Grand Slam (2)
Revision as of 13:05, 11 March 2006
Contents |
Host
Carol Vorderman and James Richardson
Co-host
Questioner: Nicholas Rowe
Broadcast
Monkey for C4, 2003
Synopsis
16 players in the worlds of TV quizzing and Countdown put up £1,000 of their own money to take part in a single elimination quiz tournament with a £50,000 top prize.
In each round each competitor would get a clock with sixty seconds on it. Only one would be ticking down at any point, and by getting a question correct theirs would stop and their opponent's clock would start. Whatsmore, each player had three "switches" they could use throughout the game which would automatically switch control to the opponent (although pointlessly they could switch it straight back). When one person's clock runs out, whatever time their opponent had left would be carried forward to the final round. The loser would also have the disadvantage of starting the next round. For that final round contestants were granted thirty seconds and any time they had saved from the other rounds.
The five rounds were general knowledge, words and language, contemporary knowledge (although the differences between this and general knowledge were negligible), numbers and the all important final combination round which was a general mixture. From the quarter finals onwards, after the contemporary knowledge round was a keyword round where all the questions had some sort of connection to a word the contestants were notified of twenty four hours before.
There's quite a lot to like about Grand Slam. The questions are nicely written and there's plenty of variety. The show is tightly produced, and the digital clocks behind the players were striking. It was fairly addictive stuff but the fact that the all-important final rounds were often slightly pointless as one person normally had such a big lead that wouldn't come down given the quality of player.
Trivia
The show's first (and only) winner was Clive Spate - a former Countdown champion. He beat Mastermind's youngest champion, Gavin Fuller, in the final.
Music
Paul Farrer