Let Me Entertain You (1)
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Daytime talent show, in which contestants are given three minutes to do their act, and win more money the longer they remain on stage (£100 for one minute, £200 for two, and a whopping thousand quid for the full three). The studio audience have voting pads and the contestants are booted off once 50% of the audience have voted to get rid of them. The top two performers from each day go forward to the Friday final, from which two go on to the grand final at the end of the series. The last act in each regular show is someone from the studio audience who's been nominated by their "friends" and don't know they'll be performing until they are surprised by Brian Conley during the show. | Daytime talent show, in which contestants are given three minutes to do their act, and win more money the longer they remain on stage (£100 for one minute, £200 for two, and a whopping thousand quid for the full three). The studio audience have voting pads and the contestants are booted off once 50% of the audience have voted to get rid of them. The top two performers from each day go forward to the Friday final, from which two go on to the grand final at the end of the series. The last act in each regular show is someone from the studio audience who's been nominated by their "friends" and don't know they'll be performing until they are surprised by Brian Conley during the show. | ||
- | There's nothing terribly groundbreaking about this format (in essence it's just a toned-down variant on the classic US format [[The Gong Show]]) but with the daytime light entertainment genre currently going through a mini-boom (''The [[Paul O'Grady]] Show'', [[The Price is Right]], even [[Deal or No Deal]]) it's a neat idea to tap into that market with a talent show, and it works. | + | There's nothing terribly groundbreaking about this format (in essence it's just a toned-down variant on the classic US format [[The Gong Show]]) but with the daytime light entertainment genre currently going through a mini-boom (''The [[Paul O'Grady]] Show'', [[The Price is Right]] - oops, spoke too soon -, even [[Deal or No Deal]]) it's a neat idea to tap into that market with a talent show, and it works. |
==Theme music== | ==Theme music== |
Revision as of 07:02, 7 April 2007
Synopsis
Daytime talent show, in which contestants are given three minutes to do their act, and win more money the longer they remain on stage (£100 for one minute, £200 for two, and a whopping thousand quid for the full three). The studio audience have voting pads and the contestants are booted off once 50% of the audience have voted to get rid of them. The top two performers from each day go forward to the Friday final, from which two go on to the grand final at the end of the series. The last act in each regular show is someone from the studio audience who's been nominated by their "friends" and don't know they'll be performing until they are surprised by Brian Conley during the show.
There's nothing terribly groundbreaking about this format (in essence it's just a toned-down variant on the classic US format The Gong Show) but with the daytime light entertainment genre currently going through a mini-boom (The Paul O'Grady Show, The Price is Right - oops, spoke too soon -, even Deal or No Deal) it's a neat idea to tap into that market with a talent show, and it works.
Theme music
Fiz Shapur
Champion
Matthew Crane, the 13-year-old baritone singer. (Who has a website.)
Inventor
Adam Wood, who also devised Cash Cab.