[quote name=\'johnnya2k3\' date=\'Aug 23 2004, 01:27 AM\']How come a live "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" wasn't even thought up?[/quote]
I always assumed it was because whenever "The Drew Carey Show" did a live episode (they did more than one), they had pretty much the entire cast of "Whose Line" on and kept interrupting the plot to do short improvised bits.
On the subject of a live TPiR... I don't doubt that the show could be staged to get all of the games and prizes in and out during the breaks (Plinko would have to be later, though, because they combine the first and second acts into one act in prime time). The trick is in the showcases, which are the things that always slow down the pace of the taping. Especially troublesome is the fact that if they're doing prime time, they like to get a big-ticket vehicle in each of the showcases, which makes staging incredibly difficult. They'd pretty much be stuck with offering one sportscar per showcase, because I can't see them risking a huge boat or motorhome not hitting its mark in time. Here's the only way I see it working:
Showcase one:
Two prizes consecutively behind door number one (either two trips, which are already loaded before the taping, or a trip and a prize (the prize can be loaded during the Showcase Showdown).
Followed by a vehicle behind door number three (also loaded during the Showcase Showdown).
Showcase two:
A prize on the turntable (loaded during the Showcase Showdown or commercial).
A "thin" prize that can be placed in front of the vehicle that's still sitting behind door number three (they do this all the time with entertainment centers and clocks and motorcyles and such).
A vehicle behind door number two (by this time, all props from previous acts have been cleared away, the final vehicle has been rolled in, and the cyc closed... hopefully).
This also makes things easy for the final act, because remember, either showcase has to be available to be displayed again depending on who wins. Or both showcases!
They'd also have to drop the guaranteed million-dollar spin unless they could clear enough space behind the turntable to move the big wheel back there during the showcases (they've done it before).
The only problem left would be getting the two cameras that shoot the showcases to hit all of their marks in time. Yep, only two cameras shoot all of the prizes in the showcases. At least in daytime. For primetime, does the jib replace a floor camera, or do they shoot with five cameras?
With a lot of planning, it could be done, but like everybody else has said, would it be worth the stress?
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Scott Robinson