Scott: Welcome to the results for the 2016 Game Show Fans 50 Greatest! Forty-eight of you voted, and I'm here with the results. But I'm not here alone -- to provide commentary that's more insightful than what I could come up with by myself, I'm joined by JasonA1. Jason, before we find out which shows made the top fifty, what are you interested in seeing from the results of this poll compared to the results of the 2006 poll?
Jason: Well, as I said before, I'm interested to see what 10 years has done to the results - namely, what the advent of YouTube has done to them. Even 10 years ago, if you weren't in the tape trading community, odds are you were relying on your memory or hearsay to judge the shows not being run on GSN. Now, with video seemingly everywhere, we all have a chance to remember even our less-than-favorite shows. But also, I'm very curious what happened to the newest "classics." In the "between time," since 2006, we got all sorts of new games on cable, plus more network shows in the wake of Howie Mandel's briefcases. That's a lot of shows and a lot of time to help figure out where the games of the new millennium truly fit in a list of the greatest of all time.
Scott: I'm glad you mentioned Howie Mandel's briefcases, because that's one of the things I'm looking forward to learning, too: When this poll was conducted in 2006, Deal or No Deal was less than a year old. At the time, we collectively ranked it as the 44th greatest game show. Now that it's had a chance to run its course, will we think more or less of it? But the result I'm most looking forward to seeing concerns two stalwarts: The last time around, Jeopardy! and Pyramid took second and third place, respectively. But Jeopardy! beat Pyramid by just one point. Will it be another neck-and-neck race between these two, or will one of them receive a clear victory over the other?
Let's reveal the results! In the end, 226 shows received at least one vote, but only fifty of them will receive the fandom's top honors. We begin with the shows that just barely made the cutoff.
50. Weakest Link
276 points; 21 votes
2006 ranking: 49
Scott: Even the syndicated Weakest Link had been off the air for about three years when we had the 2006 survey... still, now that it's been 13 years, I was curious whether it would fall off the top fifty entirely. Turns out we gave it essentially the same ranking.
Jason: If you love trivia, Weakest Link is certainly a place to get lots of it. Given our cadre of Q & A fans around here, I'm not surprised to see it back on the top 50 after all this time. George Gray proved it could be done more than capably with another host. Unlike other game shows, I actually enjoyed some episodes of the all-celebrity Link, because the players often had fun sniping at each other and tried to get Anne to crack. I'd be curious to see if Weakest Link could flourish in a revival, but I'd be wary if they decided to cast a more well-known host. There's enough going on that I don't think you need a second show happening at center stage.
49. College Bowl
277 points; 12 votes
2006 ranking: 46
Jason: When it came time to finish my list for 2016, I found a place for College Bowl, less so for the show itself. I think College Bowl deserves lots of credit for helping young people take in interest in knowledge & eventually find a place in school where they could flourish because of it. Watching existing episodes today, you get some early examples of a more modern directing style with the split-screen of both teams, coupled with audio & video questions. Allen Ludden shows enthusiasm for the proceedings, and shows sincerity as he implores the younger audience to get themselves prepared for their own higher education.
Scott: That's the exact same reason I included College Bowl on my ballot -- while I weighted "personal enjoyment" more heavily when I was ranking the shows, I did give consideration for historical impact, and I feel College Bowl deserves recognition for that. Note that only 25% of respondents actually voted for College Bowl; however, seven of those twelve ballots placed the show in the upper 25, which is what allowed it to make this list.
48. Win, Lose or Draw
281 points; 21 votes
2006 ranking: 52
Jason: The first newcomer to the top 50! (But not the last!) It's easy to forget just how big Win, Lose or Draw was in its first run. Saturday Night Live had a very funny parody, picking on the fact it was seemingly on all day with tie game after tie game. The show traveled across the country before their big brothers Wheel & Jeopardy made a yearly thing of it - Chicago, Florida, New York, Hawaii. And thanks to Antenna TV, we have tape of Burt talking about this game in the '70s on The Tonight Show. Win, Lose or Draw was never about the money being won, which is something today's producers might want to remember.
47. Tattletales
291 points; 20 votes
2006 ranking: 31
Scott: This is one of the most extreme changes in ranking between 2006 and 2016. And it can't entirely be attributed to the natural volatility of the bottom of the 50 best: In 2006, 47 out of 80 voters (more than half) put Tattletales somewhere on their list; this time around, fewer than half of the voters saw fit to include it. And on average, Tattletales was ranked lower on individual ballots compared to ten years ago. What happened?
Jason: I'm not entirely sure. If you don't have Buzzr, you'd have to seek it out on your own, so perhaps Tattletales isn't as fresh on our collective minds. Fans might have found more game-heavy shows to rank higher in the meantime, as well. This could also be a case of our average voter age dropping, with less of those fans fond of seeing stars they don't know interacting? Just a guess.
Scott: Yeah, if anything, I thought Buzzr would help Tattletales stay relatively high on the list. Of course, Buzzr's episodes have largely been stuck in the He Said, She Said-inspired beginnings of Tattletales, so... maybe not so much. Actually, if I had to put forward a theory: In 2006, as the poll was beginning, there was discussion and debate about which titles would and wouldn't be considered the same show. Matt mentioned that he would be combining Tattletales and He Said, She Said -- which makes sense to mention, since what Tattletales is best known for bears little relation to its predecessor -- but I'm wondering if that clarification put the show in people's minds and led to them placing it on their ballots. On the ballots this year, the only people who "voted" for He Said, She Said were the ones who listed their vote as "Tattletales/He Said, She Said," acknowledging the previous combination ruling.
46. Twenty One
319 points; 18 votes
2006 ranking: 41
Scott: I believe you and I are of the same opinion regarding the inclusion of the scandal shows on our ballots, Jason. However, in the case of Twenty One, eighteen people disagree with us.
Jason: Yes; I didn't include scandal shows on my ballots in either year. Inherently, the original version of Twenty One didn't work, and producers quickly saw to it that the outcomes were always exciting. Looking back on the Maury Povich version, I think it was a missed opportunity to break out from the post-Millionaire pack. Strikes and tie-breaking questions kept games short - probably too short. Adding a Second Chance helper draws comparisons to Phone-a-Friend. Ditching the Twenty One twist of a new champion's money coming from the old champion, along with the added bonus round, stripped its unique qualities even further. I think there's definitely a place for this sort of game to shine, where two players compete without knowing the others' progress. But both versions had issues. I'm curious how others made this decision.
Scott: I'm sure they'll tell us in the replies, but my hunch is that they wanted to acknowledge the undeniable fact that before the truth was revealed, the original Twenty One took this country by storm. And since I was just talking about historical impact three entries ago, I suppose I can understand that reasoning, especially because the rules explicitly stated that the definition of "greatest" was up to each voter. (Although, of the twelve people who voted for College Bowl, only five also voted for Twenty One.) But in my opinion, the phrase "great game show" implies that the program itself does something right. And if rigging the show is the only way to make it watchable, I just can't bring myself to call it great.