[quote name=\'uncamark\' post=\'134261\' date=\'Oct 12 2006, 09:41 AM\']
[quote name=\'chris319\' post=\'134230\' date=\'Oct 12 2006, 03:01 AM\']
From what I've heard, this was not a cheap show to produce as it was so production-intensive. Plus, it only ran for about a year on CBS daytime. The concept is OK but not inspired. Of all of the formats Fremantle owns, I can't imagine why they would choose this one for a revival. It would make much more sense to bring Blockbusters back -- it is cheaper and simpler to produce (= higher profit margin).
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It seems to me that the format has been licensed elsewhere around the world. Whether to any great success, I don't know, but perhaps there is enough that Fremantle thinks that it could be tried again. (And perhaps the comedic element is on its side.)
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Well, really, you're turning "Kids Say The Darndest Things" into a game show, right? That's the premise. And it's pretty much evergreen; there's always been a market for that sort of oh-that's-adorable entertainment, so I can totally see them trying to revive it.
Blockbusters has been licensed abroad as well, with much greater success.
With Child's Play you start with a list of words to be defined, go out and shoot the kids defining them (requiring the use of a crew), come back and cut them down to a series of playable definitions (requiring the use of an editor), repeat. It would be a little easier and cheaper to do today with a non-union crew and a non-linear editing system, but in 1982 they had to use union crews and editors from CBS (the kids were probably shot on 3/4"). They had probably been using 1" tape at TV City for only a year or two. On a conventional game show the writers write the questions, they are fact-checked and arranged into matches. No union crew or editor is involved in pre-production.
As successful as these two shows may or may not be abroad, I highly doubt Mimi O'Brien will see one red cent for legitimately creating Child's Play, nor Steve Ryan for Blockbusters.