Taranaki Daily News

Common sense and logic reign

This brilliant new British quiz show is for people who hate trivia, writes James Croot.

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It’s a kind of cross between Family Feud, Who Wants to be a Millionair­e? and 1 vs 100. Perfect early Saturday evening entertainm­ent that the whole whānau can engage in. Britain’s latest hit quiz show that’s thankfully arrived on our screens only five months (rather than the usual five years) after its UK bow.

Hosted by Would I Lie to You team captain Lee Mack, The 1% Club (which screens on Saturdays at 7.30pm on Eden) is in many ways the The Chase’s polar opposite.

Each episode features an audience of 100 contestant­s essentiall­y competing against each other, rather than a mega memory. Oh, and these aren’t ordinary trivia questions. No, as Mack delightful­ly informs us: ‘‘The 1% Club is the ultimate leveller. It doesn’t matter if you’re not usually good at quizzes, because the questions have nothing to do with rememberin­g facts. They’re all about logic and common sense.’’

Expect to be potentiall­y regularly upstaged by your children, while humiliatio­n can quickly follow a moment of justified smugness.

One minute, you’ll be crowing about how many page turns are required to read a 20-page paper, the next you’ll be tearing your hair out trying to work out the number between one and 100 that has the most syllables (A note of warning: you’ll need sharp eyesight as many of the posers have a visual portion).

Like Millionair­e, the questions get progressiv­ely harder and their level of difficulty has been determined by testing them on the British public (a close approximat­ion of the percentage of how many ‘‘surveyed’’ who got them right determinin­g its positionin­g in the quiz). Each of the 100 players comes in with £1000, which is then added to the prize pool when they get a question wrong – and are thus eliminated.

After a few rounds, those remaining are given the option of trading in their money for a free pass on one question – many take up that option (or a later one which allows them to take the cash). When a few – or even one – contestant remains, they can then take on a question that only 1% of the British public could answer correctly. Get it right – and they could take home up to £100,000.

Mack’s avuncular and quick-witted banter is definitely part of the programme’s appeal. As well as gently interrogat­ing those falling at the early hurdles, he’s not afraid to champion certain players as they head towards the final stage and potential glory.

As he puts it: ‘‘If, like me, your lack of general knowledge frustrates you when doing quizzes, then watch The 1% Club. That way, like me, you can instead be frustrated by your lack of logic.’’

If you struggle to name the capital of Nicaragua, but fully embrace a thought-provoking head scratcher like, ‘‘Which animal is half goat and onethird cow?’’, then you might have just found your new favourite show.

The 1% Club screens on Saturdays at 7.30pm on Eden. Episodes will also be available to stream on Threenow. that is fast becoming tangled up in the nation’s debates over privilege, wealth and politics?

Brain Busters

(4.30pm, Weekdays from Monday, TVNZ 2)

To celebrate Te Wiki o te Reo Māori, host Chris Kirk and guest presenter Sonny Ngatai will put contestant­s on the popular Kiwi kids’ quiz show this week through the usual series of escalating rounds involving maths, memory, sequencing, spelling and more entirely in te Reo Māori.

Meanwhile, New Zealand’s long-running medical soap Shortland Street promises to integrate the language into the week’s five episodes screening nightly on TVNZ 2 at 7pm.

Meng

(8.30pm, Monday, Whaakata Māori)

Lockdowns, a broken leg, periodonti­tis and a 41st wedding anniversar­y made an interestin­g 12 months for one of New Zealand’s more recognisab­le immigrant sons, Meng Foon. Co-directors Julie Zhu and Stephen Chow followed the former Gisborne mayor and current Race Relations Commission­er for a year to create this hour-long documentar­y.

 ?? ?? Host Lee Mack’s banter is part of the appeal of The 1% Club.
Host Lee Mack’s banter is part of the appeal of The 1% Club.
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