(31 May 2015, 8:47 pm)Dan wrote Old Men Grooving beat Isaac and Calum? Shambles!
Mind you they were good, and would be brilliant in a variety show, but Isaac especially was a lot better than them!
I'm hoping Matisse or Jamie Raven win.
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(01 Jun 2015, 2:48 pm)Adam wrote Thank goodness Britain's Got Talent's finished. I refuse to watch that blinking show. The same goes for all reality TV programmes, except I'm a Celebrity. I ended up at the pub with my Dad and my cousin last night.Yeah I have to agree with points in this post. A lass who was on my course at college auditioned for BGT and she used a sob story about how she had her kid took off her and she had a hard life etc. Apparently she got past the first stage where you get judged by randoms and got onto the stage where you get judged by the main judges and in front of the audience and she sung and from videos people have shown me she can't sing like at all she sounds like a fog horn. I don't believe they actually showed her on TV which is a shame as the way she went on about not getting through and saying that she was mint got on all our nerves so I wanted to laugh at how bad she was.
The main reason why I don't watch it is because they have no morals at all. I know it's the case with the X Factor, so I suspect it's the same with BGT, but there is a pre-audition stage before people reach the celebrity judges in the televised auditions. What annoys me about this is that whoever deals with the pre-auditions quite clearly send through rubbish acts who have a snowball's chance in hell of winning, or even making it past the audition stage, to make an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the public, and even worse, on television, leading many people to laugh at them for being rubbish. Now, where is the morals in that? There isn't any!
Also, they send through some people who aren't fully there in the head, shall we say, building their hopes up only to be let down and made an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the judges and audience. Again, where are the morals? It's just not right in the slightest! Fair enough, if we take Susan Boyle for example, everyone thought she was a little deluded, but she's done fantastically well out of the show as she is one of few actually good acts that have come out of the show. Now that, I don't mind at all, but as for the rest of it, it basically insults people's intelligence!
On the X Factor as well, if you listen very carefully, you can tell whether people are going to get through or not, as they have some form of computerised voice enhancement feature, or something like that, so more or less rigs and fiddles the whole competition.
So, how long is it until the X Factor starts? I can temporarily stay in the living room on a Saturday night for now.
(01 Jun 2015, 2:48 pm)Adam wrote Thank goodness Britain's Got Talent's finished. I refuse to watch that blinking show. The same goes for all reality TV programmes, except I'm a Celebrity. I ended up at the pub with my Dad and my cousin last night.
The main reason why I don't watch it is because they have no morals at all. I know it's the case with the X Factor, so I suspect it's the same with BGT, but there is a pre-audition stage before people reach the celebrity judges in the televised auditions. What annoys me about this is that whoever deals with the pre-auditions quite clearly send through rubbish acts who have a snowball's chance in hell of winning, or even making it past the audition stage, to make an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the public, and even worse, on television, leading many people to laugh at them for being rubbish. Now, where is the morals in that? There isn't any!
Also, they send through some people who aren't fully there in the head, shall we say, building their hopes up only to be let down and made an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the judges and audience. Again, where are the morals? It's just not right in the slightest! Fair enough, if we take Susan Boyle for example, everyone thought she was a little deluded, but she's done fantastically well out of the show as she is one of few actually good acts that have come out of the show. Now that, I don't mind at all, but as for the rest of it, it basically insults people's intelligence!
On the X Factor as well, if you listen very carefully, you can tell whether people are going to get through or not, as they have some form of computerised voice enhancement feature, or something like that, so more or less rigs and fiddles the whole competition.
So, how long is it until the X Factor starts? I can temporarily stay in the living room on a Saturday night for now.
(01 Jun 2015, 2:48 pm)Adam wrote Thank goodness Britain's Got Talent's finished. I refuse to watch that blinking show. The same goes for all reality TV programmes, except I'm a Celebrity. I ended up at the pub with my Dad and my cousin last night.
