[quote name=\'SteveRep\' post=\'126919\' date=\'Aug 10 2006, 11:04 AM\']
Seems to me there ain't a heck of a lot of difference between the two. Same premise, similar approach, go on date 00 -- although TDG seemed to send the couples to more exotic locales.
[/quote]
I'll tell you what it is: because on LC, the "game" part of it is never seen. On TDG, the whole procedure IS the show: the bachelor (or bachelorette) quizzing the contestants, the decision, the whole deal. On LC, all of that is done beforehand, probably in the contestant's (and for the sake of this discussion I'm gonna say the "contestant" is the one sitting on the couch with Chuck, not the one on the screen) living room, before you ever see the two people, and all you hear about is the aftermath of that procedure. The only game is the little sidegame where the audience votes to see if they picked the same person the contestant picked.
In fact, there's my knock, there's my evidence for all of you who want to suggest that LC is a game show: What game are these people playing while on the show? Not one. NOT ONE. Everything is predetermined beforehand, the contestant has already made up their mind, and the only people actually engaging in any remotely game-related activity are the audience, who are either guessing what the contestant already did, or just picking a date for them. The contestant does nothing there on the couch, the audience does the heavy lifting, and the audience's prize (nothing, unless you count the door prize) changes not one iota if they successfully match with the person the contestant already picked or not. And really, neither does the contestant's; they win a second free date with the person the audience picked regardless, and if it happens to be with the original person and they got along the first time, great.
So to sum, there is no competition, none of the activity is televised, and the prizes never change regardless of anyone's actions.
Love Connection is not a game show. And I feel more confident than ever stating that now.