UKGameshows.com

UKGameshows.com is a website dedicated to British game shows. The site currently provides information on more than 1,500 British game show formats from 1938 to the present day, over 500 mini-biographies of hosts, along with numerous other background articles.

UKGameshows.com
Type of site
Game shows
OwnerDavid J. Bodycombe
Created byChris M. Dickson
URLhttp://www.ukgameshows.com
Launched1996
Current statusonline

The site hosts over 5,000 articles, including a weekly news and reviews column "Weaver's Week", written by Iain Weaver, which launched in 2001.

History

The UKGameshows.com website was originally called The UK Game Show Page, a small section of game show fan Chris M. Dickson's personal website. This was set up in 1996 as a spin-off from his popular email discussion list, ukgs-l (since succeeded by a Yahoo Groups list). The page consisted of rules sheets for some game shows of the time, as well as "Chris Compares" programme reviews and various links of interest.

From October 1998, game show consultant and puzzle writer David J. Bodycombe co-founded with Dickson a fuller version of the site, using a list compiled by TV fan Jez Rogers as a basis. The site was updated manually using standard FrontPage software.

With the explosion in the popularity of game shows, and rapid increase in the number of British digital TV channels, the site was relaunched using MediaWiki software in 2004 so that volunteer editors could keep the database up-to-date.

Scope

The site covers game shows made in the United Kingdom. Imported programmes are not included unless they have significant UK input, such as the Eurovision Song Contest. The site's definition of "game show" is wide-ranging, taking in such diverse styles as pre-school observation games (e.g. The Shiny Show), traditional quizzes and panel games, reality television, and talent shows such as New Faces and Opportunity Knocks. Regional shows (including those made in languages other than English) are included, though typically in less detail than those broadcast nationwide. The oldest television programme featured is Spelling Bee from 1938, which is believed to be the world's first television game show, and the oldest radio programme featured is What's Wrong With This? from 1925. Traditionally the site has included only television shows, but this has now changed and a number of the more notable radio shows are included as well.

In August 2009, the Reading University Student Television production Accumulate! was the subject of the site's 3000th article, thereby becoming the first webcast game show to be featured.

Polls

All-Time Polls

UKGameshows.com has polled its readers on the subject of the greatest British game shows and game show hosts on a four-year cycle. In 2010, the poll was styled "The Gameshow General Election" and timed to coincide with the real UK general election, with the voting window running from the dissolution of Parliament on 12 April to the close of polls at 10 pm on 6 May.

Year Greatest UK Game Show Greatest Host
2002 The Mole Bruce Forsyth
2006 The Crystal Maze
2010 Bob Monkhouse

Poll of the Year

Two further polls were carried out in January 2006 asking readers to select the best and worst new game shows of the previous year. Another poll was added a year later, dubbed "The Golden Fiver", for the best game show of the year overall (not restricted to new formats).

Year Best New Game Show Channel Worst New Game Show Channel Golden Fiver
(Best Show of the Year)
Channel
2005 Deal or No Deal Channel 4 Celebrity Love Island ITV
2006 PokerFace ITV The Mint ITV/ITV2 Deal or No Deal Channel 4
2007 Golden Balls For the Rest of Your Life ITV
2008 Duel The Kids Are All Right BBC One Only Connect BBC Four
2009 The Cube The Colour of Money ITV Only Connect The Cube BBC Four ITV
2010 The Million Pound Drop Channel 4 101 Ways to Leave a Gameshow BBC One Only Connect BBC Four
2011 Secret Fortune BBC One Red or Black? ITV
2012 Breakaway BBC Two The Bank Job Channel 4 Pointless BBC One
2013 Five Minutes to a Fortune Channel 4 Take on the Twisters ITV
2014 Two Tribes BBC Two Tumble BBC One
2015 1000 Heartbeats ITV Freeze Out ITV
2016 Dara O Briain's Go 8 Bit Dave Alphabetical
2017 !mpossible BBC One Babushka The Chase ITV
2018 The Button Wedding Day Winners BBC One Only Connect BBC Two
2019 The Wall Small Fortune ITV
2020 Beat the Chasers ITV The Chop Sky History

Recognition

UKGameshows.com was one of five websites shortlisted in the "TV" category of Yahoo UK & Ireland's "Finds of the Year 2005" awards.[1]

The website has been cited in UK newspapers including The Guardian[2] and The Times.[3]

In 2006, a screenshot from the site[4] was altered and used in a piece on the satire site BS News[5] which was also widely circulated as a spoof email,[6] in which it was purported to show a contestant named Kathy Evans on the US version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? failing to answer a simple $100 question. In fact the screenshot pictured 1999 UK contestant Fiona Wheeler answering a different (and harder) question. Far from failing at the first question, Wheeler won £32,000.

In the 2005 book ITV Cultures, published by the Open University Press, UKGameshows.com is used as a case study in the chapter Who Wants to be a Fan of "Who Wants to be a Millionaire?" by Matt Hills. Hills discusses the site's methodology at length, and uses the site (in particular its entry for Who Wants to be a Millionaire? and the results of its 2002 poll) as an example to support his argument that big money game shows can be appreciated on an aesthetic as well as a commercial level.[7]

References

  1. "Yahoo UK". yahoo.com. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  2. "Filling Richard's shoes" from Guardian Unlimited: Culture Vulture
  3. Arts The Times
  4. Who Wants to be a Millionaire? UKGameshows
  5. http://bsnews.org/articles/135
  6. "FACT CHECK: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?". snopes.com. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  7. Hills, Dr. Matt: "Who Wants to be a Fan of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?: Scholarly television criticism, 'popular aesthetics' and academic tastes", in ITV Cultures, edited by Rob Turnock and Catherine Johnson, pages 177–195. Open University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-335-21729-X
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