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#1 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Why Sajak is always ready to spin again May 2, 2002 BY PHIL ROSENTHAL TELEVISION CRITIC Game shows come and game shows go, and then there's "Wheel of Fortune," which just keeps spinning round and round. "It's a diverting half-hour and that's all it's supposed to be," host Pat Sajak said during the "Wheel" world's recent Chicago visit, subject of a WLS-Channel 7 behind-the-scenes infomercial at 6 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday. "While we're not doing award-winning material out there necessarily, we are a benign half-hour. We're entertaining. We're not out to embarrass anybody. That's not the object of the game, and people seem to like that." The appeal of "Wheel" is that it remains what it has always been, a trumped-up version of the kids' game Hangman. It's not young. It's not hip. People aren't being insulted or putting things in their mouths that they wouldn't want in their homes. Tune in to "Wheel" any weeknight at 6:30 on Channel 7--the three weeks of shows shot in Chicago are set to debut Monday--and you'll see that it's more or less the exact same show Merv Griffin dreamed up 27 years ago, with just a few tweaks. "I don't understand [the new wave of game shows]," said Sajak, 55, who replaced Chuck Woolery as host 20 years and roughly 5,500 half-hours ago. "Part of it is I'm getting older and I'm officially entering the fuddy-duddy stage, but I get embarrassed for people. I don't understand why people want to put themselves in that position, though apparently everyone wants to get on television, even if it means being humiliated. I'm not a big fan of it. It's not the business I got into." Born in Chicago, Sajak got his first big break when he managed to leap from forecasting weather in Nashville to doing it at NBC's flagship station in Los Angeles, where the weather rarely changes. While he left the network version of "Wheel of Fortune" (which ended in 1991) in 1989 to be CBS' erstwhile late-night answer to Johnny Carson and Arsenio Hall, he continued to do the syndicated version of "Wheel" (which began in 1983) because, well, it only required 39 days of work and paid really, really well. Good thing, too. The CBS talk show tanked in 15 months, leaving him with some unanswered questions that he isn't terribly interested in pursuing anymore. "It's like a guy who strikes out in a World Series," Sajak said. "You figure, 'Get me back to the Series and I could do it.' "But I've gotten a little fat and lazy. ... I'm a full-time father and husband now. ... I'm real comfortable with my life. From time to time, people come to me to talk about doing a show or syndicating something, and it's nice to have anybody want you to do anything in this business, but it's not very tempting anymore." He sits in as host occasionally on "Live With Regis & Kelly" and CNN's "Larry King Live." "And that lets me scratch that itch every now and then without having to worry about coming back the next day," he said. Hosting a talk show, like hosting a game show, requires a very specific kind of personality, a star who wears well over time and doesn't mind pushing the spotlight onto others for the sake of the program as a whole. "If you can add anything to it over time, that's fine, but the players and the game have to be the star," Sajak said. "For a lot of people, it's hard to keep that in focus. That's why comics and others who have tried game shows have not succeeded because it's not a natural performance mode." So "Wheel" may spin in place, but that place is on top. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.geocities.com/tmc_132000/...dventures.html http://www.geocities.com/tmc_132000/...ends_Game.html http://www.geocities.com/tmc_132000/..._to_Worse.html http://www.geocities.com/tmc_132000/..._Bar_Site.html http://www.geocities.com/tmc_6882/Bookworm.html<a href="http://www.gwgs.co.uk"><img src="http://www.gwgs.co.uk/i/gwgebanner.jpg" border="0"></a> [/B][/QUOTE]
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#2 |
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Semi-retired
Forum Veteran
Join Date: Jan 07, 2001
Location: Washington
Posts: 5,727
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Speaking of Johnny Carson...
The King of Late Night was quoted as saying that he didn't like those reality, etc. shows either... (Remember, Johnny Carson was a game show host before he took over The Tonight Show in 1962) |
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Chelsea Former Administrator, 2005-2012 Former Member, DVD Review Team, 2004-2010. |
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#3 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 04, 2001
Posts: 53,128
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Smart fellas.
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