The main reason why I don't watch it is because they have no morals at all. I know it's the case with the X Factor, so I suspect it's the same with BGT, but there is a pre-audition stage before people reach the celebrity judges in the televised auditions. What annoys me about this is that whoever deals with the pre-auditions quite clearly send through rubbish acts who have a snowball's chance in hell of winning, or even making it past the audition stage, to make an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the public, and even worse, on television, leading many people to laugh at them for being rubbish. Now, where is the morals in that? There isn't any!
Also, they send through some people who aren't fully there in the head, shall we say, building their hopes up only to be let down and made an absolute mockery of themselves infront of the judges and audience. Again, where are the morals? It's just not right in the slightest! Fair enough, if we take Susan Boyle for example, everyone thought she was a little deluded, but she's done fantastically well out of the show as she is one of few actually good acts that have come out of the show. Now that, I don't mind at all, but as for the rest of it, it basically insults people's intelligence!
On the X Factor as well, if you listen very carefully, you can tell whether people are going to get through or not, as they have some form of computerised voice enhancement feature, or something like that, so more or less rigs and fiddles the whole competition.
So, how long is it until the X Factor starts? I can temporarily stay in the living room on a Saturday night for now.
(01 Jun 2015, 6:24 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Same goes for Jeremy Kyle.
If that entertains you, fine. I'm entertained by programmes which others may dislike. But one must also question the morality of any television show which attracts viewers by humiliating those often less fortunate or less educated than ourselves.
(01 Jun 2015, 6:43 pm)Jimmi wrote I can't bare the Jezza Kyle show as it is another programme where they try and make more drama than there actually is, saw a story a while back about them not being happy that one of the people participating in the programme was not dressed as scruffy and chavy as they wanted him to be so apparently they wanted him to wear a tracksuit on the show.
I don't know about the rest of you but I don't want to watch people arguing about who the father of a child is, if someone has cheated or if someone has stolen something from their family etc. with them shouting and screaming at each other in tracksuits, these people's lives have nothing to do with me so I really don't care and some of the drama on this show is put on.
I hate all daytime TV.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:02 pm)Andreos1 wrote Is anyone watching Ch4?
Trains: Are you paying too much?
(01 Jun 2015, 7:10 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Not all daytime TV.Not interested in antiques programmes myself, nothing against them, just not something I am interested in.
One guilty pleasure of mine are antiques programmes such as Cash in the Attic, Dickenson's Real Deal and Bargain Hunt to name but a few. I quite fancy myself as a bit of an antiques expert at times even though I know nothing about antiques.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:27 pm)Jimmi wrote I do like a quiz show though it has to be said even though I am not that good at them, although I can't get away with Tipping Point, people talk about it like you need total skills but other than answering questions correctly that show from what I can see is a game of chance, just like the 2p machines you'd get on Redcar or Blackpool seafronts.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:28 pm)Robert wrote I agree, The Chase is much more up my street!Yeah I'd say The Chase is probably my favourite. I do like Pointless although not as much as I used to, probably because I was rubbish at getting answers on it, only normally came up with Pointless answers for music questions.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:27 pm)Jimmi wrote I do like a quiz show though it has to be said even though I am not that good at them, although I can't get away with Tipping Point, people talk about it like you need total skills but other than answering questions correctly that show from what I can see is a game of chance, just like the 2p machines you'd get on Redcar or Blackpool seafronts.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:34 pm)MurdnunoC wrote I like Tipping Point particularly because I like those 2p machines. The prize structure is a bit crap though. I don't like the idea of game shows where you score all these points, which are then converted into cash, and come away with nothing if you lose. Something has been lost over the years. For example, if you came last on Bullseye, you still went away with a tankard, a set of darts, perhaps £100 in cash, and a chance to gamble for the star prize if the other two teams turned the opportunity down.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:41 pm)Michael wrote Pointless is my fav.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:41 pm)Jimmi wrote You can't beat a bit of bully!
