Yep, there was a lot of flak about
Manhunt's, er, "staging". Our friend the Prof was involved! There was a kerfuffle about somewhat similar shennanigans on the far higher-profile Survivor. But there really wasn't absolute, incontrovertible proof of outright rigging with a predetermined result.
And I think many people don't want to look naive, so they'll say that rigging wouldn't bother them or they think it's going on anyway. But they'd probably still feel a little snookered if their favorite game show or reality epic turned out to have been fixed.
OTOH, the well-known practice of final-table deals in poker tournaments doesn't seem to have affected those shows' popularity. So maybe people don't really care all that much.
But on the third hand, if it could be shown that a Survivor or Amazing Race series was absolutely flat-out rigged, I gotta think there'd be serious conniption fits.
Gee, I've got opinion on this issue pretty well surrounded.
EDIT: Kinda funny how this thread is working back towards another long thread on the board about the MG/H2 hour with the soap stars. One point in that thread was how not scripting and prepping the celebs in H2 really hurt that game's entertainment value.
Of course, this scripting and prepping was kinda, shall we say, delicate in the decades immediately following the rigging scandals. That's why Mark Goodson wouldn't allow it on MG/H2.
Many have made the point that the prepping wasn't actual rigging because the outcome wasn't predetermined. True, but the prepping obviously affected the quality of the celebs' bluffs, and thus the contestants' judgment of those bluffs, and thus eventually the outcome of the game. Even if the contestants knew what was going on, and I assume that they all did, it's still snuggling uncomfortably close to 47 USC 509.
The prepping was disclaimed, of course, which got the producers off the legal hook because they weren't purporting that the contest was completely bona fide. But while traditionalists like the Prof get hot and bothered by staging or manipulation in reality shows, somehow H2 gets grandfathered in on its manipulation of the celebs' answers.
I don't know, I'm not a purist on the issue. I'm not a fan of H2 exactly because the humor and the bluffs seem so rehearsed. But I gotta admit that Mr. Goodson's version really drags and bores without the scripted stuff.