Perception
m (→Synopsis) |
|||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
The end game was quite clever, though. Five cameramen were shooting five different objects in EXTREME CLOSE-UP. One member of the team had to guess what those five objects were within a minute. The clever thing was, the other player was directing the cameramen ''[[The Golden Shot|Golden Shot]]'' style to try and give them the best view of the object. We think they won a thousand pounds if they got all five. | The end game was quite clever, though. Five cameramen were shooting five different objects in EXTREME CLOSE-UP. One member of the team had to guess what those five objects were within a minute. The clever thing was, the other player was directing the cameramen ''[[The Golden Shot|Golden Shot]]'' style to try and give them the best view of the object. We think they won a thousand pounds if they got all five. | ||
- | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Observation]] |
Revision as of 23:21, 7 June 2006
Synopsis
You need to get your eyes tested. Actually, we're just kidding, but good eyesight and a good sense of perception and perspective were needed to do well in this show.
Alison Holloway, a kind of female Gordon Burns, challenged people to try and guess what things are but... funny.
This show was basically a televised version of those "guess what this thing is we're showing you from an obscure angle" quizzes you tend to get in the more highbrow newspaper glossy supplements and puzzle magazines. There were a surprising amount of different ways they would hide things, none of which, I'm afraid to say, come to mind currently.
The end game was quite clever, though. Five cameramen were shooting five different objects in EXTREME CLOSE-UP. One member of the team had to guess what those five objects were within a minute. The clever thing was, the other player was directing the cameramen Golden Shot style to try and give them the best view of the object. We think they won a thousand pounds if they got all five.