The Television & Radio Database

Home  
Members  
Join  
Search  
Listings  

Just A Minute

JAM Series | JAM Stats | JAM Today | JAM Group

Search the JAM Yahoo Group Archive:

 
<<<<   9222   >>>>

Topic: Yankee News Quiz

Message 1 / 6
MarkJul 3, 2013
 
 
They've mangled Red Dwarf, Fawlty Towers and dozens of other British shows.

What could they do to The News Quiz?   Find out.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0368fxl/News_Quiz_USA_03_07_2013/

--
Mark


 
<<<<   9226   >>>>

Topic: Re: Yankee News Quiz

Message 2 / 6
delmelzaJul 4, 2013
 
 
They did this already once last year- it wasn't that good

( Americans seems to have Lost the knack of How to do Panel shows)

There is a News Quiz like radio panel show ( one of the very few) in the usa called Wait Wait Don't Tell me- except they have people call in as well as 3 'celebrities" to answer questions on the news.


http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=5183214



--- In just-a-minute@..., Mark <sirnylon@...> wrote:
>
> They've mangled Red Dwarf, Fawlty Towers and dozens of other British shows.
>
> What could they do to The News Quiz? Find out.
>
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0368fxl/News_Quiz_USA_03_07_2013/
>
> --
> Mark
>

 
<<<<   9228   >>>>

Topic: Re: Yankee News Quiz

Message 3 / 6
charles_rookeJul 4, 2013
 
 
Three times (or thrice for those who prefer it) last year; once in March, twice in October. I can upload if requested.

Charlie


--- In just-a-minute@..., "delmelza" <delmelza@...> wrote:
>
> They did this already once last year- it wasn't that good
>
> ( Americans seems to have Lost the knack of How to do Panel shows)
>
> There is a News Quiz like radio panel show ( one of the very few) in the usa called Wait Wait Don't Tell me- except they have people call in as well as 3 'celebrities" to answer questions on the news.
>
>
> http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=5183214
>
>
>
> --- In just-a-minute@..., Mark <sirnylon@> wrote:
> >
> > They've mangled Red Dwarf, Fawlty Towers and dozens of other British shows.
> >
> > What could they do to The News Quiz? Find out.
> >
> > http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0368fxl/News_Quiz_USA_03_07_2013/
> >
> > --
> > Mark
> >
>

 
<<<<   9229   >>>>

Topic: Re: Yankee News Quiz

Message 4 / 6
Jeremy KeensJul 4, 2013
 
 
Hi
Don't traduced wait wait - it is very funny & more spontaneous than the news quiz (where "Jeremy, who has been a naughty boy? Ah that would be ... " always sounds like JAM would be if they had the topics before hand to me). It has three comedians on the panel. There are structured rounds (bluff the listener - one true story & 2 made up of strange things in the news,  limericks (the weakest! And more). Yes there are listeners who ring in to answer questions but they can be funny & are the springboards for jokes, and there is a 'celebrity' round where they get someone famous ask them some general questions & then 3 questions about something tangentially linked to them (eg someone with a similar name). 
They have a great roster of male and female comedians (more females than most UK shows), a very funny chair, and I often wonder about ringing in from Australia to be on it.  

Jeremy

Ps I am not American! 
 There is a News Quiz like radio panel show ( one of the very few) in the usa called Wait Wait Don't Tell me- except they have people call in as well as 3 'celebrities" to answer questions on the news.

http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=5183214



 
<<<<   9231   >>>>

Topic: Re: Yankee News Quiz

Message 5 / 6
Tony BaechlerJul 4, 2013
 
 
No, I didn't like the USA version of the News Quiz either and I'm in the US.
I agree that we really don't know how to do panel games anymore, at least
on radio. It's amazing to me that we've forgotten how to do decent quiz
shows as well. We don't have anything like Brain of Britain, Round Britain
Quiz, Quote Unquote, or of course JAM. That's what attracted me to BBC
shows in the first place. We have Jeopardy! but I find the questions too
simple and generally disappointing. Americans don't seem to be able to
think in terms of puzzles like you hear on RBQ. I would like to find a huge
archive of British quiz shows. I would consider buying them for a
reasonable price, but the BBC America shop doesn't sell most radio shows
except perhaps Agatha Christie.

Then again, the American school system is getting worse and worse, so people
aren't smart enough to understand the questions, let alone actually answer
them. A while ago, I was reading an article that teachers would correct
wrong answers on student tests so the students would get perfect scores.
The reason was because teachers got bigger bonuses for better performing
students.

