The difference is that Stewart's crowd knew how to play the game, and even casual fans of the show at the time knew that. The first instinct I'm getting is that the celebrities in the new version aren't great game players, they were just vaguely well-known people who were willing to do it. Pyramid doesn't need star power, it needs stars who can play, and I'm concerned this new version will offer neither on a consistent basis.
I'm pretty sure your concern is thanks to
Donnymid, where very few "classic
Pyramid" celebs turned up. Sure, some of the newbies were good, but others just couldn't grasp it. 'Course, that wasn't helped by the Winner's Circle...
The thing I can see going wrong is if
The Pyramid does anything like the Osmond version did: weird taping schedule, briefing the clue-giving celeb on the Winner's Circle categories, cutting back and forth between celeb and player in the WC, using terrible WC categories, and having the supremely-anal judging ("Things in a Toolbox" not being accepted for "Tools"? GTFO).
It was unusual in the L.A. years for an item to appear on two lines; it wasn't unusual in New York. (example of the latter: "keeps the doctor away")
I know they were
really groping in the beginning. Watching the opening segment of the third episode (or the entirety of the fifth) is sobering -- sure, it's the first week, but things improved within three months.
And as for long subjects, it was worse in the very beginning, with one category ("Famous Last Words", on the fifth show) using such things as "shall not perish from this earth" and "frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn".
Someone on Game Show Confessions (not me)
was surprised that
Pyramid didn't go out after 13 weeks.