The Game Show Forum

The Game Show Forum => The Big Board => Topic started by: DoItRockapella on May 09, 2016, 12:56:10 PM

Title: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: DoItRockapella on May 09, 2016, 12:56:10 PM
http://deadline.com/2016/05/netflix-ultimate-beastmaster-sylvester-stallone-competition-reality-series-1201751580/

I'm sure a lot can be written about Netflix finally trying its hand at the genre, but the show itself sounds like an incredibly blatant Ninja Warrior clone. Also not helping: the host is apparently Terry Crews.

Still, who knows, maybe Netflix will try a more "traditional" studio game show at some point...
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: tvwxman on May 09, 2016, 01:15:40 PM
How is this a game show?
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: parliboy on May 09, 2016, 01:56:01 PM
How is this a game show?

How is Beat the Clock a game show?
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: BrandonFG on May 09, 2016, 04:10:14 PM
I did actually get my hopes up a little, but give it time. With more and more shows premiering via streaming, it's only a matter of time before a traditional "studio" game show comes out.

/There's always Password Minus on Youtube
//Kidding
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: TLEberle on May 09, 2016, 04:47:46 PM
I did actually get my hopes up a little, but give it time. With more and more shows premiering via streaming, it's only a matter of time before a traditional "studio" game show comes out.
As production companies move more toward the thirteen-weeks of episodes paradigm I can absolutely see something heading in that direction. Lots of the Food Network shows are on Netflix and Top Shot was for a while.

Quote
/There's always Password Minus on Youtube
This was ten times funnier than the "line of the day" slurry over in the Grundy obit thread.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: chad1m on May 09, 2016, 04:51:56 PM
Quote
/There's always Password Minus on Youtube
This was ten times funnier than the "line of the day" slurry over in the Grundy obit thread.
Oh, get off it. That was a very clever take on a well-known aspect of his success.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: BrandonFG on May 09, 2016, 07:28:07 PM
Thinking about it now, comedies and dramas are a little easier to do without commercials, considering how premium cable set that model decades ago.

It would be interesting to see how a Netflix game show pulls off transitioning from one round/competition to another without the commercial break. I suppose you could simply have the host say "Edna wins the game and will be back to play for $20,000 in one moment!" (cue star wipe) "Annnnd we're back!"

Maybe segue the two by throwing in a fee plug or promo similar to what Wheel does when it talks about the Wheelmobile coming to your town soon...

ETA: I forgot Where in the World/Time is Carmen Sandiego used little musical segues...
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: parliboy on May 09, 2016, 07:40:08 PM
Quote from: TLEberle
This was ten times funnier than the "line of the day" slurry over in the Grundy obit thread.

To be fair, I left the thread in the obit section alone.  If the mods are going to allow another thread on the Big Board, then that one is fair game. 
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: PYLdude on May 09, 2016, 09:15:55 PM
Quote
/There's always Password Minus on Youtube
This was ten times funnier than the "line of the day" slurry over in the Grundy obit thread.
Oh, get off it. That was a very clever take on a well-known aspect of his success.

It was also incredibly disrespectful.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: clemon79 on May 09, 2016, 09:46:16 PM
It was also incredibly disrespectful.

I'm just going to make a note of this post because I think there's a pretty good chance I will be referring back to it at some point in the future.

(I'm with Chad; dude made a significant portion of his success off of rank plagarism. Lighten up, Franci.)
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: TLEberle on May 09, 2016, 10:05:37 PM
It would be interesting to see how a Netflix game show pulls off transitioning from one round/competition to another without the commercial break. I suppose you could simply have the host say "Edna wins the game and will be back to play for $20,000 in one moment!" (cue star wipe) "Annnnd we're back!"
To your point about musical segues, Only Connect makes use of them to link between the various rounds and the show fills the entire 30 minute news hole, so that would be a start if they weren't going to go the You Don't Know Jack route and have joke commercials for phony products or prompts to visit the Facebook page or how to send the show a tweet.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: PYLdude on May 09, 2016, 10:06:00 PM
Re: Grundy: Nobody is arguing that point. I'm arguing the point of cracking jokes about a guy in the immediate aftermath of his death. Which, regardless of the person, is to me not cool. Nothing more or less.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: TLEberle on May 09, 2016, 10:21:07 PM
Re: Grundy: Nobody is arguing that point. I'm arguing the point of cracking jokes about a guy in the immediate aftermath of his death. Which, regardless of the person, is to me not cool. Nothing more or less.
It's their right to do it, and our right to comment upon it. Reg was somebody's son and deserves respect just for that. I would go so far to say that understand the thrust of the joke I would not have said it that soon after his death nor trotted out "Line of the Day" for it because (since one meme deserves another) "obvious joke is obvious," and I did indeed find Password Minus to be funnier.