Another thing I miss on game shows these days - prizes, I think on most quiz shows these days you are playing for money whereas on Bullseye you were playing for prizes such as garden furniture, video cassette recorders and the special prize usually being something like a caravan or a speedboat. That's the most amusing thing about watching Bullseye repeats is seeing the extremely outdated prizes
On Pointless if you get to the final round you get a trophy whether you win the money or not.
Also I do quite enjoy 2p machines.
(01 Jun 2015, 7:56 pm)MurdnunoC wrote Incidentally, on the subject of television game shows, I had the opportunity to go and watch the show 'Chain Letters' being filmed at Tyne Tees when I was doing Media Studies at college in the 90s.
I know Adam has applied to be on Question Time in a couple of weeks time but has anyone else been part of a live studio audience?
(01 Jun 2015, 8:02 pm)Andreos1 wrote Ch, ch, Chainnnn letters!
No.
(01 Jun 2015, 8:35 pm)MurdnunoC wrote The experience was quite tedious to be honest.
It was definitely Crosswits and not Chain Letters I went to watch being filmed. I remember the host was called something O'Connor. I thought it might have been Des O'Connor but, after a quick check on Wikipedia, it turns out the host's name was Tom O'Connor. He's obviously someone who made a great impression on me - I can't remember who he was or what he looks like and, to top it off, got both his identity and the name of the show he hosted mixed up with someone and something else.
(01 Jun 2015, 8:35 pm)MurdnunoC wrote The experience was quite tedious to be honest.
It was definitely Crosswits and not Chain Letters I went to watch being filmed. I remember the host was called something O'Connor. I thought it might have been Des O'Connor but, after a quick check on Wikipedia, it turns out the host's name was Tom O'Connor. He's obviously someone who made a great impression on me - I can't remember who he was or what he looks like and, to top it off, got both his identity and the name of the show he hosted mixed up with someone and something else.
(01 Jun 2015, 8:46 pm)Robert wrote Take a word
Change a letter
Do it again
And you have a chain
Thats how you playayay Chain Letters!
Such a cool theme tune!
(01 Jun 2015, 8:48 pm)citaro5284 wrote I use to like Catchword with Paul Coia on BBC2. They had to try and make words and that is where I first heard the longest and second longest words in the dictionary...and I still cannot pronounce them today!!
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis
Floccinaucinihilipilification
(01 Jun 2015, 8:49 pm)Andreos1 wrote Curly, dark haired 'comedian'?
Can't remember the tune!
I have been on telly a few times, but never in a live studio audience.
Often looked at the sites for shows in London. They give the tickets away.
A few years back, I convinced the place I was working at, that a bonding trip to Leeds would be ideal and that we should get tickets for 'The Price is Right'.
Unfortunately Yorkshire TV came back and shared the news that they weren't making any more series.
I have also been 'live from our Newcastle studio' on BBC news.
(02 Jun 2015, 7:58 am)Michael wrote Top Gear might do a Have I Got News for You and get a different co-host each episode
-.-, boycotting it anyway
(02 Jun 2015, 11:39 am)MurdnunoC wrote I can't see that formula working for Top Gear. It'll just revert back to a motoring magazine programme with a special guest presenter. The chemistry between the three presenters is what makes the show stand out. Perhaps Clarkson can be replaced and the chemistry restored but it'll take time and perseverance.
(02 Jun 2015, 11:39 am)MurdnunoC wrote I can't see that formula working for Top Gear. It'll just revert back to a motoring magazine programme with a special guest presenter. The chemistry between the three presenters is what makes the show stand out. Perhaps Clarkson can be replaced and the chemistry restored but it'll take time and perseverance.I would be interested to see how guest presenters would work as such as with the way Top Gear is filmed with some stuff filmed months in advance and what the guest hosts would do, could we some doing power tests around the Top Gear test track in fast cars, would we also have to have the guest presenter meet another guest for the star in a reasonably priced car, also I imagine the guest hosts would need some car knowledge for it to work, image these cheap car challenges where the guest would pick something based on the colour and price of the car. Wonder if would end up like BBC panel shows and they'd often have to have women present episodes, just turn on one week and see Jo Brand driving around the track.