"To me this is worse than simple pandering; it is exploiting human misery. It exploits people's desperation to get their car back by creating a public spectacle and humiliating them on national television. I'm not going to feel very good if a person doesn't get their car back because they didn't know the most popular flavor of Jell-O or the middle name of Napoleon's second cousin. If this is where reality television is headed then deal me out."
Point and opinion accepted, but if that is the criteria for bad tv, then we shouldn't be watching Criminal Minds,
Law And Order SVU, House, The Biggest Loser, Judge Judy, Dr. Phil, or any network's evening news. We try to deny it, but misery IS the human condition. That's one thing we all like about the classic game show - it takes us away from reality for a little while with some happy music, bells, whistles, laughs, applause and a few thousand dollars thrown around. Is human misery - death, disease, poverty, bad life choices - any more sanitized just because it's fictional on a tv drama? How fast do you think some "ripped from the headlines" drama show will come up with a plot about an 8-year-old boy getting chopped up and hauled around in a suitcase? And what kind of ratings do you think it will get? Man is born to misery as sure as sparks fly upward. That's why some cope with drugs and alcohol, some with sex, some with God, and others crossing over into a fantasy land to escape. TV people know it and pander to our morbid curiosity about it. If we are going to get indignant about one show, maybe we should feel the same about a lot of others. With the recent passing of my mother-in-law, who was helping with our finances, my mom in the final stages of cancer, work hours getting cut, facing the fact that our beloved 14-year old pain-filled dog will have to be put down, and a recent miscarriage for my son and daughter-in-law, I don't treat tragedy lightly. But I have hope. And I'll cheer when somebody gets a break, dammit!