1) Except Cedric is. A six-week summer run on a crappy NBC game show is hardly the most ideal training ground for a host to take over an established format. But then again neither was \"Power of 10\"...
Wait, are you refuting your own point? Because you\'re right: Power of 10 didn\'t get Droo ready for diddly.
It really didn\'t, and I\'m not saying Drew is a spectacular host by any means. For better or worse, Mike Richards and co. has basically had to build the presentation around Drew\'s lack of hosting skills (George Gray, talking models, a new male model, flashier set, better prizes, etc.) and they will have successfully continued the show going into its seventh year post-Bob. Whether or not that would\'ve happened with a lesser-known like Mr. Newton or any of the other try-outs is up for debate, but let\'s not act like attaching Drew to the show didn\'t play a role in that in some way.
I think Cedric has a great personality offstage and on (\"on\" is where Drew fails IMO), so the fact that \"It\'s Worth What?\" was gone in six weeks doesn\'t bother me. I consider that his trial run, if you will. Contestant interaction plays a huge factor in being a great host and being a good conversationalist is a part of that. Cedric has that. The fact that he\'s a comedian should actually be a positive. \"Millionaire\" is a pretty rigid format. Injecting a little (read: LITTLE) humor into the contestant interviews and, when appropriate, during a question would actually breathe a little life into the show and I think, more so than trying to copy \"Feud\", that\'s what the producers are going for with this move.