[quote name=\'CaseyAbell\' date=\'Oct 1 2004, 12:25 PM\']The
actual wording of the law doesn't use the phrase "game show" anywhere. Of course, the phrase "reality TV" doesn't appear in this 1960 legislation, either. The key phrase is "a purportedly bona fide contest of intellectual knowledge, intellectual skill, or chance."
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It was clear that that was what they had in mind (which see Dotto, Question/Challenge, etc.)
Kinda slippery phrase that some lawyer could argue doesn't apply to talent contests or reality shows, though these seem to have some elements of intellectual skill and/or chance. I doubt that such a strained, legalistic argument would carry the day if a talent contest or reality show was discovered to have been rigged outright.
Matt and others, in answering me on this subject, have basically come up with the argument of "Who really gives a ---?" That might be what saves this from coming up. There is a serious problem with this kind of television, and it is choking out not only game shows, but much of the rest of television as well.
I firmly believe there is much evidence that "American Idol" has been discovered to at least be shady as all get-out -- the slam voters invalidating the voting process which the AI producers refuse to change...
As to why networks or cable outlets are reluctant to greenlight game shows, three words: Millionaire killed ABC. Lots of people in the business really seem to believe this. That's why the traditional studio game show is in deep disfavor now. Well, there's also the problem with those pesky demos from the Nielsen folks.
Of course, this is ignorance on their part. Regis was right on the money when he said that ABC had nothing else of any real stature on their schedule, so he really had to save them from themselves!
But, as time went on and this became five or six years worth of a problem, it's problematic for a lot more than just game shows, but ABC as a whole as well...
Of course, elements of game shows are smuggled into reality shows and poker tournaments. (No, I won't argue Blackjack again.) But programming honchos seem really wary of anything that looks too game-showy.
Then the genre is dead. And, this time, no amount of top prize will save it.