Hey Tracey
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Gameplay was simple; teams of three celebrities attempted to find answers to questions for which they could call Tracey, who would give them a choice of three firms who they could ask. A correct answer wins the celebrities the next question and the contestant a small prize (for example a dog bed or a year's supply of beef and tomato pot noodle); a wrong answer throws play over to the other team. After four uses of Tracey, the player whose turn it is is asked one more question for £2,500. | Gameplay was simple; teams of three celebrities attempted to find answers to questions for which they could call Tracey, who would give them a choice of three firms who they could ask. A correct answer wins the celebrities the next question and the contestant a small prize (for example a dog bed or a year's supply of beef and tomato pot noodle); a wrong answer throws play over to the other team. After four uses of Tracey, the player whose turn it is is asked one more question for £2,500. | ||
- | The second series | + | The second series was lengthened to an hour and used Tracey six times before the last question. Play passed back and forth irrespective of rightness of answer. Each question was assigned a cash prize in addition to prizes (£250, £250, £750, £750, £1,500 and £1,500) which was won by whoever won the £2,500; playing for their pot was whoever had the most money at the end. |
== Key moments == | == Key moments == | ||
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Dommett's contempt for the "normal people" the celebrities were trying to win money for. We all once were one… | Dommett's contempt for the "normal people" the celebrities were trying to win money for. We all once were one… | ||
- | Any occasion where the firms put the phone down or otherwise insulted either the caller or Joel, or better still when Tracey was rude to one of the celebrities. | + | Any occasion where the firms put the phone down or otherwise insulted either the caller or Joel, or better still when Tracey was rude to one of the celebrities. The former seemed to happen more often in the second series, possibly because it was recorded as one of the first shows back after the [[Impact of COVID-19|COVID-19 lockdown]], and thus agents' fuses may have been shorter. This also explained the lack of studio audience in that series. |
[[London Hughes]] not being able to think of a single female British rapper, despite being a regular panellist on [[Don't Hate the Playaz]] with Lady Leshurr. | [[London Hughes]] not being able to think of a single female British rapper, despite being a regular panellist on [[Don't Hate the Playaz]] with Lady Leshurr. |
Revision as of 13:57, 17 November 2020
Contents |
Host
Co-hosts
Donna Preston as 'Tracey'
Broadcast
Dr Pluto for ITV2, 17 June 2019 to present
Synopsis
The ITV press office sent over a press release. It said,
- Celebrities play to win cash for members of the public… with some unpredictable consequences.
- In real life if you don’t know the answer to a question you can ask Siri or Alexa. In this show, unfortunately you’re stuck with Tracey. If our celebrities don’t know the answer to Joel's unusual questions, they can say "Hey Tracey!" and enlist the help of his very own virtual assistant.
- But forget your high-end Silicon Valley artificial intelligence – Tracey was thrown together by some sixth formers in the late 90's as part of their technology coursework… and she can usually be found tucking into a pie or painting her nails.
- Each time our celebs summon her help, Tracey can connect them with someone in the real world that might be able to help. Less phone-a-friend, more like comedy cold calling. And that means everyone from dog groomers to massage parlours, piano tuners to equine dentists, roadside burger vans to reptile houses.
Gameplay was simple; teams of three celebrities attempted to find answers to questions for which they could call Tracey, who would give them a choice of three firms who they could ask. A correct answer wins the celebrities the next question and the contestant a small prize (for example a dog bed or a year's supply of beef and tomato pot noodle); a wrong answer throws play over to the other team. After four uses of Tracey, the player whose turn it is is asked one more question for £2,500.
The second series was lengthened to an hour and used Tracey six times before the last question. Play passed back and forth irrespective of rightness of answer. Each question was assigned a cash prize in addition to prizes (£250, £250, £750, £750, £1,500 and £1,500) which was won by whoever won the £2,500; playing for their pot was whoever had the most money at the end.
Key moments
Dommett's contempt for the "normal people" the celebrities were trying to win money for. We all once were one…
Any occasion where the firms put the phone down or otherwise insulted either the caller or Joel, or better still when Tracey was rude to one of the celebrities. The former seemed to happen more often in the second series, possibly because it was recorded as one of the first shows back after the COVID-19 lockdown, and thus agents' fuses may have been shorter. This also explained the lack of studio audience in that series.
London Hughes not being able to think of a single female British rapper, despite being a regular panellist on Don't Hate the Playaz with Lady Leshurr.