IMHO, I'm not so sure the simple classic, original Password format can hang these days, especially in Primetime.
Sure, it's fun for a short 5-7 minute segment on The Tonight Show but not sure if it's going to be sustainable for a series. I know they like the Celebrity banter of the segments so they might hype that up a little as well but I envision it as too dry for today's audiences. I would be ok with it, but I'm not your average TV watcher. Now, that original format can be a part of it but in my mind there needs to be something else as well to make it hold onto viewers and mix it up some. I can envision a round(s) of classic Password, then maybe a few puzzles as in PP and SP. I think those are fun trying to figure out but I don't think it needs to be the entire format. I am thinking a hybrid of Classic and Puzzle Formats. I also think an Alphabetics type Bonus Round could be fun but so would a Lightning Round at the end for the prize. Maybe Alphabetics can be a part in some other way. I might be in the minority but in my mind there needs to be a little diversity in the format so your average viewer doesn't think it's stale. We will see what happens.
I kept thinking about this as well. I completely agree that a shortened version on The Tonight Show makes sense because you can use the celebrities that are already there for the show, and then you can segue into interviews. Plus, the game can be played more for funsies.
The way I see it, this show will go one of three ways:
-Be essentially 4 games/Lightning Rounds of "Vanilla Password", and that's just too bland. It was even bland in the 1970s, and that's when you had only 30 minutes to fill.
-Not take the game seriously at all and focus way too much on Jimmy and the celebs chewing up the scenery.
-Take the game way too seriously and combine it with a Mega-Tension bonus round for big money that takes way too long to play.
Honestly, having seen Fallon for a long time, I am more fearful of #2 and trying to generate YouTube-worthy moments vs. the others. That said, given that we still have ABC's Pyramid, there's another part of me that thinks Password is largely a relic of its time and can stay on Buzzr, with Pyramid (or even 25 Words or Less) really being the "modern-day" Password.
/Did that stop me from filling out a contestant application? Nope...
//Will that stop me from watching it when it premieres? Nope...
Anthony