Reality Check

Well, I hope those of you who caught Big Bucks: The Press Your Luck Scandal based on my endless hyping thought it was worth the build-up.  (If you didn't see it, Game Show Network is running it several more times.)  The folks who put the documentary together did a good job, I thought, of telling the story and I really appreciated the fact that, though they interrupted the action for annotations, they pretty much allowed the videotape to speak for itself.

This morning, though I had nothing whatsoever to do with the program, I found myself on two different radio shows discussing it.  One host asked me why, in the era of "All Reality Shows, All The Time," I found this ancient bit of reality interesting.  I think the answer is that, first of all, it's your basic David/Goliath story.  Who could not like a story where a little guy came in and outsmarted a big-time TV network?  Secondly, today's Reality Shows are really Controlled-Reality Shows.  The producers may not know who's going to remain on the island after everyone else gets voted off…but they know someone will be.  They do not wind up standing around with their mouths open, muttering, "We never imagined that would happen."  Michael Larson, who went on Press Your Luck and won $110,000 (plus change) had just that impact on everyone.

Even supposedly-spontaneous TV shows aren't that spontaneous.  If Mssrs. Leno, Letterman, O'Brien, Kilborn, Kimmel and Maher are on for another fifty years, we'll never see any of their shows spin as wildly out of control as Press Your Luck did for about an hour there.  You will never see the stars, producers, directors and crew as clueless as to what's occurring on their own programs as the PYL staff was on account of Michael Larson.  Some execs at CBS almost didn't air the shows, ostensibly because they didn't want to revive memories of the quiz show scandals of the fifties.  Watching the Game Show Network airing last night, it dawned on me: They weren't really worried about that.  They were just uncomfortable that, for one brief moment there, they lost control.

Changing subjects, but only slightly: Watching Press Your Luck might give you a hankering to test yourself against its cleverly-configured game board.  There was a computer "home game" marketed briefly back in the eighties but it wasn't too good.  A devout fan of the show — a gent I do not know at all — cobbled up an authorized homemade version for the PC that works rather well, at least on my computer.  I don't guarantee it will work on yours, so proceed — as they say — with caution and at your own risk.  It does not contain the question rounds, but you don't care about them anyway.  Here's the link to the site where you can download it.  You'll need an unzipping utility and no, I don't know of a Press Your Luck for the Mac.  Oh — and don't complain to me if it doesn't work or ask for my help.  I have nothing to do with it.