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The complete sixth series of the light-hearted BBC panel show
hosted by Rob Brydon. Joined by team captains Lee Mack and David
Mitchell, Brydon presides as a range of celebrity guests attempt to
detect truth amidst a mire of lies. Among the challenges on the
show, each guest must read aloud a series of statements about
themselves and attempt to bluff and double-bluff the opposition as
they try to guess which of the statements are correct. Among the
celebrities to appear in this series are Chris Tarrant, Clare
Balding, Des O'Connor, Rhod Gilbert, Sarah Millican and Armando
Iannucci.
In It’s Not a Proper Job, TV legend Chris Tarrant regales the
reader with hilarious and heart-warming stories from his stellar
50-year career in television and radio. With trademark wit and
self-mockery, Chris not only recalls his behind-the-scenes capers
with fellow celebrities, but also shows us how, as a man of the
people, he has relished rubbing shoulders with ordinary folk on his
way to becoming one of the nation’s favourite TV faces. A former
teacher and ATV newsreader, Chris soon established himself at the
forefront of trailblazing telly as the host of Tiswas, and here
recounts this 1970s, anarchic, flan-flinging children’s show that
spearheaded a fresh format and a new era for Saturday morning TV
packed with pranks, full of fun, and which remains a benchmark to
this day. For later audiences, Chris will be more familiar as the
face of yet another groundbreaking show, Who Wants to Be a
Millionaire? which he presented for sixteen gripping years, and
which grew into a global phenomenon exported to over one hundred
countries. Here Chris remembers the joyous highs of contestants’
life-changing winnings, the frustrating lows of loss, the cringing
embarrassment of ignorance, and the infamous cheating of the
‘Coughing Major’. Spanning five decades, Chris’s television
credits are the envy of aspirational TV stars, but reading his
laugh-out-loud anecdotes – akin to having a chat with the man
himself over a pint, or listening to one of his entertaining,
after-dinner speeches – reveals a man still amused by life, by
the people he meets, and by his own humble assertion that none of
his glittering career can, in any way, be called ‘a proper
job’.
Over the last two and a half years, Chris Tarrant has travelled,
literally, all around the world filming Extreme Railway Journeys
for Channel 5. The hugely successful TV series is already being
repeated, and broadcast rights have been, and continue to be,
picked up in other countries, while it is also being released on
DVD. Chris's journeys have taken him to the Congo, India,
Australia, Bolivia (twice), Japan, Siberia, Myanmar, Canada and
Cuba, and the latest programmes see the completion of filming in
Alaska, Argentina, Azerbaijan, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Chris
Tarrant's Extreme Railway Journeys brings to life beautifully not
only the romance of travelling by train, but also the sights,
sounds and smells of the countries and places visited, while also
illuminating the customs and attitudes of the people the author
encountered along the way. But, as he says, 'I should have known
what I was in for and what the word "extreme" means, when the very
first show saw us filming in the Congo - where the train was six
DAYS late.' Beautifully illustrated with exclusive colour
photographs, Extreme Railway Journeys is not only a record of
remarkable journeys in extraordinary places by one of our shrewdest
commentators. It is also a demonstration of the principle that 'to
travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive'.
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Great British TV Quiz Shows
Tony Nicholson; Foreword by Chris Tarrant
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R474
R432
Discovery Miles 4 320
Save R42 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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We all love a quiz. It's virtually impossible to hear a quiz
question without blurting the answer out loud, if you happen to
know it. We spend our lives accumulating useless facts, information
and trivia, most of which just sits quietly in our brains gathering
dust, so it's very gratifying to be able to answer quiz questions
and prove all that learning wasn't a complete waste of time. Right
from the birth of commercial television, in the mid-1950s, quiz
shows have been a staple of the nation's TV viewing habits. People
of a certain age will remember Hughie Green's Double Your Money and
Michael Miles with Take Your Pick, but, seven decades later, quiz
shows are still going strong - The Chase and Pointless being two
hugely successful current examples. The programmes have become more
sophisticated and glitzy, the prizes have become bigger and better,
but, ultimately, they are still rooted in the very simple premise
of a question being asked and a person answering it either
correctly or incorrectly, leading to reward or forfeit. This
fascinating, amusing and well-researched book is a personal and
affectionate guide to the evolution of the TV quiz show, through
all the many changes over the years, leading to the ultimate
game-changer, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire. The book doesn't stop
there, but it does give a detailed insider's view of the most
important quiz show ever created. Readers will wallow in nostalgia
reading about Bullseye, Sale Of The Century and Blockbusters, and
they will learn surprising facts about all the many quizzes we have
watched over the years. Did you know that the format for BBC TV's
Mastermind was based on its creator's experiences of wartime
interrogation by The Gestapo?
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