Panel show: Difference between revisions
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Panel games are particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where they've found continued success since the [[BBC]] adapted its first radio panel shows from classic parlor games.<ref name=TelegraphPopular/><ref name=DailyMailHistory/> Perhaps the earliest UK panel show is the BBC radio adaptation of ''[[Twenty Questions]]'', which debuted on February 28, 1947. Panel games have enjoyed lasting success in the UK; ''Twenty Questions'' lasted until 1976, while ''[[Just a Minute]]'' has been on the air since 1967. Other long-running games on radio include ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'' since 1972, ''[[The News Quiz]]'' from 1977, and ''[[My Word!]] from 1956 to 1990. |
Panel games are particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where they've found continued success since the [[BBC]] adapted its first radio panel shows from classic parlor games.<ref name=TelegraphPopular/><ref name=DailyMailHistory/> Perhaps the earliest UK panel show is the BBC radio adaptation of ''[[Twenty Questions]]'', which debuted on February 28, 1947. Panel games have enjoyed lasting success in the UK; ''Twenty Questions'' lasted until 1976, while ''[[Just a Minute]]'' has been on the air since 1967. Other long-running games on radio include ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'' since 1972, ''[[The News Quiz]]'' from 1977, and ''[[My Word!]] from 1956 to 1990. |
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The British import of ''[[What's My Line?]]'' may be the first television panel game in the UK |
The British import of ''[[What's My Line?]]'' may be the first television panel game in the UK with an original run from 1951 to 1963 and several remakes in later years. |
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===Australia=== |
===Australia=== |
Revision as of 01:37, 18 May 2011
A panel game or panel show is a radio or television game show in which a panel of celebrities participates.[1] Panelists may compete with each other, such as on The News Quiz; facilitate play by guest contestants, such as on Match Game/Blankety Blank; or do both, such as on Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! The genre can be traced to 1938, when Information Please debuted in the United States.[2] While panel shows were more popular in the past in the U.S., they are still very common in the United Kingdom.[3]
Format
Most games, such as Mock the Week or Hollywood Squares, are humorous, while others, such as Face the Music, are more serious. Often, the competition and points are a formality, while comedic banter provides much of the entertainment.[4] The American version of Whose Line Is It Anyway? (U.S. TV series) acknowledged this with the introduction, "Welcome to Whose Line Is It Anyway, the show where everything's made up and the points don't matter." On QI, the questions are so hard, points can be given for interesting discussion, even if the answers are wrong.
Panel games often have a theme. Some are satirical, such as Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! or Have I Got News for You. 8 Out of 10 Cats is based on statistics, What's My Line? is about occupations, Quote... Unquote features quotations, I've Got a Secret is about secrets, and Would I Lie to You? deals with lies.
Some panel games are variants on classic parlor games.[5] Give Us a Clue is based on Charades and Call My Bluff is based on Fictionary. Other shows, such as Password, have evolved into parlor games themselves.
Frequently, a panel show features recurring panelists. Some panelists also appear on multiple panel shows.[6]
Most shows are recorded in front of a studio audience.
Panel games are so popular in Britain that they have been the subject of satire themselves. I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue is a panel game that spoofs many common elements of such shows, including the unimportance of scoring, while Rob Brydon's Annually Retentive is a scripted comedy series that parodies the workings of a panel show.
International production
United States
The first known example of a panel game in the world is the radio program Information Please, which debuted on May 17, 1938 on the NBC Blue Network. An evolution of the quiz show format, Information Please added the key element of a panel of celebrities, largely writers and intellectuals, but also actors and politicians. Listeners would mail in questions, winning prizes for stumping the panel.
