[quote name=\'mitchgroff\' post=\'183635\' date=\'Apr 9 2008, 02:03 PM\']
Heck, AG could have scrapped the $100K prize and the show would have been just as compelling.[/quote]
That sums up what my answer to this Big Question would be. If somebody wants to offer an enormous prize to entice people to start watching the show, fine, I got no problem with that. After that, though, the show has to be compelling. And a compelling show is nearly always compelling even without a ginormous grand prize. (Millionaire, in this case, perhaps being the rare exception.)
The two things that would seem to kill any compulsion on the part of viewers to watch would be a slow pace and monotony. Yet those are precisely the two things that most of the ladder-based big-money shows not only provide but seem to strive for. And who on earth thought that we coupld possibly be entertained by watching an unknown, civilian contestant answering a series of questions about his own life?
Deal or No Deal continues to come up with new wacky gimmicks, and while purists here can bemoan that all you want, it's awfully hard to argue with the show's sustained success. And they've never even given away their top prize.
As with any genre, you can't just simplistically say that every show that does this will work, and every show that does that will fail. There are always going to be oddities that defy even the most obvious logic. Personally, I thought the goofy, simple The Singing Bee had a much better shot of surviving than the derivaive, ladder-based Don't Forget the Lyrics. Simple fact is nobody has the magic formula. Right now, the ones buying the shows recognize one kind of big-money prime time show, and most anything they buy is going to look like that.