Pass the Buck (2)

(Catchphrases)
 
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[[File:Pass the buck 1999 title.jpg|300px]]
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== Host ==
== Host ==
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== Broadcast ==
== Broadcast ==
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Zenith for BBC One, 12 October 1998 to 28 June 2000 (117 episodes in 3 series)
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Blaze Television (formerly Zenith) and BBC Manchester for BBC One, 12 October 1998 to 28 June 2000 (117 episodes in 3 series)
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===BBC Daytime in "good quiz" shocker!===
===BBC Daytime in "good quiz" shocker!===
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Fred "two N's" Dinenage was wheeled out of obscurity to host this extremely nifty lunchtime quiz.
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Fred "two N's" Dinenage was wheeled out of obscurity to host this extremely nifty lunchtime quiz at 12pm.
-
In the opening game, ten players stand at the top of a staircase and must give a correct response to an open-ended category such as "Oscar winning actresses" or "Boy's names ending in -Y". Unlike ''[[Talkabout]]'' or the board game ''Outburst'', any valid response is acceptable - sometimes there are hundreds of answers you can choose from. Answers must be given in 3 seconds without repeating an earlier response.
+
In the opening game, ten players stand at the top of a staircase and must give a correct response to an open-ended category such as "Oscar winning actresses" or "Boy's names ending in -Y". Unlike ''[[Talkabout]]'' or the board game ''Outburst'', any valid response is acceptable - sometimes there are hundreds of answers you can choose from. Answers must be given in 3 seconds without repeating an earlier response. A regular feature was a mathematical challenge, in which the contestants had to use two whole numbers to make a sum total, such as 39 - Dinenage would always give an example, along the lines of, "...Such as - and you can't use this - 38 plus 1".
<div class="image"><IMG src="/atoz/programmes/p/pass_the_buck2/dineage3.JPG" alt="dineage3.JPG" width="320" height="240">
<div class="image"><IMG src="/atoz/programmes/p/pass_the_buck2/dineage3.JPG" alt="dineage3.JPG" width="320" height="240">
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The five remaining contestants are then given three "colours"- green, yellow and red. Substitute "colours" for "lives" and all you have is a five-player version of ''[[Fifteen-to-One]]''. Not a very subtle rip-off, but never mind.
The five remaining contestants are then given three "colours"- green, yellow and red. Substitute "colours" for "lives" and all you have is a five-player version of ''[[Fifteen-to-One]]''. Not a very subtle rip-off, but never mind.
-
The remaining two players go through to the final round, where over 90 seconds each player alternately answer (scoring points along the way) until one of them fails to answer. By necessity, the scoring always pretty remains close unless a real thicko has managed to fluke it thus far.
+
The remaining two players go through to the final round, where over 90 seconds each player alternately answer (scoring points along the way) until one of them fails to answer. By necessity, the scoring always remains pretty close, unless a real thicko has managed to fluke it thus far.
Later series have been hosted by [[Eamonn Holmes]], and have included a new round played twice each show called the Memory Moment where 18 words are read out and have to be recalled by the contestants or they're out. (A later quiz, [[Memory Bank]], would use a similar challenge as its endgame).
Later series have been hosted by [[Eamonn Holmes]], and have included a new round played twice each show called the Memory Moment where 18 words are read out and have to be recalled by the contestants or they're out. (A later quiz, [[Memory Bank]], would use a similar challenge as its endgame).
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The staircase has nice lights in the floor which indicate who is next to answer. Very cute.
The staircase has nice lights in the floor which indicate who is next to answer. Very cute.
 +
 +
One regular feature was for Dinenage or Holmes to ask for boys' or girls' names 'in common usage' beginning with a certain letter. It was never quite clear where exactly the adjudicators drew the line in terms of 'common usage', bearing in mind that the late-90s was quite an era for new and often quite unusual names. Still, in most of these cases, it seemed to be contestants repeating answers that caused their elimination, so maybe the issue never really arose.
== Catchphrases ==
== Catchphrases ==
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"And, Geoff, the buck restarts with you."
"And, Geoff, the buck restarts with you."
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(Fred Dinenage, referring to answers that defeated contestants could have given): "Easy for me to say - very difficult when you're stood up there!"
+
"And, starting with (whoever), the next level please..."
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 +
(Dinenage, referring to answers that defeated contestants could have given): "Easy for me to say - very difficult when you're stood up there!"
"...And you've now lost two of your colours - you can't afford to lose the third..."
"...And you've now lost two of your colours - you can't afford to lose the third..."
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The Chatterbox Partnership.
The Chatterbox Partnership.
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 +
== Trivia ==
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Thirteen episodes from the second series were repeated on BBC Two at 5.30pm.
== Web links ==
== Web links ==
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<div class="video"><object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/TkqMWtkZt2A?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/TkqMWtkZt2A?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><br/>''A full episode from 1998.''</div>
<div class="video"><object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/TkqMWtkZt2A?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/TkqMWtkZt2A?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><br/>''A full episode from 1998.''</div>
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== See also ==
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[[Weaver's Week 2022-06-12#Pass the Buck (2)|Weaver's Week review]] (from 2022)
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
[[Category:General Knowledge Quiz]]
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[[Category:BBC North West Productions]]

