Culture: Television: Game Show: Quiz
The Easiest Quiz Show In The World   (+4, -2)  [vote for, against]
Soothing

A quiz show in the usual low budget midafternoon format whereby contestants are awarded £10 for each question they can answer correctly in the 22 minutes of the show. The questions are all about the contestant. The questions are asked at a deliberate and steady pace. The contestant is introduced without fanfare
"Contestant Mary Scoggins from Clitheroe she is a Brand Manager for Breville Mary what is your favourite colour"
"Yellow"
"Correct do you like any other colours Mary"
"Yes"
"Correct Mary what is your mum called"
"Mary"
"Correct Mary what did you have for your breakfast this morning"
"Muesli"
"Correct"
and so on and so forth, with Mary racking up a fair few hundred quid in an almost entirely risk-free environment until the credits have scrolled completely across the bottom quarter of your screen and the questionmaster says
"Thank you Mary Mary has won £2120 pounds"
and you're straight into an advert for the Over 60s Life Plan.
-- calum, Aug 26 2013

The_20Hardest_20Qui..._20In_20The_20World [calum, Aug 26 2013]

Canibus blacks out on "100 Bars" http://www.youtube....watch?v=MwUxHH1G6Do
[calum, Sep 12 2013]

Cappadonna blacks out on "Winter Warz" http://www.youtube....watch?v=WUAwdXRbyWM
from 2:27 [calum, Sep 12 2013]

"Blue.... no... YELLOOOOOWWW!!"
-- RayfordSteele, Aug 26 2013


Who would be the host ? Jeremy Paxman ?
-- 8th of 7, Aug 26 2013


Somebody's been watching Celebrity Jeopardy.
-- FlyingToaster, Aug 26 2013


I'd be grinding my teeth after two minutes and another thing that annoys me are those phone-in multiple choice questions to competitions. Grrrrrr.
-- po, Aug 27 2013


Well you've just won a trip to Denver and five others.
-- tatterdemalion, Aug 27 2013


The easiest quizshow: Do You Want This?

The queasiest ease show: Who Farted?

Queasy-est ease show is closer to what I was inventing upon time of reading, socializing towards empathetic control of the subject, and the functional ethos of defining between abberation and its functional abbreviations, as institutionalized opposites. Functionalism in a philosophical sense is more than a purposeful ordering, but this "cause and effect of mental states". Abbrevation becomes abberational to the diagnostically abbreviated and the diagnostics., in the contextual discourse of medicine and law. Abberationality is a form of A->B purposeful normativity, or ABnormality. Abberationality encompasses all communicative action indicated by 'abberation' and ' abbreviation". The ABfunctional relationship can be measured by the frequency of punctuation when abberation becomes abbreviated; the efficiency of the action at producing significance. This distinction arises from the functional or necessary purposful intention of all actions, but in the case of abberation's corrollary, 'purposeful action'-abbreviated communication, abbrevation occurs when abberation becomes abbreviationally meaningfull - an impetus to act. The queasy ease is the empathetic expectation of some sort of abbrevation, that indicates some meaning has been produced, whether purposeful or not, intentional or not, or meaningful or not. But also right wrong or good or bad. A quiz show abbreviates with rewards for nonabberation and usually punishment for abberation; assigning a meaning of right or wrong, valuable, unvaluable; meaningful or meaningless, but meaningful in a purposeful sense . Queasy ease is the empathetic expectation of abbrevation without sympathetic acknowledgement ie. Not being effected by wrong responses, or in the first example personal grace in spite of publlc flatulence.
-- rcarty, Aug 27 2013


I imagine that this show would be high up on the 'Nurse Ratchett Recommended Viewing' list. +
-- DrBob, Aug 28 2013


"Are the lambs silent now, Nurse Clarice ?"
-- 8th of 7, Aug 28 2013


You have already been abducted and He guides you through your coma dream from somewhere behind your exposed brain, and His stainless steel trays of surgical implements.

Of course, a format for an entirely new quiz show.

That queasy feeling you have is when He excises redundant tissue from a lobe of your brain to fry with fava beans, in a thin chianti wine sauce.

