I'm with Sam. Depends on the format. Church group loves Feud, and they know I'm snarky (one time, the men's team named themselves The Little Blue Pills. I asked if they were able to stay up for up to four hours...). Done several Hollywood Squares takeoffs with prepared material that lets the "celebs" get the better of the host. But it was Dan Enright who taught me a stinging lesson. After submitting a copy of a cable access game I was doing years ago, he said I was drawing too much attention to myself. First thought was, "Hey...I'm the STAR! You're SUPPOSED to do that!" If you have a very good, strong game, let it be the focus and just guide it. Let your personality adjust to any level of weakness in the game. Cullen was a master at that. As much as I'm not a major Barker fan, he did say one thing that was very good advice - to paraphrase, "When that housewife from Iowa comes up on stage, she's only going to have a few minutes to shine in front of America. You have a contract and you'll be on screen every day. Give that contestant their moment."