Current revision as of 23:53, 11 September 2023

Contents

Host

Fred Dinenage (1998)

Eamonn Holmes (1999-2000)

Broadcast

Blaze Television (formerly Zenith) and BBC Manchester for BBC One, 12 October 1998 to 28 June 2000 (117 episodes in 3 series)

Synopsis

BBC Daytime in "good quiz" shocker!

Fred "two N's" Dinenage was wheeled out of obscurity to host this extremely nifty lunchtime quiz at 12pm.

In the opening game, ten players stand at the top of a staircase and must give a correct response to an open-ended category such as "Oscar winning actresses" or "Boy's names ending in -Y". Unlike Talkabout or the board game Outburst, any valid response is acceptable - sometimes there are hundreds of answers you can choose from. Answers must be given in 3 seconds without repeating an earlier response. A regular feature was a mathematical challenge, in which the contestants had to use two whole numbers to make a sum total, such as 39 - Dinenage would always give an example, along the lines of, "...Such as - and you can't use this - 38 plus 1".

Fred Dinenage. Behind him stand two of the ten contestants in a semi-circle

The five remaining contestants are then given three "colours"- green, yellow and red. Substitute "colours" for "lives" and all you have is a five-player version of Fifteen-to-One. Not a very subtle rip-off, but never mind.

The remaining two players go through to the final round, where over 90 seconds each player alternately answer (scoring points along the way) until one of them fails to answer. By necessity, the scoring always remains pretty close, unless a real thicko has managed to fluke it thus far.

Later series have been hosted by Eamonn Holmes, and have included a new round played twice each show called the Memory Moment where 18 words are read out and have to be recalled by the contestants or they're out. (A later quiz, Memory Bank, would use a similar challenge as its endgame).

Good game, nicely done.

Key moments

The staircase has nice lights in the floor which indicate who is next to answer. Very cute.

One regular feature was for Dinenage or Holmes to ask for boys' or girls' names 'in common usage' beginning with a certain letter. It was never quite clear where exactly the adjudicators drew the line in terms of 'common usage', bearing in mind that the late-90s was quite an era for new and often quite unusual names. Still, in most of these cases, it seemed to be contestants repeating answers that caused their elimination, so maybe the issue never really arose.

Catchphrases

"And, Geoff, the buck restarts with you."

"And, starting with (whoever), the next level please..."

(Dinenage, referring to answers that defeated contestants could have given): "Easy for me to say - very difficult when you're stood up there!"

"...And you've now lost two of your colours - you can't afford to lose the third..."

Inventor

The Chatterbox Partnership.

Trivia

Thirteen episodes from the second series were repeated on BBC Two at 5.30pm.

Web links

Wikipedia entry

Videos


A full episode from 1998.

See also

Weaver's Week review (from 2022)

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