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Author Topic: The Games People Play  (Read 3717 times)

dzinkin

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The Games People Play
« on: September 08, 2005, 06:26:30 PM »
To make up for the Feud article I lobotomized...

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Copyright 1987 Nationwide News Pty Limited  
Herald
July 20, 1987 Monday

SECTION: GOLD TV GUIDE; Pg. 1

LENGTH: 1332 words

HEADLINE: THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY

BYLINE: KALTER J MILSOM W

BODY:

OK, TV fans, what's hyped up and put down, but shown all over? Need a hint? One version in risque France gets contestants who answer a question correctly to take off an article of clothing - until they are left with only their underpants In Japan, home of the brave kamikaze, a losing player had 12 kilos of bees set loose on her And in the Dominican Republic, the host held a drawing that only impoverished contestants could enter, the prize, quite literally, was a new roof over their heads.

Yes, for absolutely no money, you guessed it . . . GAME SHOWS! Blind Date, for instance, the British version of that old American standby, The Dating Game, is the fifth most popular program in Britain, surpassing American imports such as Dallas and The A-Team.

Here, the local version, Perfect Match, is still an absolute rage: in Melbourne it often attracts between 50 and 60 per cent of all early-evening viewers.

While every country has its own indigenous theatre and dance, the majority of the world's game shows are still American.

There's OK, Il Prezzo e Gusto (The Price Is Right) in Italy; Blankety Blank (The Match Game) in Holland; and La Roue de la Fortune in France (deduct 10 points if you can't guess that one). But Australia is moving in.

This country was once the repository for cheap and tacky imitations of quiz and games shows that originated elsewhere.

It was common practice for producers to make overseas forays and "borrow" concepts, turning them into local sub B-grade imitations.

Now, in an interesting turn of events, Australian quiz and game show ideas are being exported to an unsuspecting world.

Reg Grundy Productions, originator of Neighbors and producer in Australia of the high rating Sale Of The Century, Perfect Match and It's A Knockout, is establishing itself as an aggressive global games show force. T has confirmed the company is about to branch into British production with a half-hour European general knowledge quiz show called Going For The Gold.

The BBC commissioned the day-time quiz show for home consumption and it is believed to have been sold to ITV's super channel for the European market.

A Grundy Production office has opened in London and a team is already searching for contestants.

The show is expected to be screened later this year, but the successful Grundy formula may come as something of a shock to British audiences. For each country lends its games shows a distinctive local flavor.

In the UK, the hosts are low-key, the guests restrained, the prizes strictly modest. (This is cut-glass bowls territory.) Where else but in courtly Britain would the grey-haired and gentlemanly host of Blockbusters, his glasses perched on the end of his nose, say to a loser: "I really do feel terribly sad for you"?

Australians, on the other hand, are more like the Americans. Our style, like theirs, is brash, outgoing, uninhibited, you could even say . . . crude.

"There's no end to the depths of the sleaze," was a comment from Josh Braun, vice-president for global operations of Fremantle International Inc., which co-produces games shows around the world, including the short-lived revival of The Newlywed Game in Australia late last year.

dzinkin

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The Games People Play
« Reply #1 on: September 08, 2005, 06:26:44 PM »
On the homegrown version of Perfect Match, the humiliation of participants seems to hold a special appeal. The dating duos return to give candid appraisals of each other. Said one young cad as his date looked on: "I am not really turned on when girls have pimples on their backs." Except for the US (where the audiences apparently don't like to have to think too hard), industrialised countries all around the world have popular quiz shows in which contestants give subtle answers to impossible questions - from the British Mastermind to the French Des Chiffres et des Lettres and the Soviet Chto, Gde, Kogda (What, Where, When).

On the last, Soviet contestants correctly named Ravel's inspiration in writing Bolero - his visit to a steel mill.

When it begins in Britain, Going For The Gold could well have some of the flavor of the long-running Sale Of The Century which has just celebrated its seventh year on Australian television.

