[quote name=\'fostergray82\' post=\'191766\' date=\'Jul 22 2008, 05:20 PM\']
I watched it. It was okay, not a bad show, but it's missing something. It's just too repetitive to be an hour-long show. At least an incentive for the contestants, i.e. a certain amount of money for each celeb fooled, with fooling all four winning a bonus. Hell, two studio contestants scoring points for choosing, based on the celeb decisions. Just something that allows a little more competition between someone other than a panel. [/quote] But the panel is already competing. That part I don't have a problem with. And really, why would the contestants earn money for "fooling" the panel? They're trying to accomplish their goal so they don't look like tools on prime-time telly. Now, if they won all the money bet by Doubting Thomases, that'd be OK by me. There's no way I'm going to put myself out there in that fashion, only to sandbag my feat just because everyone voted "SUCCEED".
I forget, but didn't the Mark McEwen CBS one-time special from about 15 years ago work the same way? ISTR celebs betting on outrageous stunts, i.e. changing a tire while driving on two wheels.
Exactly, but with no point scale that I could recall.
Some notes from me, because I know you were all on the edge of your seats waiting:
* I never thought I'd be able to say to Tom Green, "congratulations, you weren't the biggest D-bag on the panel!". But there we are. I don't know who Harland Williams is, I don't care. What a perfect asshat.
* Something has to be done with the betting. It looks awful to have Mr. Sulu triumphantly say "I bet twenty thousand dollars!" to see "$2,000" (p-TING!) come up on the screen. Either have the bets written in ink and hidden away until the reveal, or do something OTHER than using keypads. Blech.
* I also wasn't keen on "before we set the bet, let's see what our panel said." We'll find out by who cheers in what fashion in a bit anyway, why waste time on that? I think a reveal in the style of Final Jeopardy would be just fine.