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Watching again today... I don't really get any sense of Jeopardy watching it.
Watching again today... I don't really get any sense of Jeopardy watching it.
I quite enjoy it actually, as l do most tv quiz programmes. There again l'll watch whatever Stephen Fry does.My wife is hooked on it, but I find it so DULL.
Maybe thats the difference - I usually like Stephen Fry, but hate quiz shows...whereas my wife seems to watch them all.I quite enjoy it actually, as l do most tv quiz programmes. There again l'll watch whatever Stephen Fry does.
Now that would be a quiz show worth watching.It is dull but I still find it quite watchable.
You don't always need bells, whistles, strap-ons and razzmatazz.
Not sure why people have such a downer on this show. I’m a big Fry fan and think he’s doing a perfectly good job with a good, rather highbrow format. So there.
As somebody who moved to the states in my early twenties, I reject the idea that "answer in the form of a question", odd as it is, is in anyway hard to grasp. I took to Jeopardy very quickly. It literally takes maybe one round, maybe half a round, to get the gist of it.Answering trivia in the form of a question is bizarre, so good luck explaining that premise to anyone who hasn’t been watching Jeopardy! since they were a preteen.
Bloke mis-calculated his final total and lost! You need to watch to understand.Hilarious end to todays show.
Still not really engaged.
I certainly don't have trouble grasping the "answer as a question" idea, but I think it adds absolutely nothing to the format and might be mistaken for the show's main focus.As somebody who moved to the states in my early twenties, I reject the idea that "answer in the form of a question", odd as it is, is in anyway hard to grasp. I took to Jeopardy very quickly. It literally takes maybe one round, maybe half a round, to get the gist of it.
Yeah, that does strike me as pretty bad. For comparison, on the US edition, the first round has clues from $100 - $500 (so about £80 - £400) and the second round has clues from $200 - $1000.
Exactly that. The lottery of getting the "daily double". Also the possibility of picking categories you feel you are strong in so that a) you keep control of the board (important for finding the daily double) and b) you can build up enough of a lead that you can potentially make a large wager for the daily double and probably c) the psychologic advantage of building up a lead.The other thing that doesn't really work is choosing the questions from the board. Every question will be asked at some point and anyone can buzz in to answer each time, so what's the point of the contestant choosing the next one (apart from the lottery of getting the 'daily double')?