U.S. panel games transferred to television and saw their peak of popularity in the 1950s and '60s, when CBS ran three long-running panel shows in prime time: I've Got a Secret, What's My Line? and To Tell the Truth. At times, they were among the top ten shows on U.S. television and they continue to experience occasional revivals on daytime television and on cable. All three Goodson-Todman primetime shows were cancelled by CBS in 1967 amid ratings declines and trouble attracting younger viewers, although the programs were consistently profitable by being among the cheapest television shows to produce.[7][8] Their cancellations came as attention to demographics and a focus on younger viewers gained currency among advertisers.[9] The departures of these three New York-based shows were also part of a mass migration of television production to Los Angeles, leaving only one primetime show produced on the East Coast.[8][10]
Later years saw several successes in the format, with Match Game; Hollywood Squares; The Gong Show; Win, Lose or Draw; Password and Pyramid primarily airing in the daytime, largely in the '70s and '80s; the U.S. version of Whose Line Is It Anyway? having a primetime run from 1998 to 2004 on ABC; and Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! becoming a popular weekend show on NPR. In 2010, NBC's launch of The Marriage Ref was described as a revival of the primetime American panel game.[11][12]
United Kingdom
Panel games are particularly popular in the United Kingdom, where they've found continued success since the BBC adapted its first radio panel shows from classic parlor games.[3][5] Perhaps the earliest UK panel show is the BBC radio adaptation of Twenty Questions, which debuted on February 28, 1947. Panel games have enjoyed lasting success in the UK; Twenty Questions lasted until 1976, while Just a Minute has been on the air since 1967. Other long-running games on radio include I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue since 1972, The News Quiz from 1977, and My Word! from 1956 to 1990.
The British import of What's My Line? may be the first television panel game in the UK with an original run from 1951 to 1963 and several remakes in later years.
Australia
Australian panel games include Good News Week and Spicks and Specks.
Canada
Canadian panel games include Front Page Challenge and The Debaters.
Germany
German panel games include Entern oder Kentern ("Board or Capsize"), Genial daneben ("Idiot Savant"), Kopfball ("Headball"), Die Montagsmaler ("Pictionary"), Noch Besserwissen ("Even Better Knowledge"), Promi ärgere Dich nicht ("Celebrity Ludo" or "Celebrity Parcheesi," literally "Celebrity Don't Be Angry"), Die Pyramide (the German version of Pyramid), Quizfire, Sag die Wahrheit ("Tell the Truth", the German version of To Tell the Truth), Typisch Frau – Typisch Mann ("Typical Woman – Typical Man"), Was bin ich? ("What am I?", the German version of What's My Line?) and de:Was denkt Deutschland? ("What Does Germany Do?").
Examples
- 8 out of 10 Cats
- 29 Minutes of Fame
- And Then You Die
- Argumental
- Best of the Worst
- The Big Fat Quiz of the Year
- Blankety Blank
- Call My Bluff
- The Debaters
- Does the Team Think?
- Front Page Challenge
- Give Us A Clue
- Good News Week
- Have I Got News for You
- Hollywood Squares
- I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue
- It's News to Me
- I've Got a Secret
- Just a Minute
- The Marriage Ref
- Match Game
- Mock the Week
- My Word!
- Never Mind the Buzzcocks
- Never Mind the Full Stops
- The News Quiz
- Password
- QI
- Quote Unquote
- A Question of Sport
- Says You!
- Shooting Stars
- Spicks and Specks
- They Think It's All Over
- To Tell the Truth
- The Unbelievable Truth
- Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me!
- What's My Line?
- Whose Line is it Anyway?
- Would I Lie To You?
- The Write Stuff
References
- ^ Russell Davies, host (9 April 2011). "Episode 2". Let's Get Quizzical. 1 minutes in. Retrieved 2011 May 17.
In the old days, quizzes and panel games were easy to tell apart, because quiz competitors were people you'd never heard of, and panellists were more or less well-known figures. More recently, though, the rise of the celebrity quiz has complicated the picture.
{{cite episode}}
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(help); Text "BBC Radio 4 Extra" ignored (help) - ^ "Quiz show". Britannica Online Encyclopedia.
- ^ a b "For an extra point, why are panel games so popular?". The Telegraph.
- ^ "A very British tradition". The Guardian.
- ^ a b "Fingers On The Buzzer". Daily Mail. 2001 Jan 11.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "Is it good news that there's so many topical comedy shows?". The Guardian.
- ^ "'What's My Line?' Leaving TV in Fall". The New York Times.
- ^ a b "Only One Prime-Time TV Show Will Be Produced Here In Fall". The New York Times.
- ^ "Mature Programs Dying As TV Woos Young Folks". The Oregonian.
- ^ "Last New York-Based Shows On The Way Out Due To Lack Of Space". The Evening Independent.
- ^ Lowry, Brian (March 1, 2010). "The Marriage Ref". Variety magazine. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
- ^ Simmons, Chris (March 1, 2010). "Jerry Seinfeld's "The Marriage Ref" Debuts on NBC". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
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