[quote name=\'fostergray82\' post=\'241604\' date=\'May 28 2010, 11:52 AM\']Marie had the exact questions that were to be used. Can't really compare being fed trivia to practicing the events you might be playing on a stunt-based game show. To me, it kinda ruins the spontaneity, but given the difficulty of some events and the money involved, I kinda understand.[/quote]Of course you can't, and Jimmy knows it, so I'm not sure why he chose to equate choreographing a quiz show with allowing people to practice at home.
I can practice for Jeopardy, or Wheel of Fortune, or any other game show on the air. I can decide to what degree I want to practice, as well. And if my devotion to the exercise is more than that of my opposition, then I'm in a better position to do well. Big Brother will routinely reveal the next competition a day before the actual event, allowing everyone a chance to have a couple of tries before the real deal. Minute to Win it is really no different. If I want to practice Supercoin to the detriment of my health and hygiene, I can. I don't, but I can.
[quote name=\'Jimmy Owen\' post=\'241606\' date=\'May 28 2010, 12:23 PM\']For today's TV audience, it's probably better to "cut to the chase."[/quote]That's certainly an interesting point to make with absolutely nothing to back it up. The way you have it, you bring out the family, say, "Well Dad, you have one chance to accomplish the task we showed you seven days ago. Let's get to it," and that's all. You really have zero respect for "today's TV audience," don't you?
With what Big Moment did, you got to see the task, you got to get to know the family, decide whether I want to root for or against them, and then the whole thing builds to a natural climax. Or in the case of the Dad who had to complete a unicycle slalom course and return to the finish line, a total anticlimax as he got about six inches out of the gate and fell off his mount.