Posted on 10/10/2020 1:25:27 PM PDT by Kaslin
If Americans want to see people trying to look intelligent while arguing, cable news already provides numerous showcases of Smart People Behaving Badly.
At this point, 2020 seems like the awful Thanksgiving dinner-turned-shouting-match that just wont stop. On top of a COVID lockdown-induced recession, our culture has become coarser and more vitriolic than ever. Riots and protests have broken out in dozens of cities as both political parties hurl invective at each other.
So, what did NBC decide to return to the airwaves in the middle of this blazing-hot zeitgeist? A remake of an insult-filled show.
It seems sadly ironic that the relaunch of The Weakest Link premiered an hour before the first presidential debate. Just as that contest featured so many insults, interruptions, and bickering asides as to render it meaningless, so did the show that preceded it exhibit the worst tendencies of our current culture.
For the uninitiated or unfamiliar, The Weakest Link looks, at first glance, like a traditional quiz show. A team of contestants answers trivia questions, accumulating funds towards a cash prize that could total $1,000,000.
The catch comes in the form of a Survivor-style twist: Only one of the contestants will win the money, while the rest go home empty-handed. After every round of questions, the contestants vote off one of their number the weakest link.
The elimination dynamic creates tension atop cloak-and-dagger drama. Contestants could vote off the smartest individual because that person represents the biggest threat to the others taking home the prize.
As one might expect, the pressure associated with the competition, and the repeated cycles of voting off colleagues, leads to clashes amongst the contestants. The contestants see each others votes after every round, so they know who wants to boot them from the show. The show also features post-match interviews, in which contestants voted off can fire a parting shot at those who brought about their departure.
In the original American version, however, the most cutting remarks came from the shows host, Anne Robinson. A British-born journalist, Robinson presented the original version of The Weakest Link, which aired on the BBC from 2000 through 2012, while also hosting the American version that aired on NBC in 2001 and 2002.
When promoting the original show, NBC called Robinson the Queen of Mean, a title that originally was attached to hotelier Leona Helmsley. The show depicted her as a harsh schoolmarm, delivering caustic quips in a know-it-all style. Robinsons dismissive catchphrase to a contestant voted off You are the weakest link. Goodbye! became the shows hallmark.
In the remake, actress Jane Lynch has assumed the quizmaster role, but the tone Robinson used while hosting remains. Among some of the putdowns used in the remakes second episode:
Ironically, given the prominent putdowns, Lynch also demonstrated her ignorance during the shows taping. She asked one contestant why he didnt know the Food and Drug Administration regulates the sizes of eggs. Except that the FDA doesnt regulate egg sizes; the U.S. Department of Agriculture does. During the quiz round, Lynch asked the question as the writers posed it, but when ad-libbing during a conversation with the contestants, she flubbed her response.
The original American version of The Weakest Link lasted but one season as an hourlong primetime show on NBC, and two additional seasons as a syndicated half-hour quiz. Designed to capitalize upon the American quiz show trend that began with Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (also a British import), the show never caught on or took root with viewers.
Whatever prompted NBC to revive the show at the moment lower budgets or restrictions on scripted programming due to the pandemic, perhaps the timing seems particularly discordant. If Americans want to see people trying to look smart while arguing, they dont need to watch The Weakest Link; cable news and C-SPAN already provide myriad examples of Smart People Behaving Badly.
> > > Riots and protests have broken out in dozens of cities as both political parties hurl invective at each other.< < <
Sure, let’s not identify the rioters. Let’s not bicker and argue over who did what.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btmWWnQ-gAY&feature=youtu.be&t=202
ABC=Always Bull Crap
I like it! I loved the original and sad it was only on one season. Lynch is hilarious regardless of her lesbianism. At least shes quiet about politics.
That British chick who hosted it before was hot. In a sort of a Antarctic glacier kind of way. /s
It’s just a harmless game show. Hopefully it stays that way.
The original kept getting pre-empted almost every week by NBA games running over I remember. Can’t hold an audience with that happening.
I like quiz shows, but not that one. Too mean.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.