"But we never wanted to get into a Mastermind situation with a lot of obscure questions that many people couldn't answer," Mr Greer says.

"Sale Of The Century is based on the formula that one out of four people watching must be capable of answering the question." Mr Greer said Sale Of The Century is constantly being rejuvenated and pepped up to maintain audience interest. For instance, a student championship series kicks off tonight, with Year 12 students from around the country competing over three weeks for a place in the grand final.

The company has also devised a games show called Scrabble for NBC in the US, based on the enduringly popular board game. It features "expensive hardware" in the form of a huge visual cube that turns and has illuminated letters, but has yet to be sold to Australian television.

But if Sale Of The Century is carefully honed general knowledge, and gards it as a breakthrough for Australian television.

"I'm always a little surprised at how the producers get people to say the things they do," she said.

Indeed, there are insights to be gleaned (even if no bonus points) from a comparative study of quiz shows. For, whether serious or silly, they mirror the ideals and values of a culture.

In Saudi Arabia, where knowledge of the Koran confers status, pre-adolescent boys (and boys only) recite passages by heart on the long-running In the Shadow of the Koran, with cash prizes provided by the Saudi army.

Malaysia pursued its development goals years ago with a game show in which competitors addressed a given topic - such as the need for family planning or good nutrition - by creating quick-witted rhymes, a traditional Malaysian folk form.

Only in Japan could there be the Ultra Quiz - made infamous by Clive James - which requires losers to show bravery in the face of defeat.

Upon missing a round of questions, they are bombarded with 25 pounds of bees, or left atop a 600-foot butte in the Utah desert, or forced to wash dishes in the galley of a cruise ship as a taskmaster barks: "Faster!Not good enough!" The Soviet Union reveals the ideal of Russian womanhood in A Nu-ka Devushki! (Let's Go Girls!): some two dozen lovelies must identify pieces of classical music and theatre, and also compete in vacuum-cleaning skills, milking a cow and cooking.(Who can roll the thinnest dough in 60 seconds?)

France confirms its racy reputation with Sexy Folies. There's also game show KVN (an acronym for The Club of the Gay and Clever), which recently returned to the air after 12 years.

Two teams match wits, weaving in sophisticated allusions to Soviet history and literature as they lampoon the vices and inconveniences of everyday Soviet life.

In the Philippines, post-Marcos freedom can get raucous. On one show, an ageing acress, insulted by the proceedings, smashed someone over the head with her microphone.

"This is a scandalous development!" said Norma Japitana, a Philippine entertainment writer. "Our freedom is getting out of hand." And yet the game shows will continue to proliferate. As the number of TV channels expands around the globe, so does the need for popular - and cheap - programming.

The US, which had a multiplicity of channels before other countries, became the leader in the field.

Even ahead of the Australian games show people, the American producers, sensing a jackpot, are now rushing in to fill the need internationally.

European viewers will soon see Blockbusters in Bavaria, Super Password in Sweden. And France, which just increased its channels from four to six, is a promising market.

Says French journalist Bruno Silvestre, who could be speaking for much of the world: "We don't have quite the idiocy of American game shows, but we're catching up fast." Additional material supplied by TV Guide.

END OF STORY

GRAPHIC: Games shows are still the rage around the world. Joanmarie Kalter and Wendy Milsom report.

LOAD-DATE: September 19, 2003

TLEberle

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The Games People Play
« Reply #2 on: September 08, 2005, 07:04:10 PM »
In one of the Games Magazines that I have collecting dust in storage, there is a rather large article titled "What Would Alex Trebek Think?"  The main jist is overseas game shows: Ultra Quiz is mentioned, as well as a South African show where a host hides a $1,000 bill in your house, and you have five minutes to find it.  I don't remember much if anything being said about the British shows, but "Fort Boyard" was given a mention as well.

So, I sort of forgot the point, but I think it was that foreign game shows were doing wacky things long before the 'reality' TV craze hit.  Or something.
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