\'s show, since it was all going to 6430 Sunset Blvd. anyways?
/I tried to participate once, and never got a response -- to this day I think I sent the post card to *5430* Sunset by mistake and never tried again.
How would you use a binary response question on Family Feud? How would you use an open-ended survey question on Card Sharks?
I think he means a sheet with both types of questions on it. \"While we have you here, let\'s have you do some CS questions.\"
How would you use a binary response question on Family Feud? How would you use an open-ended survey question on Card Sharks?I think he means a sheet with both types of questions on it. \"While we have you here, let\'s have you do some CS questions.\"
Exactly. However, there were some Feud survey questions that *could have* become fodder & spawned ideas for future Card Sharks questions.
Feud Example: \"We asked 100 Men, name something you wear to a funeral\". Now if there was a \"interesting\" number of a specific response (say 22 people said \"Tennis Shoes/Sneakers\"), Card Sharks could expound on the Feud answer to create a new Sharks question by asking 100 men in a separate survey, \"Have you ever worn sneakers to a funeral?\". Or you can really get specific and say, \"We asked 100 men from West Virginia: Have you ever worn sneakers to a funeral?\"
And that\'s EXACTLY what we did at my GSC back in \'97.
I believe it was the late Randy Amasia who came up with that idea....Just take the top answer from the Family Feud home game, and boom - instant CS question.
And that\'s EXACTLY what we did at my GSC back in \'97.
I believe it was the late Randy Amasia who came up with that idea....Just take the top answer from the Family Feud home game, and boom - instant CS question.
I actually watched that video a couple of weeks ago (because we [still] are a drinking community) ;-)
I believe it was the late Randy Amasia who came up with that idea....Just take the top answer from the Family Feud home game, and boom - instant CS question.
How would you use a binary response question on Family Feud? How would you use an open-ended survey question on Card Sharks?I think he means a sheet with both types of questions on it. \"While we have you here, let\'s have you do some CS questions.\"
Exactly. However, there were some Feud survey questions that *could have* become fodder & spawned ideas for future Card Sharks questions.
Feud Example: \"We asked 100 Men, name something you wear to a funeral\". Now if there was a \"interesting\" number of a specific response (say 22 people said \"Tennis Shoes/Sneakers\"), Card Sharks could expound on the Feud answer to create a new Sharks question by asking 100 men in a separate survey, \"Have you ever worn sneakers to a funeral?\". Or you can really get specific and say, \"We asked 100 men from West Virginia: Have you ever worn sneakers to a funeral?\"
I think I remember some Card Sharks questions that asked about how many people responded a certain way to an open-ended question. (To make up an example, \"We asked 100 married women \'What color was your wedding dress?\' How many of those married women said that their dress was not white?\") Some of that type of question could easily be taken from surveys that didn\'t work for Feud.
Some of that type of question could easily be taken from surveys that didn\'t work for Feud.But who would write that question for Feud? \"Besides white name a color a bride\'s dress might be\" may as well be \"Name a color.\" On the Venn diagram of survey questions I don\'t think there\'s much intersection of the two shows at all, and I don\'t think they\'d write questions with the other show in mind when there\'s so many good show specific questions that exist.
But who would write that question for Feud? \"Besides white name a color a bride\'s dress might be\" may as well be \"Name a color.\"
Maybe, but I bet you any money pink and yellow both place pretty high.
Some of that type of question could easily be taken from surveys that didn\'t work for Feud.
But who would write that question for Feud? \"Besides white name a color a bride\'s dress might be\" may as well be \"Name a color.\" On the Venn diagram of survey questions I don\'t think there\'s much intersection of the two shows at all, and I don\'t think they\'d write questions with the other show in mind when there\'s so many good show specific questions that exist.
It may not be the greatest example anyway, but the corresponding Feud question I envisioned didn\'t have the \"besides white\" attached. Those triple-round surveys where there was one obvious answer and two obscure ones on the board had to come from somewhere.
I\'m not saying that every Feud question has a number that\'s interesting enough to be a worthwhile Card Sharks question, but I think there may have been the occasional surprisingly high number for a seemingly-obscure answer or an unusually low one for a seemingly-obvious answer that got sent down the hall precisely because it was surprising.
Done.
Just curious, what method did they use to conduct the surveys on the Dawson or Combs series?
When I participated, every month or so I received a 2 or 3 page list of questions in the mail to fill out. This continued for about 2 or 3 years. I\'m pretty sure I was the only one in my high school who was one of the \"100 people surveyed\".
Josh
Done.
Just curious, what method did they use to conduct the surveys on the Dawson or Combs series?
When I participated, every month or so I received a 2 or 3 page list of questions in the mail to fill out. This continued for about 2 or 3 years. I\'m pretty sure I was the only one in my high school who was one of the \"100 people surveyed\".
Josh
Pretty neat thing to do, I bet
Just did it. :) Hope your game goes well!
I had trouble compiling things the way I wanted, but you can view all the responses I received in a document via this link
I\'ll probably try this again in a couple of months. Thanks to all who participated!
I\'ll probably try this again in a couple of months.
Good luck to you at that time.