My prediction would be that a Netflix Original Game Show would either be a season-long elimination contest, thirteen-episode tournament or something with standalone episodes rather than something where one episode leads to the next.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: clemon79 on May 09, 2016, 10:21:49 PM
Re: Grundy: Nobody is arguing that point. I'm arguing the point of cracking jokes about a guy in the immediate aftermath of his death. Which, regardless of the person, is to me not cool. Nothing more or less.

If it's your Uncle Phil, sure, I get it. If it's a public figure who you know nothing about aside from seeing his name between the words "A" and "Production", then I stand with Uncle Hulka.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: Unrealtor on May 10, 2016, 01:21:26 AM
It would be interesting to see how a Netflix game show pulls off transitioning from one round/competition to another without the commercial break. I suppose you could simply have the host say "Edna wins the game and will be back to play for $20,000 in one moment!" (cue star wipe) "Annnnd we're back!"
To your point about musical segues, Only Connect makes use of them to link between the various rounds and the show fills the entire 30 minute news hole, so that would be a start if they weren't going to go the You Don't Know Jack route and have joke commercials for phony products or prompts to visit the Facebook page or how to send the show a tweet.

A quick musical stinger and a wipe that more or less replicates the title card seems to be a fairly common thing during BBC shows.

On the other hand, you don't necessarily need to have stopdowns during the show. To go back to the BBC, Mastermind appears to be a single 28-minute take. Quite a few American shows back in the live-to-tape era seemed like they could have gone without breaks if they didn't need to allow for advertising. It's probably not a coincidence that every example I can think of straddles, so the production design and direction had to account for the fact that ad breaks didn't fall in the same points during every game.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: TLEberle on May 10, 2016, 01:37:21 AM
A quick musical stinger and a wipe that more or less replicates the title card seems to be a fairly common thing during BBC shows.

On the other hand, you don't necessarily need to have stopdowns during the show. To go back to the BBC, Mastermind appears to be a single 28-minute take.
Two things irked me about Two Minute Drill: one is that the amount of content was ten minutes instead of sixteen. Second is that the specialist round instead became the double-your-bucks question. One of the things I'm enjoying about having the entire 2015-2016 series to watch is learning about stuff that I wouldn't pick up a book to read normally but now I'm broadening my horizons a little.

Having watched as much on Netflix as I have in the past month or so, I really haven't given much thought to the fact that ad breaks are missing--the action just stops, fade to black for about a second and then it kicks back up. Just about any standard-issue game show could follow that path, and the bonus would be that with no restrictions on time that more content could be played. I do love my content.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: PYLdude on May 10, 2016, 05:41:54 AM
Re: Grundy: Nobody is arguing that point. I'm arguing the point of cracking jokes about a guy in the immediate aftermath of his death. Which, regardless of the person, is to me not cool. Nothing more or less.

If it's your Uncle Phil, sure, I get it. If it's a public figure who you know nothing about aside from seeing his name between the words "A" and "Production", then I stand with Uncle Hulka.

Fair enough.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: johnnya2k3 on May 18, 2016, 01:11:37 PM
The success of Sports Jeopardy! on Crackle (soon to move to television on NBCSN) has convinced other streaming services like Netflix to try their hand at game shows.

Since he created the show for PBS, maybe Bob Boden could try to revive "Think Twice" for Hulu with John O'Hurley as host.
Title: Re: Netflix To Launch First Original Game Show
Post by: clemon79 on May 18, 2016, 02:15:38 PM
has convinced other streaming services like Netflix to try their hand at game shows.

(http://libpublic2.eol.isu.edu/images/citationneeded.jpg)