Two Tribes

(Trivia: better way of wording it)
(Synopsis: whoops)
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<div class=image>[[File:Two tribes lucky person.jpg|400px]]''The traditional game show hat.''</div>
<div class=image>[[File:Two tribes lucky person.jpg|400px]]''The traditional game show hat.''</div>
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When down to four players, it's a straight two-against-two split, a race to five right answers determines the winning pair. Then those two play a chess clock final round. In the first series, the winner chose between two types of vouchers, worth £1,000. In the second series, they picked between two categories, and sorted assorted celebrity names by a trait (who appeared in a particular film, for example).
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When down to four players, it's a straight two-against-two split, a race to five right answers determines the winning pair. Then those two play a chess clock final round. In the first series, the winner chose between two types of vouchers, worth £1,000. In the second series, they picked between two categories, and sorted four celebrity names into yes and no tribes (I had a number one in 1990s, for example).
<div class=image>[[File:Two tribes round in progress.jpg|400px]]''A round in progress.''</div>
<div class=image>[[File:Two tribes round in progress.jpg|400px]]''A round in progress.''</div>

Revision as of 23:22, 1 June 2017

Contents

Host

Richard Osman

Broadcast

Remarkable Television (an Endemol company) for BBC Two, 18 August 2014 to 31 August 2015 (90 episodes in 2 series)

Synopsis

Seven contestants are split into groups: those who can answer "yes" to a question like "I am a risk taker", and those who can answer "no".

You Bet!'s new set seems much smaller than the old set.

Each tribe has 60 seconds of general knowledge questions, a question is passed down the line if it's wrongly answered, and should none of the tribe know an answer the round ends at once. One of the losing tribe is out of the game, the rest divide again.

The traditional game show hat.

When down to four players, it's a straight two-against-two split, a race to five right answers determines the winning pair. Then those two play a chess clock final round. In the first series, the winner chose between two types of vouchers, worth £1,000. In the second series, they picked between two categories, and sorted four celebrity names into yes and no tribes (I had a number one in 1990s, for example).

A round in progress.

At heart, Two Tribes is a hardcore quiz show - it'll typically ask 70 questions in a half-hour slot, and the questions tend to be tougher than Eggheads. Two Tribes is more than a straightforward quiz - the yes/no statements give Richard Osman an excuse to chat with the players, and deploy his trademark dry wit.

Trivia

Airing in the 6pm slot, pushing 6pm's usual show Eggheads to a later slot at 6.30.

Voted the Best New Show in this site's Poll of 2014

Web links

BBC programme page

Wikipedia entry

Bother's Bar taping report, which we shamelessly cribbed to start the synopsis.

See also

Weaver's Week review

Pictures

Two tribes enter, one tribe wins.
Richard Osman looks quizzical in this publicity photo.

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