(Sorry this is long.)
Yes, Wheel is still mega-popular and is the same show at its core,
...which is precisely what he was hired to accomplish
Harry Friedman was hired to lead the show in a "different direction" because he was friends with a Sony CEO...oh, and Sony thought
Wheel as produced by Nancy Jones was tired and dated. As I said, he's made good changes, but the bad ones are rarely fixed and good ones sometimes disappear. Further, just because a show runs for years doesn't automatically mean it's a quality program. "It's still hangman meets roulette. There's still a puzzleboard, a Wheel of money, three players, and a Bonus Round. What's the problem?"
The format of any game show can be solid, but it's the entire package that matters, and a good format can be brought down by the host, set, contestants, budget, etc. Of course, a good host can salvage an otherwise-bad overall package, so it really depends.
but the aesthetics have been altered to the point of resembling pretty much every million-dollar game show of the past decade
you couldn't be further off the mark here.
How so? $1,000,000 top prize: check. Generic music: check. Dark set with crappy neon lighting: check. "Ambient" music playing at certain times: check. Players who don't deserve to win but do so anyway: check. Plugs that feel recycled to the point where the announcer might as well not be in the studio: check.
From what I can tell, there's at least a few parallels. Minus, arguably, the top prize, the aforementioned hurts the overall package compared to, for example, 2000.
His posts ... lean more towards fanboyism, in terms of thinking that game show producers are obligated to cater to we nerds, instead of the general public (read: the ones who don't notice 1/10 of the changes the forum gripes about at times*).
For me, all I want is quality in a series. Using puzzles like CATCHING SOME OF THE GREATEST WAVES EVER or WHERE DO I PICK UP MY SKI-LIFT TICKETS?, throwing out Merv's music while retaining some form of it on
Jeopardy!, audiences that barely respond to anything, and "WTF?" things like Vanna For A "Day" and the Season 28 dubfest do
not contribute to or represent a quality production.
I'm not asking for the shopping format or manual puzzleboard, because I know that's a massive step backward -- I want audiences who actually want to be there, players who don't risk nearly $10,000 on the Mystery Wedge, good puzzles (no I LOVE MY PASSPORT PHOTO crap), and an actual prize/cash variety.
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FosterGray, you're right -- game show producers aren't obligated to cater to nerds, even when they get called out on their stupidity (see:
Donnymid), but that doesn't give them an excuse to sacrifice quality. If your show is quality, people will find it even if the network has no faith in it (see:
Million-Dollar Mind Game) -- and even if a quality show perishes quickly, it'll become at least a cult classic and have
some fans. I'm not sure when new entries pretty much gave up trying for quality and opted for artificial padding, drawn-out reveals, and pandering to certain demographics...but that kind of crap needs to stop, because if
contestants point out the padding on-air {see: American
Duel,
You Deserve It), you're doing it wrong.