A daily general knowledge quiz show where challengers face the formidable Eggheads, former champions of other quiz shows, competing for a cash prize.A daily general knowledge quiz show where challengers face the formidable Eggheads, former champions of other quiz shows, competing for a cash prize.A daily general knowledge quiz show where challengers face the formidable Eggheads, former champions of other quiz shows, competing for a cash prize.
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- ConnectionsFeatured in The Royle Family: Barbara's Old Ring (2012)
Featured review
You get home from a long day at work and want to watch something that doesn't require too many brain cells or attention. What do you turn to?
Eggheads is your average, slow-paced multiple choice pub-style quiz show. Right from the get-go you get a formula: The presenter uses the same words and phrases each episode, and each time there is a different group of contestants who are connected in some way - graduates from the same college, nuns from the same convent, worm charmers from the same worm charming club. You get the point. The questions are all very similar, but are all very difficult, with the exception of the first question in each round. Don't expect to know most of the answers. The topics range from Food and Drink to History to Film and Television.
The points system is also formulaic. Four of the five challengers get to face head-to-head their choice of one of five Eggheads, a team of expert quiz winners who rotate from a larger selection of Eggheads, which ranges from about six to eight depending on the season. Each head-to-head winner gets to compete in the final round, and each loser has to sit outside. By the end of the show, it's usually three against two, or one against four, usually with an advantage for The Eggheads, because, well, they're better than the contestants. If the constants win their set of three questions (followed by a Sudden Death round if there's a tie), they win the prize money, which increases by one thousand pounds for every episode the contestants lose. The prize money often gets to around, but rarely over, 20-ish thousand pounds.
The Eggheads are all amiable, with the exception of the know-it-all CJ, who is always pulling faces when the head-to-head challengers get their answers wrong. Still, they're a joy to watch and their personalities are all memorable. The first host, Dermot, was a bit dry. The co-host in the later series, Jeremy, is more fun, but still sticks heavily to the formula.
The show is a good time-waster, but it lacks the suspense of its competitors like Who Wants to be a Millionaire, not only because the prize money is less, but because it's quite dull by nature. Nevertheless, I watch it every weekday simply because it's something familiar, routine, and regular.
6/10
"So tune in next time to see if a new team of challengers have what it takes to beat The Eggheads! Twelve thousand pounds says they don't. Until then, goodbye."
Eggheads is your average, slow-paced multiple choice pub-style quiz show. Right from the get-go you get a formula: The presenter uses the same words and phrases each episode, and each time there is a different group of contestants who are connected in some way - graduates from the same college, nuns from the same convent, worm charmers from the same worm charming club. You get the point. The questions are all very similar, but are all very difficult, with the exception of the first question in each round. Don't expect to know most of the answers. The topics range from Food and Drink to History to Film and Television.
The points system is also formulaic. Four of the five challengers get to face head-to-head their choice of one of five Eggheads, a team of expert quiz winners who rotate from a larger selection of Eggheads, which ranges from about six to eight depending on the season. Each head-to-head winner gets to compete in the final round, and each loser has to sit outside. By the end of the show, it's usually three against two, or one against four, usually with an advantage for The Eggheads, because, well, they're better than the contestants. If the constants win their set of three questions (followed by a Sudden Death round if there's a tie), they win the prize money, which increases by one thousand pounds for every episode the contestants lose. The prize money often gets to around, but rarely over, 20-ish thousand pounds.
The Eggheads are all amiable, with the exception of the know-it-all CJ, who is always pulling faces when the head-to-head challengers get their answers wrong. Still, they're a joy to watch and their personalities are all memorable. The first host, Dermot, was a bit dry. The co-host in the later series, Jeremy, is more fun, but still sticks heavily to the formula.
The show is a good time-waster, but it lacks the suspense of its competitors like Who Wants to be a Millionaire, not only because the prize money is less, but because it's quite dull by nature. Nevertheless, I watch it every weekday simply because it's something familiar, routine, and regular.
6/10
"So tune in next time to see if a new team of challengers have what it takes to beat The Eggheads! Twelve thousand pounds says they don't. Until then, goodbye."
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