Originally posted by ardcarp
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University Challenge
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostYes and it's one of the TV 'shows' which just gets on with it and has little extra flummery. There must be quite a large proportion of the viewing public that just likes that straightforwardness. Even if (like me) they only manage to answer few of the questions.
Here's a thing I've probably suggested before. Do science/maths students chip in to answer arts questions more often than arts students doing likewise with science/maths?
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Originally posted by cloughie View Postmany of the science/maths questions are rather specialist.
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From a very recent one - mention of quantum computers. Here is an update - https://newsroom.ibm.com/2022-11-09-...tum-System-Two
I didn't know about the commercial viability claimed in the quiz show. See https://research.ibm.com/interactive/system-one/
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Surprised nobody's yet commented on the new version with Amol Rajan. I do hope they get his chair sorted out. I don't know if it's just me, but I have trouble with his delivery - it's not as clear as either Paxo's or Bamber's, and thus far feels a bit rushed. I'm seriously considering having to put the subtitles on.
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Have any of the teams noticeably struggled to catch the questions? I've only heard bits of the new series, but my reaction differs from others' - I like his more friendly, relaxed style (closer to Bamber than to Jeremy?) and, apart from a rather gabbled end to the very first programme, even my sub-par hearing has coped.
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Originally posted by Rolmill View PostHave any of the teams noticeably struggled to catch the questions? I've only heard bits of the new series, but my reaction differs from others' - I like his more friendly, relaxed style (closer to Bamber than to Jeremy?) and, apart from a rather gabbled end to the very first programme, even my sub-par hearing has coped.
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I've tried returning to this programme in the wake of Mister Smugness, but what with the new presenter being someone I don't warm to, whether he's commenting on something political on the BBC TV news, or hosting this, or the way the questions have become even obscurer and ostensibly more divorced from the evermore urgent problems facing most people worldwide, all seem indifferent as to who wins or loses.
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I sometimes find myself unable to grasp what mumblers are saying on TV - usually in dramas - but I have had no problems with Amol Rajan, either speed, enunciation or general manner. I prefer his pace to Paxman's
In fact Only Connect which precedes UC is altogether more intelligible. Victoria what's-her-name, despite her eccentricities, speaks very clearly.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
I'm afraid I find the opposite! I've nothing against Mr Rajan, but he does go at a faster pace than Paxo (look at the numerical value of the scores) and his diction is often indistinct ESPECIALLY when he gives the correct answer to a wrongly answered question. Surely the question-master's job (apart from asking the questions!) is to enunciate very clearly the correct answers for the viewers, and even to repeat correct answers when they've been quickly blurted out by a team member?
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I'm all in favour of the friendlier manner, but I wish the faster pace (if that's the producers' intention) were accompanied by much clearer diction.
I used to be annoyed by Paxo's often sneering manner. Its very outrageousness probably had some audience appeal, and the students knew what they were in for. Clarity was never an issue though, despite Paxo's obvious onset of a debilitating condition. Please may we have some clarity back?
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