[quote name=\'chris319\' date=\'Oct 21 2003, 04:15 PM\'] Audiences that hoot and whoop like a flock of drunken hoot owls.
Music that sounds like it came from a Radio Shack synthesizer.
Grossly overpaid emcees/panelists who get the boot after just a few seasons.
Motorized spotlights, horror-movie music and other gimmickry disguising the absence of an actual game.
Production companies that botch remakes of the simplest formats.
Butt-ugly Jimmy Cuomo sets.
These are just some of the maladies afflicting the current generation of game shows. The question being posed here is: When and in what ways have modern game shows "jumped the shark"? If you need a definition of
jumping the shark, see here:
http://www.jumptheshark.com/Or do you think game shows haven't "jumped the shark"? If you think Card Sharks 2001 was better than the originals, you are free to make your case here (but I think you will be in a very small minority). [/quote]
The one thing that irritates me the most about the current shows are the camera shots. I've talked about this in another post, but in just about all the shows, the cameras do these wild and crazy moves about the set, tilts, etc. It looks like the cameraman is having an epileptic seizure or something. I mentioned that we have shows like "Cribs" to thank for this, and I stand by that statement. The worst offender I think is Feud, if you ever notice during the credits, right as the theme comes to an end, they always show the set at an tilted angle, then have it move towards a level angle. To be honest, I nearly cringe every time I see it, being it's so annoying.
I'd like to think game shows are one form of programming that don't have to cater to 18-34 year-olds, but that would be too close to normal. But, then again, it's possible to cater to the younger viewers without being so gimmicky. Feud looks like it's trying too hard.
Another Feud peeve: give the audience some sedatives please. We don't need rhythm clapping
every single time the theme song plays, and we don't need hootin' and hollerin' every time the #1 answer is given.