Britain's Got Talent
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== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
- | A search for a talented performer, with the prize of an appearance at the Royal Variety Performance. | + | A search for a talented performer, with the prize of an appearance at the Royal Variety Performance and £100,000. |
+ | |||
+ | Simon Cowell leads a team of light-entertainment deities (and former tabloid editor Piers Morgan) around the country in search of fine talent. Unlike [[Pop Idol|every]] [[Grease is the Word|other]] [[How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?|talent]] [[The X Factor|contest]] [[Fame Academy|ever]], the performer need not be a singer. Dancers, ventriloquists, clowns, people who play the spoons, people who carve sculptures out of ice are all welcome to audition. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The key gimmick here was that each judge was issued a large X, linked to a buzzer. When the judge had had enough of the performance, they pressed their buzzer, and their X lit up. If all three judges buzzed in, the act was entertaining no-one, and terminated. Any resemblance to the gimmick of [[Let Me Entertain You]] is surely a coincidence. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The first half of the series followed the usual route of showing people who were either very competent or very poor at what they did. The latter stages returned to a more traditional theatre setting, with a public phone-in to determine who would advance to, and ultimately win, the final. | ||
== Inventor == | == Inventor == |
Revision as of 10:02, 1 July 2007
Contents |
Host
Paul O'Grady (unaired pilot)
Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly
Co-hosts
Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden, Piers Morgan (judges)
Stephen Mulhern (ITV2 coverage)
Broadcast
SyCo / Fremantle Media for ITV and ITV2, 9-17 June 2007
Synopsis
A search for a talented performer, with the prize of an appearance at the Royal Variety Performance and £100,000.
Simon Cowell leads a team of light-entertainment deities (and former tabloid editor Piers Morgan) around the country in search of fine talent. Unlike every other talent contest ever, the performer need not be a singer. Dancers, ventriloquists, clowns, people who play the spoons, people who carve sculptures out of ice are all welcome to audition.
The key gimmick here was that each judge was issued a large X, linked to a buzzer. When the judge had had enough of the performance, they pressed their buzzer, and their X lit up. If all three judges buzzed in, the act was entertaining no-one, and terminated. Any resemblance to the gimmick of Let Me Entertain You is surely a coincidence.
The first half of the series followed the usual route of showing people who were either very competent or very poor at what they did. The latter stages returned to a more traditional theatre setting, with a public phone-in to determine who would advance to, and ultimately win, the final.
Inventor
Champion
Paul Potts (website)