It's amazing and disappointing to me that we gave up on even trying to
produce decent radio while the BBC kept going and improving on it. It's
next to impossible to find good radio drama and you certainly won't find it
every afternoon. Advertisers aren't interested in paying for dramas and our
equivalent of public radio (NPR) doesn't often want to carry it. I saw that
the World Service archives have some Brain of Britain shows which I'm hoping
to get fairly soon, if I can figure out a streamlined way to download them.
Help in that regard would be appreciated. I'm also looking for past
archives of Counterpoint, especially since I missed series 27 this year.

On 7/4/2013 9:37 AM, delmelza wrote:
> They did this already once last year- it wasn't that good
>
> ( Americans seems to have Lost the knack of How to do Panel shows)
>
> There is a News Quiz like radio panel show ( one of the very few) in the usa called Wait Wait Don't Tell me- except they have people call in as well as 3 'celebrities" to answer questions on the news.
>
>
> http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=5183214


--
Have a good day,
Tony Baechler
mailto:tony.baechler@...

 
<<<<   9232   >>>>

Topic: Re: Yankee News Quiz

Message 6 / 6
delmelzaJul 4, 2013
 
 
I did like Says You on NPR and have been to some of the recordings when they have come to my city.
The only other panel show I know of besides Wait Wait Don't Tell me is Ask Me Another which I have not heard enough of to offer an opinion on

http://www.npr.org/programs/ask-me-another/


I grow up in the 60's and remember many usa tv panel shows like What's My Line/I've got a Secret & To Tell the Truth which once were very popular.
The art of panel games & Wit seems to have disappeared in usa media.

They have done 2 pilots for Have I got news for you- both failed

and the usa version of Never Mind the Buzzcocks barely lasted 1 series ( never saw it so again I cannot judge it)



--- In just-a-minute@..., Tony Baechler <tony.baechler@...> wrote:
>
> No, I didn't like the USA version of the News Quiz either and I'm in the US.
> I agree that we really don't know how to do panel games anymore, at least
> on radio. It's amazing to me that we've forgotten how to do decent quiz
> shows as well. We don't have anything like Brain of Britain, Round Britain
> Quiz, Quote Unquote, or of course JAM. That's what attracted me to BBC
> shows in the first place. We have Jeopardy! but I find the questions too
> simple and generally disappointing. Americans don't seem to be able to
> think in terms of puzzles like you hear on RBQ. I would like to find a huge
> archive of British quiz shows. I would consider buying them for a
> reasonable price, but the BBC America shop doesn't sell most radio shows
> except perhaps Agatha Christie.
>
> Then again, the American school system is getting worse and worse, so people
> aren't smart enough to understand the questions, let alone actually answer
> them. A while ago, I was reading an article that teachers would correct
> wrong answers on student tests so the students would get perfect scores.
> The reason was because teachers got bigger bonuses for better performing
> students.
>
> It's amazing and disappointing to me that we gave up on even trying to
> produce decent radio while the BBC kept going and improving on it. It's
> next to impossible to find good radio drama and you certainly won't find it
> every afternoon. Advertisers aren't interested in paying for dramas and our
> equivalent of public radio (NPR) doesn't often want to carry it. I saw that
> the World Service archives have some Brain of Britain shows which I'm hoping
> to get fairly soon, if I can figure out a streamlined way to download them.
> Help in that regard would be appreciated. I'm also looking for past
> archives of Counterpoint, especially since I missed series 27 this year.
>
> On 7/4/2013 9:37 AM, delmelza wrote:
> > They did this already once last year- it wasn't that good
> >
> > ( Americans seems to have Lost the knack of How to do Panel shows)
> >
> > There is a News Quiz like radio panel show ( one of the very few) in the usa called Wait Wait Don't Tell me- except they have people call in as well as 3 'celebrities" to answer questions on the news.
> >
> >
> > http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=5183214
>
>
> --
> Have a good day,
> Tony Baechler
> mailto:tony.baechler@...
>

 
<<<<   9232   >>>>

Back to the Top
 

Message History

 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
201910231211351191231414
201847218937951925514
20174342212172041923442316
201613493957608710322412923
201551973249415420280143116
201497568332833528251323879
2013463251988781192889886385427
2012921211801991258871155118166125144
20111127871731342252521526218316563
20101421171539469496918382716875
200967454297901491107063423539
2008200120175120701098711571455838
2007165447132999557140118748812599

|   FAQ   |   Contact   |   Services   |   Terms   |   Privacy   |   Credits   |

[Page generated in 0.1023 seconds under 1.4% server load]

© 2012-2025 TVRDb.com. All rights reserved.