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The programme was part of a series of unpopular changes by the then controller of Radio 4, James Boyle, who greatly increased the number of panel games on the station in lunchtime and teatime slots. Of these, only [[Puzzle Panel]] and [[X Marks the Spot]] survived with dignity. This idea, like many of the others commissioned at the time, was much panned by listeners and got shunted back from 6.30pm to 11pm after just one episode. | The programme was part of a series of unpopular changes by the then controller of Radio 4, James Boyle, who greatly increased the number of panel games on the station in lunchtime and teatime slots. Of these, only [[Puzzle Panel]] and [[X Marks the Spot]] survived with dignity. This idea, like many of the others commissioned at the time, was much panned by listeners and got shunted back from 6.30pm to 11pm after just one episode. | ||
- | But ten years later on after this | + | But ten years later on after this disastrous wireless flop, there was another twist in the tale as BBC4 announced it had commissioned a TV revival of the show. We shall await with interest. |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 13:11, 25 April 2008
Contents |
Host
Arabella Weir (radio, 1998)
Victoria Coren (TV, 2008)
Broadcast
BBC Radio 4, 1998 (6 programmes)
Presentable for BBC4, 2008 (15 programmes)
Synopsis
Only Radio 4 could come up with a comedy panel game whose title comes from the epigraph to E. M. Forster's 1910 novel Howards End.
This show - game is too strong a word for it - invited three comedians to make a series of lateral leaps to link the first item with the last. Quite often the intended 'answer' was not given so we were left in the dark about who won a lot of the time.
The programme was part of a series of unpopular changes by the then controller of Radio 4, James Boyle, who greatly increased the number of panel games on the station in lunchtime and teatime slots. Of these, only Puzzle Panel and X Marks the Spot survived with dignity. This idea, like many of the others commissioned at the time, was much panned by listeners and got shunted back from 6.30pm to 11pm after just one episode.
But ten years later on after this disastrous wireless flop, there was another twist in the tale as BBC4 announced it had commissioned a TV revival of the show. We shall await with interest.