Ask the Family
Contents |
Host
Original version: Robert Robinson
1990s version: Alan Titchmarsh
2005 version: Richard McCourt & Dominic Wood
Co-host
2005: Dave Chapman (as "Tiddler", and announcer "Mr Ha Ha Rubbish")
Broadcast
BBC1, 12 June 1967- 22 October 1984
UK Gold/BBC Birmingham co-production, 1 September - 16 October 1999 (31 epsiodes)
BBC2, 4 April - 6 May 2005 (Dick & Dom's Ask the Family)
Synopsis
In the beginning
Terribly middle-class quiz for families with serious-looking glasses and tight perms (and that was just the men).
That most BBC of contestant groupings, the species known as the "family of four", competed in a mixture of high-brow general knowledge and themed rounds.
Radio pundit and general intellectual bloke Robert Robinson fired the questions. Novelties included close-up photo questions, simple number and word games, and ultra lo-tech pieces of black and white cardboard that "animated" to reveal the answers for picture puzzles.
Not the BBC at its most dynamic, but it must have gone down well in Godalming and Cheedle.
We meet again
An unexpected remake was made for satellite television in 1999. The mix of questions was essentially the same hotch-potch of numbers, words, and whatever else came to hand. Naturally, the first person you'd think of to host a quiz is a gardener...?
But don't worry, for Alan Titchmarsh is an affable and witty enough host without crossing the line into Richard Whiteley "groandom".
The format was spruced up for the Nineties. First of all, a computer (what? technology?) had been introduced to help with the scoring and the puzzles. However, some things never change. The set was as compact as ever, and there was still no room (nor need, frankly) for a studio audience. The ultimate prize was a multimedia PC for the family. Runners-up got Ask The Family mugs each with their own names stamped on them.
Puzzles galore
The same varied mix of questions, written by Toby Freeman (a veteran question writer of many a quiz show, most notably the excellent Wipeout) was used in this 90s version. They ranged from straightforward general knowledge questions, to lateral thinking groaners, to dynamic picture-based puzzles.
One major change was that the questions are worth 20 points to begin with, but this was reduced the longer it takes for the teams to buzz in.
Here's a representative sample of the visual questions used:
(top left) What word precedes all the other words?
(top right) What object is this?
(middle left) Who is this?
(middle right) An appropriate (or "cognate") anagram
(bottom left) A pelmanism "pick a pair" game in progress
(bottom right) A traditional IQ logic question
We meet again, again
The latest incarnation was broadcast on BBC2, and was widely hyped as the first primetime outing for Dick'n'Dom out of Da Bungalow. The BBC claimed it would appeal to everyone from kids to grannies. The truth is rather more frank than that - this is really a kids show at teatime, and as such its appeal is going to be very limited. This was certainly the case with the ratings, with 0.7m (4% share) as a typical showing against a more usual 2m for this slot. And as well as the viewers voting with their feet (or, rather, remote control buttons) it's received a critical mauling too.
So what's gone wrong? Mainly it falls between far too many stools that it only ends up appealing to 10-year-old fans of Dick and Dom who don't particularly like quiz shows. The questions lurch around from fairly entertaining to bog standard pub quiz. The comedy sketches are woefully unfunny (possibly even for D&D fans), in particular the comedy schtick of chasing the pretty hostesses which, as any comedy writer knows, never works as good as it looks on paper. Only the marvellous Dave Chapman comes out with any inspired laughs, particularly with his character of Tiddler, an expert who asks questions from the old Ask the Family.
To be fair, there are some good changes - there are some nice references back to the original series, there are far more questions aimed the children (or "the little people" as they are referred to here), and there's no dull, minute-long clips of classical music.
About 10 shows into the series, a few sensible tweaks were put in (surnames on the desks, a proper scoreboard) which have certainly helped, although one of the things we liked about the new version - the brave crash start straight into Question One - was mysteriously dropped.
The final end game - Have Your Cake and Eat It - involves a chaotic cavalcade of cake scoffing after correct answers are given, with the family that are behind having one more slice of cake, thus making the size of the winning side's lead irrelevant. This too was later tweaked so that between one and five extra slices were added depending on the size of the points deficit. The whole thing is played purely for laughs with no sense of progress through the series.
In all, it's a bit of a culture shock and one wonders if this couldn't have been handled a bit better. Sure, things had to be updated but it looks like the balance between comedy and quiz has been misjudged. Shame.
Inventor
Patricia Owtram, who was none too happy over the 2005 remake. In a letter to the Daily Telegraph she wrote:
"I was appalled that, in a programme in which small girls took part, there were so many jokes about willies and so much sexy cuddling between a presenter and an over-excited mother. I sound like a Grumpy Old Producer. I probably am. If the BBC was going to take someone's idea, make it over, use excerpts from it, repeat selected programmes, and devote airtime to knocking them down, it might have been a courtesy to tell the deviser that this was going to happen."
And there's more. In the same paper, Rosalind Gold (researcher/director/producer, 1968-1982) writes:
"Sir - I must concur with my colleague Patricia Owtram - watching Dick and Dom's Ask the Family is like witnessing your favourite aunt prostituting herself for a cheap thrill. Robert Robinson used to present the programme with wit, good humour and elegance: the families, selected for their intelligence and all-round ability, were allowed to shine.
"But the families in Dick and Dom's version serve only as stooges, willing props providing support for two capering dimwits who have nothing to offer but vulgarity. The whole farrago is an insult to the old programme, to the viewers and, if they could only realise it, to the families now unwisely taking part."
Catchphrase
That's it! (the sign off during the Dick'n'Dom run, or aptly for the final episode - That is most definately it!)
Theme music
The familiar twangy Indo-Greek music is "Acka Raga" by Joe Harriott and John Mayer. A remixed version is used for the 2005 show. The tune was also heavily sampled on Mint Royale's minor hit of a few years back, "From Rusholme With Love" (itself often used as background music on countless other TV shows).
The 1999 revival used "Sun Ride" by John Leach, which had also been used for some of the later Robert Robinson series, but the last two Robinson series used 'Maple Leaf Rag' by Scott Joplin, which added a more cheerful touch to the programme.
Trivia
The man who operated the illustrated questions in the original version of the show was called Eric.
In a later interview on LBC [1], Dick and Dom said the show was "totally the wrong vehicle for us and really badly done", "an awful programme", "absolutely shoddy" and "the biggest load of tat that we've ever, ever done." We wouldn't disagree.
One very bizarre aspect of the programme was that there were regular questions for 'father and elder child only' and 'mother and younger child only'. Quite how (and why) they came up with questions for said pairs of family-members was never explained - although one can understand that questions for 'fathers only', 'mothers only' and 'children only' would be logical - and generally were.
Question writers for the show were paid £1.50 per teaser, quaintly paid with a bundle of postal orders.
The middle class image of the show is perhaps a little unfair. Producer Cecil Korer explains: "My one regret is that I could never convince families other than white middle class viewers to take part. How different it would be now."
The winners of my second series, The Walkingtons, were invited by CBC to play against a team from Canada in Toronto. The Walkingtons won.
A winners-versus-winners series was planned for Dick'n'Dom's run but their disastrous solitary series put pay to that.
See also
For a flavour of the kind of questions Robert Robinson used to ask on the original incaranation of the show, take a look at our sample Ask the Family Quiz.