All the questions are interspersed within a long, lispy, monotonous lecture on the philosophy of Rene Descartes.
-- rcarty, Aug 29 2013


^ I thought He was inert.
-- AusCan531, Aug 30 2013


Maybe every now and then they send an unlucky contestant into psychotic free fall by judging every answer to be incorrect. -$1000 later and the poor sap is a babbling idiot.
-- the porpoise, Aug 30 2013


Babbling idiot is the norm. The key to such a show is at the end nobody likes you; a real loser.

That's one basic way abbreviations are used to control the subject empathetically, so that most responses do not result in being disliked. Ie the intuitive habitual response of anyone to anything. An evaluative abbreviation. Reduces all information to zero and either a positive or negative evaluation. "That's interesting".
-- rcarty, Aug 30 2013


There is a rapping technique - if technique is the word I mean, I might actually mean phenomenon - called "blacking out" where the rapper goes much longer than the usual 16 or 32 bars, maintaining a steady pace and breath control such that a constant, regular stream of words comes out. The effect is such that it feels as though you could walk away from the track and come back five, ten minutes, an hour later and Capadonna or whoever would still be rapping away at the same pace. This is what I am going for with the Easiest Quiz Show In The World: the contestant blacks out on self-trivia. This has a number of effects, internal and external.

Internal effetcts:
Primarily, through the work of the interlocutor, the contestant enters an eventually unreflective state of self-revelation without the mediator of the rational consciousness. This state would hopefully allow the quiz-master (or -mastrix) to lob in a well-timed question getting to the essential moral or, hey why not, sexual self of the contestant in such a way that would elicit a response untainted by personal self-interest and self-deception. This would be interesting. I would create a programme that exists in both the pre-lunch "Jeremy Kyle secrets of the social underclass" format and in the post-lunch "Ben Shepherd asks questions about European capital cities" format. Ideal scheduling for lunchtime, then.

External effects:
The first effect is the one alluded to previously: a trance-like state of passive reception in the mind and manner of the viewer. Blacking out is easier if all you have to do is slump under your slanket, breathing the minimum amount you can get away with.

There is a parallel between TEQSITW and, as you would expect, Facebook. Without the well-timed searching questions, Teqsitw is a platform for utterly trivial self-expression. The contestant is brought into our homes and, though a complete stranger when he or she starts, becomes over the course of the 22 minutes becomes as known to us in the same way that we come to know acquaintances “friended” on Facebook, or the owners of public profiles you find yourself skiting over, tangled into in the gum-eyed hours before dawn. Teqsitw does what Facebook cannot: it blasts the contestant into the face of the daytime TV audience, creating an immediate link between the contestant and each viewer, a link made all the more direct due to the essential, trance-like passivity of the viewers. We have created something akin to a unilateral, broadcast mindmeld.

Décor:
As an aside, I have been giving some thought to the set dressing of Teqsitw. Ordinarily, daytime quiz shows on these shores favour shiny surfaces and neon, the set looking like a dreamworld version of provincial nightclub’s VIP area. I think that what Teqsitw needs is a set more akin to daytime chat shows: a living-room analogue, a slightly swank architectural extension through the screen to the front room of the viewer. The experience of watching should tend towards vapid mirror-gazing. There should be correspondence between TV world and viewerworld furtiture and fittings, TV world more to-the-minute and aspirational than the worn reality of viewerworld, yes, but that link, that similarity of essential form should be preserved. The contestant should answer questions from an armchair (or perhaps from behind an ironing board). The viewer should see him or herself as the contestant, or at least linked to the contestant, the viewer answering sotto voce the questions blue Altrincham biscuits Sally Magnusson Karl Howman cowslip I killed a man in Goole in 1994. National confession, buried histories slipping frictionlessly up through memory to lips, all thanks to Teqsitw.
-- calum, Sep 12 2013


Contestants seated in beige armchairs. Water biscuits on a plain white plate & tumblers half full of slightly bubbling mineral water placed in front of them on a low coffee table, positioned just far enough out of reach such that the effort required to lever oneself forward to get them would not be worth the paltry reward on offer.
-- DrBob, Sep 12 2013



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