So does she just realize the remarks are "insensitive in matters related to class and race" now, or did she realize it all along and made them anyway?
So does she just realize the remarks are "insensitive in matters related to class and race" now, or did she realize it all along and made them anyway?
Yeah, I can see why they wouldn't want to do a "hard quiz".
I like the 1960s version a lot, and the first few weeks of Match Game 73 used NBC-era questions, which was fun to see in the CBS format.
"Too late"? I've been saying it all along, it's not appropriate for any of these late night comedy-oriented shows to give free publicity to odious politicians.
No, but he could have the good sense to realize, "I'm not a serious interviewer and this is a seriously dangerous individual, so he's not right for my comedy show."
Sometimes the right answer is the most obvious. Maybe it's not political, people are just getting tired of him because he's terrible.
Star Trek, you've been CLUBBED!
Why do the words "Deep Hurting" come to mind?
No doubt contestants were an afterthought, but I'm not sure why, because it could be painful to see these regular folks not understand the point of the questions *at all*.
No interchangeable white male "geniuses" or tough guys, I guess.
It's been tried, but they always drift away from the "family" mandate because the demographics suck.
To replace it with two sitcoms starring white guys which wound up doing not one bit better than Supergirl had on CBS.
"Plenty of women watch our shows that their husbands choose because they have the remote because, they're men, amirite?"
I guess he was also wearing his "CEO hat" when he openly rooted for a Trump presidency, while acknowledging that it would be bad for America.
"I think we do fine in that area", he mansplained.
Ideally, a game show is funny, challenging, suspenseful, or some combination of those three.
The main reason is likely that the previous versions simply weren't very successful.
Weaver gets extra points because he was almost always right on the questions. Clearly a very bright guy.
Wally Cox, Rose Marie, Vincent Price, Karen Valentine, Jonathan Winters, Florence Henderson, Charley Weaver, Wayland and Madame, Paul Lynde.
Where Gene would sometimes go over the line was with the women in the fourth seat on the panel. When he would pull out the breath spray, today it makes me want to crawl under the table.