but there\'s one where the kids would play a game, and the parents had to guess if the kid would cheat by some way, or predicting how successful the kid would be. So that part doesn\'t bother me.
Here\'s my exact problem with that: even if all the parents are doing is guessing which side of the crib the kid will crawl to first, and there\'s no actual direct success or failure on the kid\'s part, let\'s flash forward fifteen years:
Teen: \"Hey, whatcha looking at, Mom?\"
Mom: \"Oh, these are the pictures we took when we took you on that game show fifteen years ago.\"
T: \"Wow, I don\'t even remember that, I was so little! Did we win?\"
M: \"No, we could have won $50,000, but we guessed you were going to crawl to the red side of the crib and instead you crawled to the blue one.\"
And there\'s no really good way to have that conversation that doesn\'t leave the kid feeling like he had a hand in the failure while he was still crapping in a diaper.
Mind you, I\'m not accusing any potential contestants of malicious behavior (though I have not one doubt we\'ll see at least one of those), I think a family is just being rather shortsighted if they agree to do this.
And I thought that the Minute to Win it family episode was handled appropriately (the kids weren\'t risking anything on that last game) and all four of the team members got to play because they piled up so many extra lives.
This part I was not aware of (that everyone had a punt) and that might mitigate it a little, but I still think it was irresponsible parenting to stick a quarter in a kid\'s hand and say \"Alright, this is for a million dollars!\"
I\'m fond of \"Wait until you see it,\" and there\'s so few details that I\'m content to follow that advice.
Outstanding. I eagerly await your review.